09-10-2024
11:24 PM
- last edited on
09-10-2024
11:30 PM
by
RogersZia
Hi,
I read an article about WiFi calling at https://www.rogers.com/support/mobility/wifi-calling-everything-you-need-to-know.
The following statement in the article confused me:
"If you do not have Roam Like Home or a Travel Pack or roaming add-on, your outgoing WiFi calls and messages to a non-Canadian number will be billed according to roaming Pay-Per-Use rates."
Why do I have to use cellular data for WiFi calling? Can I make WiFi calls using my local WIFI network out of Canada with the cellular data turned off?
Could anyone share your experience and expertise please? Thank you.
PZ1
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09-11-2024 07:50 AM
09-11-2024 07:50 AM
09-11-2024 02:09 PM - edited 09-11-2024 02:18 PM
Thank you so much! I've concluded that I'd better put my phone in Airplane Mode. Once there is a local Wi-Fi network, for example, in a hotel, I can use the Wi-Fi calling function to receive text messages and calls for free. That is a great option for travellers. Am I right?
PS. I also read a statement from the same article (https://www.rogers.com/support/mobility/wifi-calling-everything-you-need-to-know😞
"You may incur additional long-distance charges and/or international message charges if your VPN, DNS or internet provider is set to a country outside Canada." It sounds like Rogers always has an excuse to charge users
for long-distance calls, as users are blinded to the local network settings.
09-11-2024 02:24 PM
Something else I know about Wifi Calling, for it to work properly and not bill you extra, make sure you do not connect to a foreign cell network, as this registers with the network that you have left canada, it may prevent you from using wifi calling, or may incur long distance.
Keep airplain mode on, and ensure cellular network is off the whole time.
I used wifi calling in the caribbean and did not incur any charges when I followed these steps.
a month ago
I would like to continue this thread if I may; I'm wondering about the use of an eSIM while abroad and using Wi-Fi Calling. Am I incorrect in assuming that if I leave my Rogers SIM as the secondary and on AirPlane mode I can make calls using Wi-Fi Calling as per a normal cell phone ?
a month ago
a week ago
a week ago - last edited a week ago
@Sal00 wrote: Airline mode is almost useless as it’s make you entirely inaccessible.
Not exactly true since you can use WiFi (which may not be immediate, but is usable for communicating), where you can use email or WhatsApp or other apps for communicating.
We discussed all this in the following thread that you started. Anyone should read at least the first and second posts of that thread since this is a complex discussion with many options. WiFi calling and possible charges is discussed in detail in post 2 of the thread with cut/paste directly from Rogers.
a week ago
There have been MANY reports of people receiving calls when travelling in USA or Internationally, their data roaming is off, they do not answer the call, yet they are charged for the voicemail message someone left. This also happened to me too so I know its not been resolved because people still have it happen to them.
When your roaming, and receive a call and let it go to voicemail, the network often sees the call being answered though it's the voicemail retrieval number accepting the call. I had given that number to rogers and told them to look it up in their system and they still refused to credit me. it was not until I escalated it further that I got an apology and credit.
a week ago - last edited a week ago
@Pauly wrote:
There have been MANY reports of people receiving calls when travelling in USA or Internationally, their data roaming is off, they do not answer the call, yet they are charged for the voicemail message someone left.
This is almost exactly what happened to me recently, although I'm with Chatr, which is prepaid and uses pay-per-use roaming. I got a roaming charge when I was travelling internationally for a one minute (incoming scam) call, even though I did not answer it and even though I have my voicemail (and data roaming) turned off. Just the fact of an incoming call triggered the charge.
This happened because I needed to make an emergency call and turned off Airplane mode temporarily to do that. This was not Roam Like Home, but rather it was the international pay-per-use roaming charges which I prefer since they are much less than Roam Like Home since I only use my phone very occasionally or for an emergency. I turned Airplane mode back on and had no charges for the rest of my trip abroad.
Summary: If your phone is not in Airplane mode, or turned off completely or you haven't removed the Rogers SIM, then charges are very possible, even if you don't use your phone directly.
Edit - I prefer a Pre-paid plan for my use and keep my balance under $20. In this way, any charges cannot exceed that amount. Top ups if necessary, are very easy to do online.