Optus Mobile Review ALDI Mobile Review Amaysim Mobile Review Belong Mobile Review Circles.Life Review Vodafone Mobile Review Woolworths Mobile Review Felix Mobile Review Best iPhone Plans Best Family Mobile Plans Best Budget Smartphones Best Prepaid Plans Best SIM-Only Plans Best Plans For Kids And Teens Best Cheap Mobile Plans Telstra vs Optus Mobile Optus NBN Review Belong NBN Review Vodafone NBN Review Superloop NBN Review Aussie BB NBN Review iiNet NBN Review MyRepublic NBN Review TPG NBN Review Best NBN Satellite Plans Best NBN Alternatives Best NBN Providers Best Home Wireless Plans What is a Good NBN Speed? Test NBN Speed How to speed up your internet Optus vs Telstra Broadband ExpressVPN Review CyberGhost VPN Review NordVPN Review PureVPN Review Norton Secure VPN Review IPVanish VPN Review Windscribe VPN Review Hotspot Shield VPN Review Best cheap VPN services Best VPN for streaming Best VPNs for gaming What is a VPN? VPNs for ad-blocking The Optus MVNO’s biggest selling feature to families though is that if you combine a bunch of different plans in one bundle, you can save up to 15% on your total bill each month. All of its plans are also month to month, so you’re never locked into anything. For extra safety around your kids’ mobile usage, Yomojo also offers its FamilyEye app which helps monitor sites browsed, disable certain apps and control usage times. Yomojo’s one big downside though, if it’s important to you, is that its international roaming plans are not very competitive, so if you’re a traveller you’ll be better off with a provider such as Vodafone with its $5 a day international roaming. Find out why Yomojo’s family bundle discounts combined with its parental control features make the telco our top pick for the best value family provider in our Yomojo mobile review below. For kids and teenagers, most of their usage will probably be on WiFi - with the majority of their time at home and school (where hopefully they aren’t on their phone), so you don’t need to break the bank too much to get them enough data. Yomojo markets its $9.90 1GB plan as its kids’ plan, but realistically, if you have a teenager who’s talking to their friends over Snapchat and browses Instagram on the regular, they’ll probably use a little more than that. This is enough to handle up to 150 Snapchat messages, 15 hours of web browsing, and 1 hour of YouTube a month - which should be enough for most kids and teenagers when factoring in WiFi usage at home and school. On top of that, if you want to help manage how your kids use their phone, you might want to consider adding Yomojo’s FamilyEye device monitoring app which costs $5 a month. So all up, you’re looking at $20.90 a month before any discounts if you bundle more plans together. For an additional $5 a month, you can purchase an add-on for unlimited international calls and texts to 33 selected destinations. This is particularly handy for those who have relatives or friends overseas and want an easy option for making international calls without breaking the bank. Immediately forget about that 1GB plan, if you use your phone on your commute, you’ll probably blow through that data in 2 or 3 days - so we’ll look up the data tree here for you. The sweet spot for most would be Yomojo’s $25.90 plan with 10GB data. This should be enough to cover you for 40 hours of web browsing, 20 hours on Facebook, 20 hours of Spotify streaming plus a bunch more to spread across emails, Instagram and some YouTube clips on the way to work. This plan price comes down as you start to bundle more together, and if you have a family of four, the 10GB plan comes down to $23.31 a month. For $15.95 per month, you’ll get 5GB of data, which should be sufficient for most people, as well as unlimited national calls and SMS. This $15.95 plan also comes with the current $10 SIM activation fee waiver. If you refer a friend to sign up to Circles.Life as well, you’ll even get an extra 20GB of data to burn for a month. This limited-time offer will end on 28 February 2020 though, so you’ll have to get in quick. For example, assuming you had a family of four, with both kids on the $15.90 2GB Plan and the parents on the $25.90 10GB plan each, you’d get a 10% discount off with your Family Bundle and save a total of $100.32 yearly (or $75.25 every 30 days). The percentage you’ll get off your total bill will depend on how many SIMs you bundle together as follows:

5% off for 2 SIMs 7.5% off for 3 SIMs 10% off for 4 SIMs 12.5% off for 5 SIMs 15% off for 6 SIMs

FamilyEye is able to block certain features too, such as the use of the phone’s camera, as well as block apps and websites entirely — such as adult content and certain social media applications you might not want your kids to be on. Outside of monitoring direct content on your kids’ devices, it also allows you to set time limits on their phone or specific apps as well as geo-fence alerts — so you can be notified if they leave certain safe places they’re meant to be such as school or a friend’s place. FamilyEye itself costs an additional $5 a month for every child, but you can try it free for your first month to make sure it’s right for your family. The app itself is available on both iOS and Android devices, so it should work on all your phones with no issue. Yomojo plans to introduce a screen-usage monitoring feature as well as bedtime tracking soon. Optus has also been investing heavily in its regional network the last couple of years, adding more towers and network capacity across major regional centres, as well as taking part in the government’s Mobile Blackspot Program, co-investing in mobile towers in extremely remote areas that previously had no coverage. One disadvantage of being an MVNO though, is that when Optus turns on its next-generation 5G network in the next 12 months, it will be exclusive to Optus customers and not MVNOs such as Yomojo. At first, there won’t be too much of a difference though, so Yomojo customers won’t be missing out on much — but it’s still worth considering if network speeds are of utmost importance to you. Here’s the network coverage you’ll get with Yomojo: Alternatively, you can chat online with a customer service agent on Mondays to Fridays between 8am to 6pm and Saturdays between 10am to 6pm AEST. If your enquiry isn’t urgent, you can also email them via support@yomojo.com.au or fill out their online contact form. Tan uno manage your plan and account settings, download the Yomojo mobile app for iOS from the Apple App Store or for Android from the Google Play Store. But if you need a SIM card today, most major supermarket chains such as Woolworths and Coles sell Yomojo SIM cards at their front counter. You should also find Yomojo at most major petrol stations and newsagents. If you’re worried about keeping your number, it doesn’t matter which option you take to order, you’ll be able to bring your existing mobile number over to Yomojo when you activate your SIM online.