Cancel 1&1 contract?

A year ago, I signed a two-year contract with a Wi-Fi router because I moved into my own apartment. However, I've now moved back in with my parents, where I have an ongoing contract. Therefore, I no longer need a router and am paying a lot of money unnecessarily. I have the right to terminate my contract early, right? What exactly do I include in the termination notice, and what documents do I need?

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evtldocha
5 months ago

I have a special notice right now, right?

… this can be a juridically tricked thing, because your provider could not continue the contract technically if the connection with your parents is already occupied or the technology of your previous contract is not at all available to your parents. Only in the two cases there is a chance.

In principle, there is no special right to terminate in a move. The exception is only given when the provider enters the contract unchanged cannot continue (so you would not have to take a change to another rate).

rkwiss
5 months ago

From my point of view, the move does not give rise to a fundamental special right of notice. The router has nothing to do with the whole thing anyway. But, and that might be a loophole if your parents have already signed the VDSL connection to their homes with another provider/contract, 1&1 is not able to supply you further and would have to accept the special announcement m.E. What else would it be, for example, if your parents receive their Internet via another medium, for example glass fiber or cable. Then 1&1 could continue to deliver and thus insist on compliance with the contract.

Check this out best with the 1&1 hotline.

Waldi2007
5 months ago

completed a 2 year contract with a Wlan router a year ago,

This text is for 2 reasons pure nonsens:

  1. With a technical device you can’t conclude a contract, but – as you should say right here – with an Internet provider
  2. Wi-Fi is a wireless transmission standard for local networks and has nothing to do with the Internet. The provider provides access to the Internet, the router links via this access and terminals in the local network can go via WLAN to the router.

If you have a special right to terminate at 1&1 for the case described by you, you can only say 1&1. So, shields your concern with their customer service and ask for a satisfactory solution for both sides. But if you’re wrong, you’ll have to go for the second. Completely paid year. Contract is contract.

kevin1905
5 months ago

There is only a special right to terminate in law if the connection to the new address would not be technically feasible. Then you could cancel with a deadline of 3 months.

All of this would be regulated in the terms of the terms of the terms of the terms of the terms and conditions of your contractual partner.