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T-Mobile HTC Touch Pro 2 Pricing Leaked… Again.

Categories: HTC, Rumors, T-Mobile
By: , IntoMobile
Tuesday, August 11th, 2009 at 6:26 AM

tmobile-touch-pro-2

This one caught me a little off guard… Guess TMoNews’ ninjas had the pricing slightly wrong on the Touch Pro 2 the first time around. You can check out the initial rumor right here.

This time around, hopefully the information via TMoNews is a little more solid (I think it should be, we have an actual picture of a pricing list this time!) At any rate, a T-Mobile pricing sheet for current and upcoming devices has emerged. The low-down for the Touch Pro 2 is $249.99 on a 2-year deal, $399.99 for a 1-year, and $549.99 with no contract.

The question is now, what say YOU? Too much cash-ola for the full-QWERTY, Touchflow powerhouse that is the Touch Pro 2? You going to take out a small loan, or do you find the pricing reasonable and in-line with other technology on the market today? Let me know what you think in the comments.

Note: Bottom line, believe the price once you see it on the T-Mobile site. I think that’s the best advice I can give :)

About The Author

James Falconer

James was born and raised in Winnipeg, Canada. Almost 15 years ago he started out in the 'real world' as a web and graphic designer. Through the years he has finely tuned his skills in SEO, internet marketing, conversion strategy, and project management. To date, he runs his own successful consulting business where he advises companies all over the globe. A co-founder of www.crackberry.com, and sole proprietor of www.mactropolis.com, James in recent years has become very active in the tech blogosphere. Online community building and strategy is fast becoming one of his passions. Watch for James' no frills attitude, unique perspective and to-the-point comments here on IntoMobile!

  • Jason Young

    You have the price of $249 listed in the article, but the price on TMoNews site shows $349. Do you know which is the actual correct price?

  • Texsi

    All other sites say $349 for a 2 year contract. Are you sure about your post?

  • billybob

    Well this is much better news than what I saw on other prices floating around at $299 and $349 with a two year contract.

    Here is my Two cents worth. I think this phone is going to be the flagship widows mobile phone in the the US, as it will most likely be carried by all major US carriers. TMobile needs to be carefull where they price this puppy because if it is too high, everyone will just wait for it to be released on other carriers in a month or two. Plus it looks like this phone will have some updates (namely the ear phone jack so you don’t have to carry the that stupid converter this phone comes with)

    I would think that the optimal price would be $199 with a two year commitment. If they one of the other carriers that will have this phone will.

  • billybob

    I would think that the optimal price would be $199 with a two year commitment. If they don’t price it there, one of the other carriers will, and T mobile will end up pissing a core group of their customer base.

  • Jack Jackson

    Why does the picture show $349.99 while the article says $249.99?

  • Dileep

    Pricing is $199.99 for new customers; $349.99 for existing customers. Way too expensive!

  • slim-o

    Jack’s right! where do you see $249?

  • Mobile Pro

    I have talked to tmobile rep. He has mentioned $349.99 with 2 yrs. contract.

  • Cliffy44

    ME?

    I’m an at&t’er.

    I’m patiently waiting for the Tilt 2 (HTC Touchpro 2).

    It’ll have all the features (ALL FEATURES AVAILABLE FROM HTC); that the T-Mobile and Sprint versions won’t have.

    Till then, I’m VERY happy with my HTC Fuze (Touch Pro).

    Me thinks that the TP2 is a bit expensive. BUT, the at&t Tilt 2 is worth it.

  • Dave48

    I’m gonna get the Touch Pro2 unlocked and use AT&T’s new $20/mo. data plan for prepaid users. No voice plan, cheap data when I need it, and I’ll use WiFi most of the time. I’ll save money within four months, and a fortune over 2 years. I look forward to the results of Congress’ investigation into wireless companies’ anticompetitive phone-locking plans, and the Justice Department’s antitrust violations. I hate American phone companies more than TV advertisements, and that’s a lot.