Gem Net Pakistan

Jazz Internet Packages — All Bundles, Codes & Rates 2026

By the Gem Net editorial team · Updated Friday, June 12, 2026

Jazz internet bundles split data into two tiers — anytime and off-peak (1 AM to 9 AM) — and the per-MB price between them differs by roughly 3×. A bundle that looks cheap on the headline number may carry most of its volume in the off-peak window, which is fine for overnight backups and updates but useless if you need YouTube at 4 PM. The pages below sort every active SKU into daily, weekly, and monthly tiers with the anytime/off-peak split exposed.

Top questions answered

Which Jazz internet bundle is cheapest per GB in 2026?

The Monthly Premium pack on *117*32# at Rs. 1,100 for 50 GB total works out to Rs. 22 per GB — the lowest rate Jazz offers. Half of that 50 GB is locked to the 1 AM–9 AM window, so it's only the best value if you genuinely use overnight data.

Why does my Jazz daily internet package give me less data than advertised?

Daily Mega Plus advertises 6 GB but only 1.5 GB is anytime data — the remaining 4.5 GB is gated to 1 AM–9 AM. If you subscribe at 2 PM and try to use 6 GB before midnight, the pack runs out at 1.5 GB and you start consuming standard tariff data without warning.

Can I subscribe to a Jazz weekly internet bundle if I already have a monthly one?

Yes — Jazz allows stacking across tiers. The system consumes from your daily bucket first, then weekly, then monthly. Stacking two of the same tier (two weeklies, for example) is blocked and returns a 'package conflict' message.

The two tiers inside every Jazz data bundle

Every Jazz data bundle splits its volume into two clocks. The "anytime" pool runs 24 hours a day. The "off-peak" pool — Jazz brands it variously as Late Night or 1 AM–9 AM — is only accessible during that eight-hour window. The headline number on a Jazz pack is usually the sum of both pools, so a "6 GB Daily Mega Plus" pack is really 1.5 GB during waking hours and 4.5 GB while you sleep.

This matters because Jazz subscribers regularly assume the full headline volume is available throughout the day, then run into a silent tariff fallback once the anytime pool is exhausted. The balance enquiry doesn't visually flag the depletion of the anytime sub-pool — only that the bundle is "active."

Daily Jazz internet packages

Daily data packs serve two distinct use cases: someone with no fixed Wi-Fi at home who needs a single day of online time, and someone on a different operator who briefly swaps in a Jazz SIM for a coverage edge case. Validity is calendar-day on most SKUs, with the exception of the 3-Day pack which carries its allocation across 72 hours from activation.

BundleCodePriceData allocationValidity
Daily Browser*117*11#Rs. 17150 MB (anytime)1 day
Daily Mega Plus*117*7#Rs. 401.5 GB anytime + 4.5 GB (1 AM–9 AM) — 6 GB total1 day
Daily Social Premium*660#Rs. 22500 MB for WhatsApp / Facebook / X / Instagram1 day
3-Day Internet*114*3#Rs. 603 GB total — usable across 3 days3 days

Weekly Jazz internet packages

Weekly internet bundles are designed for the spending pattern most prepaid Pakistanis actually live with: top up once a week, consume across seven days, repeat. The Weekly Premium pack at Rs. 250 for 10 GB is the closest Jazz comes to a flat-rate weekly data plan, though the off-peak split still applies.

BundleCodePriceData allocationValidity
Weekly Premium*117*47#Rs. 2505 GB anytime + 5 GB (1 AM–9 AM) — 10 GB total7 days
Weekly Mega*117*9#Rs. 2006 GB total (3 GB anytime + 3 GB off-peak)7 days
Weekly Social*114*7#Rs. 130Unlimited WhatsApp + Facebook + 1 GB anytime7 days

Monthly Jazz internet packages

The monthly tier is where Jazz competes hardest on per-GB pricing. A monthly bundle deducts at subscription time and renews on the same calendar day each month if auto-renewal is on. The Monthly Premium at Rs. 1,100 for 50 GB is currently the lowest published per-GB rate across any Pakistani mobile data SKU.

BundleCodePriceData allocationValidity
Monthly Premium*117*32#Rs. 1,10025 GB anytime + 25 GB (1 AM–9 AM) — 50 GB total30 days
Monthly Mega*117*30#Rs. 80012 GB anytime + 12 GB off-peak — 24 GB total30 days
Monthly Internet Basic*117*77#Rs. 4806 GB anytime + 6 GB off-peak — 12 GB total30 days

Social-app and short-validity bundles

Alongside the main lineup, Jazz keeps a smaller catalogue of app-specific bundles — WhatsApp Daily, Facebook Daily, Social Premium — that carve data into named buckets per app. These work well for users whose entire mobile usage is one or two messaging apps, since they bypass the general data pool. They don't help anyone who needs browsing, maps, or email on the same SIM.

How to subscribe, check balance, and unsubscribe

Subscription is one USSD dial: the code from any of the tables above. To check what's left on the active bundle, dial *117*7*2# — the response breaks down anytime data, off-peak data, and time remaining. To stop a bundle from auto-renewing, dial *5555# and pick "Manage subscriptions," then unsubscribe the package by name.

Choosing between daily, weekly, and monthly Jazz internet

The decision logic is mostly about commitment risk. Monthly packs deliver the best per-GB pricing but require Rs. 480 to Rs. 1,100 of balance committed upfront. If you change SIMs, lose the phone, or stop using the number partway through the cycle, you forfeit the remainder. For users with stable usage and a single primary SIM, monthly is the obvious pick — the Rs. 22-per-GB rate on Monthly Premium isn't matched by any other Pakistani SKU.

For users juggling multiple SIMs or with usage that swings between weeks, weekly bundles are the safer fit: the lost-balance risk is capped at one week's spend, and the per-GB rate still undercuts daily bundles by 40 to 60 percent. Daily bundles are best treated as a top-up tool — appropriate when an active weekly or monthly pack is running low before its expiry, or for a single day on a SIM you don't normally use.

Jazz internet versus fixed-line broadband for home users

For users with a fixed home address and predictable evening usage, mobile data is rarely the right primary connection. PTCL Flash Fiber starts at around Rs. 2,100 a month for 20 Mbps unlimited; StormFibre's Typhoon 2.0 plan is Rs. 1,999 a month for 10/25 Mbps with bundled TV. Either delivers unmetered streaming, which Jazz Monthly Premium's 50 GB cap cannot match across a household with two or three active screens.

Jazz internet remains the right pick for users without a fixed address, mobile-first usage where tethering is occasional, secondary SIMs for travel or work separation, and rural areas where fibre hasn't reached. Anyone on a home fibre line should treat the Jazz data bundle as a backup for outages, not as the primary connection. Tethering a phone over Wi-Fi for two or three hours during a fibre cut consumes maybe 3 to 5 GB on average — well within a monthly bundle's headroom.

Verify before relying: Tariffs and codes here were verified against the My Jazz app in Q2 2026. Operator rates change weekly — confirm in the app or by dialling the subscription code before relying on a figure.

Further Jazz internet questions

No. Unused data lapses at the validity boundary. Even with auto-renewal on, the renewal grants a fresh allocation — the unused balance from the previous cycle is forfeited.

Jazz doesn't publish a written throttling policy, but field tests show speeds dropping noticeably on monthly bundles after roughly 80 percent of the allocation is consumed in any 24-hour window. Speed normalises the next day.

No. Domestic bundles are tied to Pakistani PLMN codes only. If you cross into international roaming, the bundle pauses and data charges fall back to the destination country's roaming tariff.

It's a low-traffic window when network capacity is largely idle. Jazz offers heavily discounted data in this window to spread load away from prime-time hours. Bundles that look generous often hide most of their allocation here.

Brand-new subscriptions take a few minutes to reflect in balance enquiries. If the zero balance persists past 15 minutes, restart the data session by toggling aeroplane mode on and off — sometimes the SIM holds an old session key that bypasses the new bundle.