How do Night and Weekend minutes work?
1) When making a call that starts during peak time and ends during off-peak time or vice versa, only the peak portion of the call is billed as such. Example: a call starts at 8:50 pm and ends at 9:10 pm (assuming you have 9pm nights), only 10 minutes would be billed as peak. 2) When outside of your home time zone, your night start time is based on where the phone is located when the call is placed. Example: your home is Iowa (Central time zone), but you are on a current National plan traveling in California. Your nights will start at 7pm/9pm (depending on your plan) Pacific time. The time shown on your phone is the time that the system will log the call. Note: if you are near a time zone divider, you could be registered on a tower that is in a different time zone than you are. Example: you are traveling in extreme western Kansas, which is Central time zone. However, you may be roaming on a tower in Colorado, in which case, your calls will log as Mountain time zone. In this case, it may