Canceling a $10 smartwatch line shouldn’t feel like pulling teeth, but for many T-Mobile users, that’s exactly what’s happening.
Over the last few weeks, Reddit threads have been flooded with frustrated Magenta customers describing the painful process of disconnecting old watch and tablet lines. It’s something that should take five minutes in the T-Life app but, in practice, often stretches into hour-long phone calls filled with upsells, retention pitches, and escalations to supervisors, according to PhoneArena.
A challenging customer service experience
When the retention department gets a little too bold
One customer summed up the experience bluntly: “It took 45 minutes of arguing… It’s like we’re back in 1990 trying to cancel our cable bill.” Another, who actually works for T-Mobile, said canceling two watch lines and a voice line took almost an hour and required repeatedly insisting that, no, they did not want a cheaper plan, they just wanted the lines gone.
One potential, frustrating contributor to the issue isn’t entirely surprising. According to several self-identified employees, part of the problem is internal metrics. T-Mobile reportedly tracks reps’ performance, online cancellations, callbacks, and past-due balances, with bonuses tied to keeping those numbers low. In other words, the fewer lines reps let you cancel, the better their paycheck (according to anonymous social media comments, of course).
It’s not just the phone lines, either. Longtime customers say even the once-reliable T-Force social media support team is now running the same playbook. One user recounted having three different reps on X (formerly Twitter) try to convince them to keep their T-Mobile Home Internet despite repeated complaints about poor service.
To be fair, T-Mobile isn’t alone in frustrating customer service; Verizon and AT&T have their own reputations for changes like unhelpful chatbot adoption. But T-Mobile’s aggressive shift toward automation and app-first account management means that when something actually does require human intervention, customers expect it to be smooth. Instead, they’re stuck in a sales funnel.
For a company that built its reputation on being the “un-carrier,” this isn’t the best look. If canceling a $10 accessory line feels like a war of attrition, customers may start wondering whether sticking around for the rest of their plan is worth the fight.
Until T-Mobile streamlines the process, your best bet might be to grab a cup of coffee, put your phone on speaker, and prepare for persuasion because getting rid of that old smartwatch line could take a while.

