If you’re looking for a cellular iPad 4, Rogers has price dropped 32GB models in both black and white in-store to $349.99. The news comes from this thread over at RedFlagDeals, where users have been able to purchase these new iPads contract-free.

Normally-priced at $699, a corporate memo indicated a price drop to $349.99 effective April 8. As for stock, right now “your mileage may vary” as odds of picking one up depend on your area and availability.
Some have been able to buy the iPad outright, while others have been charged the $15 activation fee as part of signing up for a month-to-month plan, which will be $5. So technically this iPad could cost you $369.99.
If you’re a deal hunter, this might be your chance to get a deal on a cellular iPad 4. A brand new 16GB LTE iPad 4 costs $529 new from Apple. iPad sales are starting to become common in anticipation of new models coming out this fall.
Let us know if you’re going to jump on this. I suggest using the free app TalkTo to contact multiple stores for you.
Other articles in the category: Rogers
Rogers Launches $95/50GB Unlimited Canada/USA Plan for Limited Time
Rogers has launched a limited-time promo in the form of a $95/50GB Canada and USA plan on Friday. This plan offers 5G/5G+ network access and 50GB of data at up to 1 Gbps speeds, then throttled after the data buck is consumed. You also get unlimited calling, texting and data use in Canada and the...
TekSavvy Slams Minister for Approving ‘Anti-Competitive’ Rogers-Shaw Merger
TekSavvy expressed its disappointment in the decision of Innovation Minister François-Philippe Champagne to approve the Rogers-Shaw merger and related sale of Shaw's Freedom Mobile to Quebecor's Vidéotron. The company claims that the decision disregards unlawful Rogers-Vidéotron agreements and the ongoing investigation by the Canadian Radio-television and Telecommunications Commission (CRTC) into anticompetitive wholesale agreements. TekSavvy has...
Senator Criticizes Rogers-Shaw Merger, Blames Competition Commissioner
Independent Canadian senator Colin Deacon has criticized today's approval of the Rogers-Shaw merger, saying that the conditions and penalties imposed on the deal would not be necessary if Canada's Competition Act did not favour oligopolies. He argues that the Competition Commissioner in Canada lacks the same powers as their counterparts in other G7 countries, which...