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VPNs for ad-blocking A December 2019 report from the ACCC notes that the average data usage for October 2019 to December 2019 in Australia was 7.7GB per month, with an 8% increase since the previous June 2019 report. Using this 8% increase-per-quarter logic, the average data usage for October 2020 to December 2020 would have been around 8.5GB and, in the first quarter of 2021, would be approximately 9.2GB per month. That ACCC report notes that mobile broadband had the highest average download volume (10.3GB) and Prepaid had the lowest at 4.5GB. You can check out our monthly picks of the best mobile phone plans in Australia or the best cheap mobile plans, but scroll on for a breakdown of data usage based on common mobile internet tasks. That’s why our everyday recommendations are for users who don’t tend to dabble in data-draining activities like videoconferencing, video streaming and hours of social media. Basically, if you’re engaging with content that has videos, particularly the kind that play automatically, expect to use more mobile data each month. You can see 10 of the most popular SIM Only plans below that have at least 10GB of data (this list updates daily). For instance, Circles.Life has a popular 100GB Monthly Plan that costs under $40 a month (it’s even cheaper with promo pricing) for 4G-speed data, while the $119 Optus One Plan comes with 500GB of data to use on the Optus 5G network. If you don’t want to worry about data usage at all, check out the limitless data of Felix Mobile, which is capped at a very reasonable 20Mbps to comfortably tackle all manner of mobile online activities on your phone. Below is a daily updating list of the most popular SIM Only plans with at least 30GB of data. Scroll on for a breakdown of common online tasks and how much mobile data you can expect them to use. Bear in mind that this doesn’t count image-heavy or video-stuffed sites, but basic web browsing uses around 60MB per hour. Similarly, while sent or received attachments will up the data usage of an email (only if sending or opening a received attachment), emails don’t tend to use even 1MB per email. Basically, you don’t have to factor in basic web browsing and email too heavily into your monthly data considerations. If all you want mobile data for is browsing and emailing, you can take a look at popular SIM Only plans below that have at least 1GB of data and don’t cost more than $30 a month. How much data you’re using per hour of video call really depends on what you’re using to make the calls. Apple users have it the most efficient with around 180MB of data usage per hour for FaceTime calls, which jumps to 480MB for Duo calls on Android handsets. There’s an even bigger usage leap with third-party software like Skype, which uses around 1.35GB per hour for an HD call to one other person, while Zoom uses up to 1.6GB per hour of HD one-on-one call. Bear in mind these data numbers go even higher for Skype and Zoom if you’re video calling multiple people. Below is a daily updating list of the most popular SIM Only plans that include at least 20GB of data. Netflix defaults to an automatic setting on mobile devices, which equates to four hours of viewing per 1GB of data. Though it’s recommended for unlimited-data plans only, streaming quality can be maxed out, which will use around 3GB of data per hour. Stan has similar numbers and can use up to 2.89GB per hour, while Prime Video uses roughly 2GB per hour. Sports fans should prep to use around 3.25GB per hour of Kayo streaming, though. You want plenty of data to regularly stream video via mobile data, which is why we’ve generated the daily updating list below of the most popular SIM Only plans that have at least 50GB of monthly data to play with. There’s some big variance in social media data usage, depending on the service and what you’re doing. Facebook, for instance, can use as little as 80MB per hour or up to 160MB per hour if you’re watching videos. Snapchat is similar at around 160MB per hour, but even though it’s mainly dealing with photographs, Instagram uses around 720B per hour. Twitter data usage varies greatly depending on whether you’re only using it to post text, or whether you’re scrolling through tweets filled with images and/or video. Below is a daily updating list of the most popular SIM Only plans with at least 10GB of data. Even on PCs and next-gen gaming consoles, online gaming doesn’t use up anywhere near as much data as you might expect, even if the core game download and subsequent patches can stretch into lots of gigabytes (update games on WiFi to avoid blitzing through mobile data). Mobile games tend to be better optimised for mobile data usage needs, which means they tend to use less data than their dedicated gaming-platform counterparts. Games may use as little as 20MB per hour or it can stretch up to around 100MB per hour. Below is a list of the most popular SIM Only plans (which update daily) with at least 4GB of monthly data. Like video streaming, hourly data usage of music streaming varies depending on the service you’re using and the quality of the audio playback. Apple Music, for instance, maxes out at around 115MB per hour of playback, which is the same story for YouTube Music and SoundCloud. That said, Apple Music’s hourly data usage can also be negated by signing up with a telco like Boost or Telstra, both of which were offering data-free streaming of Apple Music at the time of writing. Fans of lossless music streaming should look to SIM Only plans with plenty of data, which is why the daily updating list below is for popular plans with at least 70GB of monthly data.