Dish has officially completed the acquisition of T-Mobile’s mandatory sale from its various prepaid carriers, now all under the Boost Mobile umbrella, valued at $ 1.4 billion. With the new property there are immediate changes, such as a modified logo and new rate plans in effect tomorrow.

Boost will drop from three plans to two. One is called “$ hrink-It!”, Which provides 15GB of data at a starting rate of $ 45 per month before dropping to $ 40 after three on-time payments and then to $ 35 after six – the company offered a Similar contraction scheme through July 2014. The other plan allocates 10 GB of data with unlimited calls and text messages for $ 35 per month.

As it stands today, there is a $ 35 rate plan that includes 3GB of high-speed data, unlimited low-speed data, as well as calls and text messages, a 480p limit on video streaming, music streaming to zero speed, 12 GB of high-speed mobile access point and a free 6-month subscription to TIDAL. The $ 50 tier overrides the high-speed data limit, while the $ 60 plan increases the access point allocation to 30GB and the video streaming limit to 1080p.

We are working to get more details on the new Boost plans and will update this story when we have more information.

For the new $ 35 plan, titled “Everything You Need,” 10GB data allocation is limited: Low-speed data is not provided. At the $ hrink-It! plan, customers can achieve each discount with non-consecutive punctual payments. After 15GB on LTE, users can pay a surplus rate of $ 5 per gigabyte to retain standard speeds or otherwise be accelerated to 2G levels. In both cases, the use of the mobile access point is included and based on the monthly allowance.

Dish seems to be offering the new plans with the old ones if the website is worth it. That means the existing $ 35 plan with unlimited LTE 3GB and low-speed data remains in play.

The fine print of the new plans gives the impression that they are only introductory promotions and will not exist for long.

Since the Sprint and T-Mobile merger, Boost Mobile customers with compatible phones have been able to natively use combined cellular networks for service. New customers will now be able to bring their own suitable phone to use with Boost.

Dish is also touting its progress in sourcing vendors for its independent 5G network, having selected Altiostar, Fujitsu, and Mavenir so far. President Charlie Ergen told investors in a profit call that he hopes to have an online market by the end of the year.

The acquisition includes subscribers to Boost Mobile, Virgin Mobile and Sprint’s former prepaid division.