The Digital First Wireless brand of Verizon, Verizon, is formally launching a new method for people without the restrictions of traditional family projects. From August 21, a new program, called Visable Internal Circle, will allow consumers to connect their wireless accounts with six others, while they have full control over their own lines, payments and project selection. After a brief trial announced last week, many users were invited to test the internal circle. As we reported at the time, it was the closest alternative to the family project’s career, and early opinions showed strong interest from those who wanted to save the group without joint billing.
Unlike traditional family plans, which requires a primary account holder and a single bill, the internal constituency allows each member to adjust his project without paying separately and affecting others. This makes it easier for college rooms, friends, or groups like expansion families to save together without routine harmony matters.
David Kim, in Chief Revenue Officer Veraizon Price, the program reflects the fact that “meaningful contacts come in every form” and that the wireless service should be adapted to the lives of consumers. It also recognizes that not every house is going to pay a single bill or it does not fit into a standard family plan setup.
The key features of the internal circle include:
- Savings: Up to 7 people can join $ 25/month with unlimited 5G data. The Premium Plan users can save $ 5/month with at least two members in the group.
- Independent Accounts: No basic account holder. Everyone manages their service and payments.
- Flexible membership: Groups can be made from anyone. Members can leave or join at any time without interrupting others.
- Privacy Safe Guards: Personal details remain private, choose with members to share what to share.
- Premium coverage: All projects use VeraizonNational Wide Network with Premium Options, including access to 5G Ultra Wide Band.
The visible launch ‘internal circle’. | Image Credit – Visit/Verizon
Compared to the group projects of T -Mobile or AT&T, the Inner Circle offers similar shared savings, but without binding everyone with a bill. This may appeal to those who value freedom, though it is not consistent with the lowest rates offered by some traditional family projects for big households.
As a visible customer, I can already see how I will benefit from this project by adding my “adult children” accounts and saving some money in this process. If the idea of the project works according to planning, it can challenge the idea that a person in the shared wireless savings needs to manage everything – a change that can benefit anyone in search of both savings and control.
Read the latest from Johanna Romero


