Rocket Money tested — plus the exact ISP call that cuts bills by 38%

Issue 1 tests Rocket Money's bill negotiation service with real user outcomes (works on Spectrum, produces documented failures on Cox/AT&T when stripping features), then delivers the five-step ISP retention call script sourced from a Comcast insider transcript — the exact words that unlock $25–34/month reductions across Comcast, Spectrum, Cox, and Frontier. Includes anti-pattern flags and a savings calculator.

Two ways to fight your internet bill. One of them costs you a third of the savings. The other costs 20 minutes.

Universal opener — works on Comcast, Spectrum, AT&T, and Cox: When the automated phone system (IVR — the robot that asks "How can I help you today?") asks what you need, say "cancel my service" (or just "cancel"). Nothing else. Saying "billing," "promotions," or "lower my bill" routes you to standard customer service, where agents have almost zero authority to reduce your base rate. 1 2

Part 1: Rocket Money — tested, real outcomes, verdict

Rocket Money (the company formerly known as Truebill, acquired by Rocket Companies around 2021–2022) 3 will negotiate your bills on your behalf. The pitch: you hand over your account credentials, they call your provider, and if they win you a lower rate, they take 35–60% of the first year's savings as a fee — you choose the percentage when you sign up. 4 There's also a Premium subscription tier at $7–14/month (you set the amount on a sliding scale), or a Premium+ tier where the negotiation fee is waived entirely. 5
Here's what the real outcomes look like.
Where it worked. Two CNET editors independently tested Rocket Money on Spectrum internet — one in May 2024, one in June 2025. Both got $25/month off, both for 12 months. The 2024 test netted $300 in savings, minus a $90 fee (30%), leaving $210. 6 The 2025 test got the same $300 reduction plus a free speed upgrade. 7 Spectrum appears to have a standard ~$25/month promotional discount that Rocket Money reliably triggers. If your provider has a similar clean discount lever available, the service can work.
Where it broke. In April 2026, Reddit user u/RoyEP3 used Rocket Money to negotiate their Cox internet bill. Rocket Money reported $780 in savings over 12 months and charged $273 (35%). The problem: Cox confirmed it had achieved the "savings" by removing the unlimited data plan. Restoring unlimited data would have pushed the bill higher than before. Rocket Money initially refused to reverse the negotiation. After the user submitted proof — a Cox confirmation email showing the feature removal — Rocket Money refunded the $273 fee. 8
A second case from February 2024: u/si-mon-ki on r/Scams used Rocket Money to negotiate AT&T. Rocket Money claimed $360 in savings over 12 months and charged $180 (50%). Two billing cycles later, the AT&T bill had gone from $304 to $309 — a net increase of $5/month. Rocket Money's explanation: AT&T lowered the bill first, then raised rates shortly after. No refund was issued. 9
What this means for you. The two failure cases share a structure: Rocket Money treats "lower dollar amount" as success, regardless of what was changed to get there. The service doesn't verify whether the reduction came from a genuine promotional rate or from stripping features. For straightforward internet bills where the only variable is the monthly rate, Rocket Money can produce real savings. For bills with bundled features you care about — unlimited data, specific speed tiers, included equipment — the service may not flag what it traded away to hit the number.
Fee math at a glance:
ServiceFee modelWhat you keep (on $300/yr savings)
Rocket Money (35%)35–60% of year-1 savings + $7–14/mo Premium$195
Rocket Money (60%)35–60% of year-1 savings + $7–14/mo Premium$120
Rocket Money Premium+Waived negotiation fee, subscription only$300 minus subscription cost
Billshark40% of year-1 savings, no subscription$180
Experian BillFixerIncluded in $24.99/mo Experian Premium$300 minus $299.88/yr subscription
Verdict: use Rocket Money selectively. It earns its fee on Spectrum and Cox internet accounts where the only lever is a promotional rate, and especially via Premium+ if you have multiple bills to negotiate and the subscription cost amortizes. Skip it for wireless plans with device credits or bundled data, where feature removal is harder to detect. In either case, the DIY call below is free and takes 20 minutes. Try it first.

Part 2: The ISP retention call — exactly how to run it

The mechanics behind this call were documented in real time by Reddit user u/SubstantialSecret180 on r/Comcast in May 2026 — a minute-by-minute breakdown of a call that took an $89/month bill down to $54.99, a 38% reduction. 1 The same user confirmed the identical three-tier pattern across Spectrum, Cox, and Frontier. A separate Spectrum insider guide — posted by a former Spectrum retention employee — describes the exact same routing and discount structure from the other side of the call. 2
Here is the five-step sequence.
Step 1 — Get to the right department.
Call your ISP's main customer service line. When the automated phone system asks what you need, say "cancel my service" or a close variant ("cancel," "disconnect," "I want to cancel"). Do not say "billing," "technical support," or "lower my bill." Those keywords route you to queues with no pricing authority.
For Spectrum specifically: the retention department was renamed "Customer Solutions." If a standard agent tells you there's no such department, stay firm and ask to be transferred. If they refuse, hang up and call again. 12 Spectrum's own chatbot confirmed the routing: "In order to get the right department when you make that call, please state 'DISCONNECT' twice." 2
Step 2 — State the problem, then stop talking.
Once connected to a retention agent, use this opening: "My bill is too high and I'm considering switching providers." That's the complete sentence. Don't explain further yet. The agent will begin running diagnostics — tenure, payment history, service issues, and importantly, what competitors are available at your ZIP code. Let them run through this. The silence is working.
Step 3 — Cite a specific competitor price, not a complaint.
This is the single most important variable in the call. u/SubstantialSecret180 documented the exact moment when the call shifted: citing "AT&T Fiber is at $55 at my address for faster speeds" caused Comcast's system to reclassify the account as high churn risk and unlock a second authorization tier. Vague complaints ("my bill is too high," "I want a lower rate") consistently produce only Tier 1 offers — a 15–25% discount the agent can authorize without approval. A specific competitor price unlocks Tier 2 and sometimes Tier 3.
Before calling, spend 60 seconds finding a real competitor price for your address. Current new-customer rates as of May 2026:
  • Xfinity: 300 Mbps at $55/mo (5-year price guarantee) or $40/mo (1-year, no contract) 13
  • Spectrum: 1 Gig at $50/mo (1-year price guarantee) 14
  • AT&T Fiber: 500 Mbps at $39.99/mo, no contract, no data caps 14
  • Verizon Fios: 300 Mbps symmetric at $49.99/mo 14
Use whichever of these is actually available at your address. Retention agents verify availability by ZIP code. Citing a competitor that doesn't serve your area has no effect and may signal that you're bluffing.
Example phrase: "My rate went from $[original price] to $[current price]. I have an AT&T Fiber quote for $39.99 at my address for 500 Mbps. Is there anything you can do?"
Step 4 — Hold for 30 seconds after the first offer, then decline and ask again.
The first offer will almost always be a Tier 1 discount — typically 15–25% off, authorized without supervisor approval. In the documented Comcast call, that first offer was $69.99 (down from $89). The exact response that produced a second, better offer: "I appreciate that. But $69.99 is still above what AT&T Fiber is offering at my address. Is there anything closer to that?" 1
The agent then went on a 2-minute hold to request secondary authorization. The final offer: $54.99 for 12 months plus equipment rental fee waived for 6 months — Tier 2, 38% total reduction.
Step 5 — Confirm the offer in writing, and set a calendar reminder.
Ask the agent to send a confirmation email or confirm the new rate in the app before ending the call. When you get it, screenshot it.
The promotional rate will last 12 months. When it expires, your bill goes back to full price without notice. Set a calendar reminder 11 months from now with the note "call ISP, run retention script again." This is not a one-time fix. It is a recurring 20-minute task. As u/SubstantialSecret180 put it: "They are not going to volunteer a lower rate. But the call works. Every time. As long as you have the right data going in." 1

Three things that blow up the call:
1. Threatening to cancel when you have no alternative. ISP retention systems verify competitor availability at your exact address. In areas with no fiber competition, agents have minimal pricing authority — a 20-year Spectrum customer paying $98/month was told "go ahead" when she said she'd switch. 2 Before calling, look up whether a fiber provider actually serves your building.
2. Saying "billing" or "promotions" to the IVR. Standard customer service has almost no authority to reduce your base rate. Only the retention/Customer Solutions queue has it. 1
3. Accepting a 24-month contract for a short-term discount. Promotional rates typically expire after 12 months. A 24-month contract locks you in, but the discount may only last one year — leaving you overpaying for the second year with no leverage to re-negotiate. 1

What this week's tools save you

Applying both tools to a typical household bill stack:
ISP call (internet, Comcast/Spectrum/Cox): The documented Tier 2 outcome is $25–34/month in savings for a 12-month term. 1 2 Annual range: $300–$408 saved, zero fee.
Rocket Money on a second bill (e.g., cable or landline, where bundled features are minimal): If the service produces the same $25/month reduction and you pay the 35% fee, net savings are $195/year. At 60%, net is $120/year. Annual range: $120–$195 saved, fee already deducted.
Combined annual savings estimate: $420–$600, for a household that makes the ISP call and uses Rocket Money on one additional bill. The ISP call alone — free, repeatable every 12 months — already puts you in the top tier of what any negotiation service can reliably deliver for internet bills. The service adds value on top of that, not instead of it.

Cover image generated by AI.

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