Telus-owned Koodo and Rogers-owned Fido lowered prices on their respective 60GB plans. But while the plans are cheaper, they still aren’t winning the value fight.
Both providers lowered their 60GB plans from $45/mo to $40. Koodo moved first, lowered prices on Feb. 25, and Fido followed suit on the 26th. At the time of writing, Bell-owned Virgin Plus hadn’t adjusted its $45/60GB plan.
Along with the 60GB change, Koodo also dropped its 80GB plan from $55 to $50. Neither Fido nor Virgin offer 80GB plans, however.
Koodo’s 60GB and 80GB plans as of Feb. 26, 2026.
Koodo’s $40/60GB plan includes 5G data with speeds capped at up to 250Mbps, and unlimited Canada-wide talk and text. The price includes a $10/mo discount for using automatic bank payments. Customers can also pick one free perk for the plan, with options including rollover data, faster data speed, and more. Koodo’s $50/80GB plan is the same, but with a higher monthly cost and more data.
Fido’s 60GB plan as of Feb. 26, 2026.
Fido’s $40/60GB plan, however, is limited to 4G data with speeds capped at up to 150Mbps. It also includes unlimited Canada-wide talk and text and 500 international minutes. Notably, Fido no longer includes hotspot capability in its plans, but currently has hotspot available as a free add-on. Fido’s price also includes a $5 auto pay discount and an additional $5/mo credit to get down to the $40 price point.
The changes come just days after Freedom Mobile refreshed its plans, adding more roaming benefits and tweaking pricing. That included bumping up plan prices by $1/mo, which means Freedom now offers a $40/60GB 5G CAN/US/MEX plan. If you bring your own phone (BYOP), you can take advantage of Freedom’s $10 BYOP credit to get a $40/100GB plan instead.
Similarly, Telus-owned Public Mobile is offering a $40/100GB 5G CAN/US/MEX plan until March 2. The plan normally includes 60GB of data.
While it’s good to see competition from Freedom putting downward pressure on pricing, it’s disappointing to see the likes of Koodo and Fido continue to offer worse plans. Why pay $40 to them for an inferior 60GB plan when, for the same money, you can get unlimited use in North America and bundled roaming, or significantly more data?
