Pre-order the Samsung Galaxy Note 10/Note 10+ from T-Mobile and save up to $300 with select trade-in

T-Mobile announced this afternoon that the just-announced Samsung Galaxy Note 10 and Galaxy Note 10+ will be available for pre-order starting tonight at 9:01 pm PDT (12:01 am Thursday morning on the East Coast). Starting today, if you trade in a qualifying smartphone you can get as much as a $300 off either new Galaxy Note model through a combination of a trade-in credit and a rebate. Plus, Samsung will reward you with a $150 gift voucher.
The Samsung Galaxy Note 10+ 5G comes to T-Mobile in Q4
Both new models support all of the tricks that T-Mobile has up its sleeve for its Advanced-LTE network. That includes 4X4 MIMO, increasing the number of data connections between cell sites and the phone. With carrier aggregation, different data channels are put together to increase the capacity and dataspeed. And 256QAM means that more data is carried on each LTE waveform. Sure, it all sounds complex-and it is. All you need to know is that your Galaxy Note 10 and Galaxy Note 10+ will run fast and far, especially on the carrier’s 600MHz spectrum. Lower-band airwaves, like the latter, run farther and penetrate buildings better than higher-band spectrum. T-Mobile says its Extended Range LTE signals travel twice as far and penetrate structures four times better than mid-band spectrum.
T”-Mobile is still the adult in the room when it comes to bringing a real, meaningful 5G experience to America. The cracks in Verizon’s millimeter wave-only strategy are showing – and they’ll be forced to take capacity from their existing customers if they want to deliver broad 5G. Only the Un-carrier has a way to harness a full range of clear spectrum for 5G, should regulators approve our merger with Sprint. It’s taken years of dogged determination, meticulous planning, innovation on a global scale and ridiculously hard work from a ridiculously talented team… and we’re just getting started. With the Galaxy Note10+ 5G and many more devices to come, we’ll get to see it all pay off.”-Neville Ray, CTO, T-Mobile