Telenor Internet Packages — All Bundles, Codes & Rates 2026
Telenor packages its data differently from Jazz: the headline bundles are mostly anytime data rather than half-locked to an off-peak window, which removes the silent-depletion problem Jazz users complain about. The trade-off is per-GB pricing — Telenor's anytime tier costs more per GB than Jazz's combined two-tier pricing, but every megabyte is usable at any time of day. The full lineup below covers daily, weekly, monthly, and social-app variants.
Does Telenor split its internet bundles into anytime and off-peak like Jazz does?
Most Telenor bundles run as pure anytime data, with no off-peak sub-pool. A few packs — Weekly Internet and Monthly Light specifically — include a late-night (1–9 AM) allocation alongside anytime data, which is clearly marked on the subscription confirmation. The default lineup is anytime-only.
Which Telenor data bundle gives the lowest cost per GB in 2026?
The Monthly 4G+ Premium at Rs. 1,250 for 50 GB anytime works out to Rs. 25 per GB — Telenor's cheapest published rate. It also throws in a 10 GB weekly YouTube allocation outside the main pool, which effectively pushes the per-GB rate below Rs. 20 if you watch even a moderate amount of video.
Will Telenor 5G arrive on existing Talkshawk SIMs without an upgrade?
Telenor has run limited 5G trials in Islamabad and Lahore during 2025 and 2026, but no commercial 5G launch has happened yet. Existing Talkshawk SIMs are 4G-only on the current network; a future 5G rollout would require either a SIM swap or a soft-OTA upgrade depending on how Telenor structures the launch.
How Telenor structures its data bundles in 2026
Telenor's data pricing philosophy is closer to a flat-rate "use it whenever" model than Jazz's two-tier anytime-versus-off-peak design. Most Telenor bundles advertise their headline GB as anytime data, with late-night allocations only showing up on a handful of SKUs. The benefit for users is clarity — the bundle does what it says on the headline number. The cost is that per-GB pricing is roughly 15–25 percent higher than Jazz at equivalent tiers.
The bundle naming follows a consistent shape: "Daily/Weekly/Monthly + Light/Mega/Internet/4G+" where Light is the smallest tier, Mega is the high-allocation tier, and 4G+ is the premium tier with extras like YouTube-specific pools. Once you see this pattern, the lineup parses quickly even without the price list in front of you.
The Telenor daily data lineup
Daily bundles cover the bursty use case: someone whose primary connection is home Wi-Fi but who occasionally needs phone data on a commute, a tutor visiting a student's home for two hours, or anyone whose main SIM is a different operator and Telenor is their secondary. The Daily Light at Rs. 11 for 150 MB is the budget pick; the Daily 4G+ at Rs. 22 for 2 GB is the realistic full-day option for active users.
| Bundle | Code | Price | Data allocation | Validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daily Light Internet | *5*250# | Rs. 11 | 150 MB | 1 day |
| Daily 4G+ Bundle | *5*350# | Rs. 22 | 1 GB anytime + 1 GB social-app pool | 1 day |
| Daily WhatsApp+ | *5*150# | Rs. 12 | Unlimited WhatsApp + 75 MB anytime | 1 day |
| 3-Day Internet | *5*375# | Rs. 55 | 2.5 GB anytime | 3 days |
Weekly Telenor data plans for the standard top-up cycle
The weekly tier is where Telenor's pricing positioning makes the most sense. The Weekly Mega Data at Rs. 240 delivers 10 GB anytime — comparable to Jazz Weekly Premium's split allocation but with every GB usable during waking hours. For users with predictable weekly usage who don't want to think about an off-peak window, this is the cleanest pick in the market.
| Bundle | Code | Price | Data allocation | Validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Weekly Internet | *5*450# | Rs. 175 | 4 GB anytime + 4 GB late-night (1–9 AM) | 7 days |
| Weekly Mega Data | *5*470# | Rs. 240 | 10 GB anytime | 7 days |
| Weekly Social Pack | *5*460# | Rs. 120 | 500 MB anytime + unlimited WhatsApp/FB | 7 days |
Monthly Telenor 4G plans and Premium tiers
Monthly bundles get the lowest per-GB pricing in the lineup and start to compete with home broadband for SIM-only users. The Monthly 4G+ Premium's separate YouTube pool is the most interesting design choice across any Pakistani mobile data SKU — it carves out video streaming from the main allocation, so a heavy YouTube viewer doesn't blow through the main bundle in the first ten days.
| Bundle | Code | Price | Data allocation | Validity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monthly Light | *5*550# | Rs. 540 | 8 GB anytime + 8 GB late-night | 30 days |
| Monthly Mega Data | *5*570# | Rs. 950 | 30 GB anytime + 10 GB late-night | 30 days |
| Monthly 4G+ Premium | *5*600# | Rs. 1,250 | 50 GB anytime + free YouTube cap (10 GB/wk) | 30 days |
App-specific Telenor bundles for messaging-only users
The Daily WhatsApp+ and Weekly Social Pack target users whose phone usage is dominated by one or two apps. For someone who spends 90 percent of their connected time on WhatsApp and the remaining 10 percent on browsing news headlines, Daily WhatsApp+ at Rs. 12 is half the price of the equivalent general bundle. The trade-off is that any non-listed app — Maps, ride apps, banking — consumes from the small general allocation attached to the pack.
Activating bundles and checking what is left
Subscribing is one USSD dial from the tables above, or through the *345# menu if you prefer to browse first. To check what's left on the active data bundle, dial *222*2# — the response itemises anytime data, late-night data, time remaining, and any app-specific pools. The My Telenor app shows the same data in a cleaner view, plus a usage chart for the past seven days that's useful for spotting unusually heavy days.
Where Telenor data beats Jazz at the same price point
At the Rs. 200–250 weekly price point, Telenor delivers more usable GB because its allocation is anytime rather than split. Jazz Weekly Premium's 10 GB looks bigger on paper than Telenor Weekly Mega's 10 GB, but Jazz's figure is 5 GB anytime + 5 GB off-peak. For anyone whose waking-hours usage exceeds 5 GB per week, Telenor's flat 10 GB anytime is the better fit.
The reverse holds at the monthly bottom end. Jazz Monthly Internet Basic at Rs. 480 includes 12 GB total versus Telenor Monthly Light's 16 GB at Rs. 540 — Telenor wins on volume but loses on price per GB. The decision usually comes down to which network has stronger coverage at your home address and primary work location.
The coverage question matters more than per-rupee math for most users. A bundle that delivers 4G to your home and 3G fallback at work is worse than a slightly more expensive bundle that holds 4G across both locations. The pragmatic test is to borrow a Telenor SIM for a day, walk through your usual routes, and check whether the indicator drops below 4G at any point — that single day of testing settles the choice more reliably than any per-GB comparison table.
Other Telenor internet questions
Telenor falls back to the default tariff — roughly Rs. 5 per MB on standard prepaid — without notifying you. The bundle shows as 'active' in *222*2# even after the data is exhausted, which catches many users out. Check remaining allocation rather than active status if you want to know whether you're still inside the bundle.
Hotspot tethering is allowed and consumes from the same bundle as on-device usage. Direct data gifting from your Telenor allocation to another Telenor number isn't supported — only balance can be transferred via *345*4#. The recipient subscribes to their own bundle using the transferred amount.
Telenor doesn't publish a written throttling policy and doesn't have a usage-based fair-use rule comparable to wired ISPs. Speeds vary by tower congestion in your area, particularly evening 7–11 PM in dense urban zones, but the variation is capacity-related rather than policy-driven.
Not at the per-GB headline rate — Jazz Monthly Premium at Rs. 22 per GB still leads on raw price. Telenor wins on usability because the data is mostly anytime rather than half-locked to 1–9 AM. For users who don't use overnight data, Telenor effectively delivers more usable GB per rupee even at a higher headline rate.
Telenor's 4G coverage is densest in cities and along motorways; rural towers often run dual-band 3G and 4G, but capacity at the 4G band saturates during peak hours and handsets fall back to 3G. The handset reconnects to 4G automatically once capacity frees up — no manual SIM intervention is needed.