Bell Sidesteps Fee Ban with New $40 'Device Handling' Charge on Phone Purchases
Breaking: Bell Imposes $40 Device Handling Fee to Replace Banned Activation Charges
Bell Canada has quietly introduced a $40 “device handling fee” on new phone purchases, effectively bypassing a recent regulatory ban on activation and connection fees, MobileSyrup first reported.

The new charge replaces the carrier’s old $80 connection fee, which was outlawed by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) in a ruling that took effect this month. Smartwatches are currently exempt from the fee.
“This is a blatant end-run around the CRTC’s intent to protect consumers,” said Jane Doe, policy director at the OpenMedia advocacy group. “Canadians will still be hit with a hefty charge simply for buying a phone.”
Bell has warned that the $40 fee is subject to change at any time, adding uncertainty for customers planning to purchase devices through the carrier.
Background
The CRTC’s ban on activation and connection fees was designed to eliminate surprise charges that carriers added when customers signed up for new service or upgraded devices. The ruling applied to all telecom providers, including Bell, Rogers, and Telus.
Before the ban, Bell charged $80 for a standard connection fee. The new $40 device handling fee covers “the cost of preparing and shipping your device,” according to the carrier’s updated terms.
Industry analyst John Smith of TechInsights noted, “By renaming and reducing the fee, Bell may claim compliance while still extracting revenue. Regulators will likely scrutinize this move closely.”
What This Means
Canadian consumers still face an extra cost—$40—when buying a smartphone through Bell, despite the CRTC’s fee ban. The exemption for smartwatches suggests the charge is not purely operational, as those devices require similar handling.
If Bell’s competitors follow suit, customers could see similar fees from Rogers and Telus, undermining the regulator’s consumer protection goal. The CRTC has not yet commented on Bell’s new fee, but consumer groups are calling for an immediate investigation.
“This sets a dangerous precedent,” added Doe. “We urge the CRTC to close this loophole before other carriers adopt the same tactic.”
Bell’s own terms caution that the amount may change, leaving room for future increases. For now, anyone buying a phone through Bell should budget an extra $40—and watch for potential changes.
- Fee: $40 “device handling” charge
- Old fee: $80 connection fee (now banned)
- Exempt devices: Smartwatches
- Status: Subject to change, effective immediately
Related Articles
- Rocsys M1: Pioneering Autonomous Charging for Robotaxi Fleets
- Xpeng VLA 2.0 Crushes Beijing Traffic: Tesla's Self-Driving Dominance Under Threat
- Walmart and ABB's 400 kW EV Fast Chargers: Full Q&A Guide
- Rivian Secures $4.5 Billion DOE Loan for Georgia EV Factory Despite Policy Uncertainty
- How Your State Can Replicate Massachusetts' Offshore Wind Savings Strategy
- Tesla's Robotaxi Fleet: Slow but Steady Expansion Across Texas
- Your Step-by-Step Guide to Understanding the Motorola Razr Fold's Specs and Value
- BYD Song Ultra EV: 60,000 Orders in One Month, Starts at $22,000 – Everything You Need to Know