Andrew Bonwick
Vice President of Product Development at Relm Insurance
Madhav Sheth
CEO of Ai+ Smartphone
Stephen Rose
CEO Render Networks

Yesterday, Reliance Jio announced that it would be charging voice calls to other networks at six paise per minute. By charging voice calls, Jio is delivering 1GB of data at no extra cost for every Rs 10 spent on voice calls. The company also came out with new IUC Top-Up vouchers which customers will have to recharge on top of the existing prepaid tariff plans. Yesterday, we reported that Jio has launched four IUC Top-Up vouchers to the prepaid users, but we can now confirm that there are a total of six IUC vouchers, including the higher-priced Rs 500 and Rs 1,000. But the biggest question in every Jio customer’s mind is: how does these IUC recharge work? Well, Jio has listed seven variants of its prepaid plans and removed the hassle of performing a separate recharge of IUC Top-Ups. If that sounds confusing, well, continue reading to know more details.

Jio IUC Top-Ups: How Do They Work?
So in total, Reliance Jio now has a total of six IUC Top-Ups for its prepaid users and they are Rs 10, Rs 20, Rs 50, Rs 100, Rs 500 and Rs 1,000. Every Jio prepaid customer will have to perform these Top-Up recharges on top of the unlimited combo prepaid plans to make voice calls to other operators like Airtel, Vodafone Idea and BSNL. It seems like Jio is bundling these IUC Top-Ups alongside the prepaid plans itself. For example, the Rs 1,699 yearly prepaid plan from Reliance Jio now comes in a total of seven variants- the standard one with 1.5GB data per day, unlimited voice calling and 100 SMSes per day, followed by six variants with different IUC Top-Ups bundled. If a customer wants to choose the IUC Rs 100 Top-Up, then the company will charge Rs 1,699+Rs 100, providing benefits of 365GB data, unlimited voice calls within Jio network, 1,362 IUC minutes, 100 SMSes per day and 10GB of extra data for the Top-Up voucher. Similarly, Jio prepaid users can choose other IUC Top-Up vouchers as well if they think their outgoing voice calls to other networks is high.