T-Mobile has announced a new buy one, get one offer, this time covering the Samsung Galaxy S7.

The deal, which is only available this weekend, will allow customers to acquire two units of the Galaxy S7 for the price of one.

T-Mobile BOGO Offer For Samsung Galaxy S7

In the press release of the company that announced the offer, T-Mobile said that customers who would purchase the Galaxy S7 through the carrier's Equipment Installment Plan will get another unit of the smartphone for free after 24 monthly credits.

Customers, however, will need to add a qualifying line of service for the second Galaxy S7, as well as sign a 24-month financing agreement. If a customer will terminate their T-Mobile subscription before the 24 months are up, then he or she would have to pay the remaining balance on the second Galaxy S7.

The offer is also open to subscribers of other carriers, with these customers able to also take advantage of the Carrier Freedom promotion of T-Mobile that will see the company pay off remaining device payments and early termination fees that the customer will incur when moving into T-Mobile, good for up to $650 per line.

The deal will become available on Nov. 11 at 6:00 a.m. PT and will end on Nov. 13 at 11:59 p.m. PT. 

Why The Samsung Galaxy S7?

The offer is not really the most exciting one, given the fact that the Galaxy S7 is eight months old. However, with Samsung pulling the plug on the Galaxy Note 7 due to the exploding battery issue, the Galaxy S7 reverted to being the company's current flagship smartphone.

A buy one, get one offer for the Galaxy S7 is a good option for families looking to get a good deal on a perfectly capable smartphone.

It should be noted that that the offer actually also applies to the Galaxy S7 edge, the Galaxy S6, the Galaxy S6 edge and the Galaxy S6 edge+. The Galaxy Note 5 is not included, perhaps to prevent the deal from being associated with the troublesome Galaxy Note 7.

T-Mobile might have a significant amount of surplus stock for Samsung's smartphones, especially with the aforementioned Galaxy Note 7 issue. Samsung recently released full-page advertisements to apologize for the debacle, but it will likely take a lot more than that to win back the trust of customers. Perhaps an amazing Galaxy S8 would do the trick?

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