French operator Bouygues Telecom has rolled out a dense mix of phone and accessory discounts, with sizeable cuts on Samsung, Google and Apple models, alongside smaller 5G handsets and even SIM‑free bargains.
Flagship phones with prices that finally look reasonable
Samsung and Google models with triple‑digit savings
The most eye‑catching part of Bouygues Telecom’s winter push targets recent high‑end devices, often locked behind hefty launch prices the rest of the year.
The Samsung Galaxy S25 FE, for instance, drops to €83 upfront when paired with Bouygues’ 200 GB plan. The minimum saving goes past €200, pulling a feature‑rich phone into a price zone usually reserved for mid‑range models.
Google’s latest is treated in a similar way. The Pixel 10 falls to €11.90 upfront with the same 200 GB plan, again with at least €200 shaved off the total. For anyone who values clean Android, fast updates and computational photography, this is a way to move to the newest generation without waiting until the Black Friday or end‑of‑year clearance cycles.
The more ambitious variants are not left out either. The Galaxy S25 Plus lands at €69.90 upfront plus €8 per month over 24 months, with a discount of at least €300 built in. On the foldable side, the Pixel 10 Pro Fold starts at €699.90 plus €8 per month, backed by a minimum €270 reduction, which remains rare for new foldable hardware.
High‑end phones like the Galaxy S25 Plus and Pixel 10 Pro Fold are seeing cuts of €270–€300, a level usually reserved for much older stock.
Budget‑minded buyers get 5G without the premium price
The campaign does not only court enthusiasts. Several entry‑level and mid‑range models slip under the psychological €50 mark at purchase, while still offering 5G and modern features.
- HONOR 400 5G: €1 with the 200 GB plan (including a €50 immediate discount).
- Xiaomi 15T: €1 upfront plus €4 per month, with at least €122 knocked off.
- OPPO Reno 14 5G: €49 with a direct €72 reduction.
These offers target users who mainly scroll social media, message, browse and watch occasional streaming, and who want a current device that will receive updates for a few years, without committing to a flagship‑level spend.
iPhone discounts are modest but still noticeable
Apple devices remain less flexible during sales, yet Bouygues Telecom still nudges prices down on recent generations.
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- iPhone 16: €89.90 upfront plus €8 per month, at least €110 off.
- iPhone 15: €347 upfront plus €8 per month, with a minimum €200 reduction.
For anyone set on iOS, every euro counts, especially so close to the launch window. These discounts soften the usual premium, making it easier to join or stay in the Apple ecosystem shortly after a new device arrives.
While Android flagships see the deepest cuts, Bouygues still trims up to €200 off recent iPhones, a rare move so soon after release.
Accessories slashed, from earbuds to kids’ watches
Half‑price add‑ons for a new setup
The sale extends beyond phones to accessories, many positioned around the 50% off mark. This matters because a new handset often goes hand in hand with protective gear or audio upgrades.
- Force Play Touch XL earbuds: €24.99 instead of €49.99.
- ECHO Rainbow GPS watch: €24.99 instead of €49.99.
- BURGA Almond Latte case for iPhone 16: €22.47 instead of €49.95.
The GPS watch will speak to parents who want location tracking for children without handing over a full‑blown smartphone. The discounted case and earbuds, on the other hand, let new iPhone and Android owners protect their purchase and improve sound on a tighter budget.
The accessory discounts make it easier to fully equip a new phone with protection, audio and kid‑friendly gear without doubling the bill.
Unbundled phones for those who refuse long contracts
Not everyone is ready to switch operator or accept a new engagement period. Bouygues Telecom also lists several phones discounted outright, sold without a plan.
- HONOR 400 Smart 5G: €127.20 (20% off).
- Samsung Galaxy A26: €202.30 (30% off).
This route suits users happy with their current SIM‑only deal, or those relying on prepaid cards. They can benefit from the sale pricing while keeping freedom to move later.
How the different offers compare at a glance
For readers trying to understand what kind of saving is on the table, here is a quick overview of some headline deals:
| Model | Type of offer | Upfront price | Monthly add‑on | Minimum discount |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Samsung Galaxy S25 FE | With 200 GB plan | €83 | Included in plan | €200+ |
| Google Pixel 10 | With 200 GB plan | €11.90 | Included in plan | €200+ |
| Galaxy S25 Plus | With 200 GB plan | €69.90 | €8 / month | €300+ |
| Pixel 10 Pro Fold | With 200 GB plan | €699.90 | €8 / month | €270+ |
| iPhone 16 | With 200 GB plan | €89.90 | €8 / month | €110+ |
| HONOR 400 Smart 5G | SIM‑free | €127.20 | None | 20% |
Who really benefits from these Bouygues Telecom deals?
Different user profiles, different strategies
A student might look at the HONOR 400 5G at €1 or the Xiaomi 15T and pair it with a big data plan, using the phone for streaming, gaming and social media on the go. A parent might choose an OPPO Reno 14 5G for a teenager, then add the discounted GPS watch for a younger child.
At the other end of the scale, tech enthusiasts could jump on the Pixel 10 Pro Fold or Galaxy S25 Plus at several hundred euros off, locking into a 24‑month period but paying far less than early adopters did at launch.
From a €1 5G starter phone to a heavily discounted foldable, the same sale tries to speak to almost every type of mobile user.
What “with plan” really means in the small print
Many of the biggest reductions are tied to the Bouygues 200 GB plan and, in some cases, a 24‑month commitment with an extra monthly device payment. That structure brings the sticker price down on day one, but it shifts part of the cost into the monthly bill.
For a realistic comparison, a buyer should add the upfront cost, the extra monthly €8 when there is one, and the price of the 200 GB plan over two years. Only then does it become clear whether a “€1 phone” actually undercuts buying the same handset outright and pairing it with a cheaper SIM‑only tariff.
A simple check: simulate both options. For instance, imagine a Pixel 10 at €11.90 with a 200 GB plan versus the same phone at full retail with a low‑cost virtual operator. Over 24 months, the cheapest route is not always the one that looks flashiest in a banner ad.
Practical tips before jumping on a Bouygues bargain
Two questions can help guide the choice. First: how much data do you actually use? A 200 GB plan is generous, but plenty of people rarely pass 30 or 50 GB. Paying for unused gigabytes just to get a bigger handset discount might not make sense.
Second: how long do you usually keep your phone? If you upgrade every year, locking in a 24‑month device payment may feel restrictive. On the other hand, if you typically keep a handset for three or four years, a two‑year engagement with a lower upfront price can match your habits quite well.
Accessories deserve the same level of scrutiny. A €25 case or pair of earbuds at half price is attractive, but only if you would have bought something similar anyway. Bundling too many add‑ons “because they are cheap” can quietly erase part of the saving achieved on the phone itself.
Run a quick two‑year cost scenario, including plan, instalments and accessories, before calling any winter deal a real win.
