Jazz call packages run from one-day unlimited bundles to monthly hybrids that bolt on data and SMS, with prices starting around Rs. 15 a day. The catch is that Jazz sells more than a dozen overlapping voice offers at any moment, and the wrong pick quietly eats your balance through auto-renewal.
You activated a Jazz bundle for 'unlimited' calls, the call dropped at minute six anyway, and the next morning another Rs. 16 disappeared because the bundle renewed itself at midnight.
Where Jazz voice bundles catch people out
Most daily bundles are on-net only — calls to Telenor, Ufone or Zong numbers bill at the base rate even while the bundle is active.
'Unlimited' carries a fair-usage cap, and a per-call setup fee (the call connection charge) applies on many offers, so short calls cost disproportionately more.
Daily offers renew automatically at midnight unless you unsubscribe — the single biggest source of mystery balance drain on Jazz.
Match the bundle to who you actually call. City-bound Jazz-to-Jazz callers want Apna Shehar; mixed-network callers need a hybrid with off-net minutes like Haftawar All Rounder or Monthly Hybrid. The full comparison is below, with the renewal traps flagged.
Every voice bundle on the menu, side by side
Every current mainstream voice offer, ordered by validity. On-net means Jazz and Warid numbers; off-net is every other Pakistani network.
| Package | On-net | Off-net | Extras | Validity | Activate | Price* |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Jazz Day Bundle | Unlimited (FUP) | — | — | 1 day (till midnight) | *340# | ≈ Rs. 16 |
| Apna Shehar | Unlimited in your city | — | — | 1 day | *229# | ≈ Rs. 15 |
| Haftawar All Rounder | 1,000 min | 50 min | SMS + data | 7 days | *747# | ≈ Rs. 185 |
| Weekly Super Duper | 1,500 min | 60 min | 1,500 SMS + data | 7 days | *706# | ≈ Rs. 270 |
| Monthly Hybrid | 10,000 min | 150 min | SMS + data | 30 days | *430# | ≈ Rs. 900 |
| Monthly Super Duper | 3,000 min | 150 min | 3,000 SMS + data | 30 days | *707# | ≈ Rs. 1,100 |
Base prices only — taxes and yearly budget revisions move them. Double-check the day’s price in Jazz World or at jazz.com.pk before subscribing.
Daily offers: cheap, but watch the midnight reset
The Day Bundle and Apna Shehar both expire at midnight, not 24 hours after activation. Subscribe at 9 pm and you've bought three hours. They suit a specific person: someone making a burst of Jazz-to-Jazz calls during the day — coordinating an event, chasing a delivery, running a small shop. For anything habitual, the daily route costs more per week than Haftawar All Rounder while giving less.
Apna Shehar deserves one extra caution. It locks to the city where your SIM is registered for the offer, so the unlimited minutes stop applying the moment you travel. People discover this on the motorway when the balance starts draining at base rate mid-conversation.
The weekly sweet spot for most callers
Weekly Super Duper is the bundle Jazz itself pushes hardest, and for once the marketing matches the math: 1,500 on-net minutes works out to over three hours of calling a day, the 60 off-net minutes absorb the odd call to a Ufone rishtedar, and the bundled SMS and data mean you're not stacking three subscriptions. Haftawar All Rounder is its lighter sibling — two-thirds the price, two-thirds the allowances.
The off-net pool is the number to check against your own habits. Sixty minutes a week is under nine minutes a day. If your family group chat lives on Telenor numbers, no Jazz voice bundle fixes that economically — a WhatsApp calling habit over a data bundle does.
Monthly hybrids for the heavy user
Monthly Hybrid's 10,000 on-net minutes is functionally unlimited — that's five and a half hours of talk time every single day. You're really paying for the convenience of one renewal a month and the 150 off-net minutes. Monthly Super Duper trades raw minutes for bigger SMS and data buckets. Pick by which resource you actually exhaust; nobody runs out of both.
Turning bundles on and off
Dial the activation code from the table — for example *747# for Haftawar All Rounder — and confirm with 1 when the menu prompts.
Check what's active any time in the Jazz World app under Manage Packages; the app also shows remaining minutes, which the USSD confirmations often omit.
To stop a daily offer from renewing, open the same package in Jazz World and tap Unsubscribe, or re-dial its code and choose the unsubscribe option from the menu.
Give cancellations a few minutes before midnight — unsubscribe requests sent at 11:59 pm regularly process after the renewal has already billed.
Keeping your balance intact
Load through JazzCash instead of scratch cards — recharges land instantly and you skip the shop's Rs. 5 'service' markup.
Audit your subscriptions monthly: dial *444# or check Jazz World, and kill anything you don't recognise. Old promotional subscriptions love to linger.
If most of your talking happens on WhatsApp anyway, a Jazz data bundle plus the dedicated WhatsApp offers usually beats any voice package on price.
Prepaid balance vanishing with no bundle active? You're paying base rate plus call setup charges — practically any bundle in the table is cheaper after the third call of the day.
Text more than you talk? The Jazz SMS bundles start under Rs. 10 a day and most include WhatsApp data.
The per-minute math Jazz hopes you skip
Divide and the menu reorders itself. Haftawar All Rounder's 1,000 on-net minutes at roughly Rs. 185 is about 18 paisa a minute; Weekly Super Duper lands near the same per-minute cost while adding a real SMS pool; the Day Bundle, if you actually talk an hour, beats both — but only on days you genuinely use it. Base rate without any bundle sits orders of magnitude higher once the call setup charge is counted, which is why 'I'll just pay as I go' is the most expensive plan Jazz sells.
Off-net minutes deserve their own arithmetic because they're the scarce resource. Fifty off-net minutes inside a Rs. 185 weekly bundle effectively prices cross-network talk at several rupees a minute once you treat the on-net pool as the cheap filler it is. Households split across networks should price a month of their real call log, not the headline minutes, before picking a tier.
Prepaid versus postpaid is the other fork people skip past. Jazz postpaid plans bundle minutes at rates that undercut prepaid hybrids for anyone spending past roughly Rs. 1,000 a month — the trade is a CNIC-verified contract, a monthly invoice, and losing the ability to simply walk away. For a business number that takes calls all day, postpaid usually wins; for everyone else, prepaid's flexibility is worth the small premium.
Regional and time-boxed voice offers
Beyond the national menu, Jazz runs geography-locked offers — province bundles for Sindh and KP have appeared for years, priced under the national equivalents for on-net calling within the region. They surface in Jazz World only on SIMs registered in qualifying areas, which is why your Karachi cousin swears by a bundle your Lahore menu has never shown. If you live and call within one province, it's worth scrolling the app's full list rather than stopping at the promoted tiles.
Night and off-peak voice offers also rotate through the lineup, selling unlimited late-hour calling for a fraction of day rates. They're aimed at exactly who you'd guess, and they work as advertised — just mind that the qualifying window is enforced to the minute, and a call that begins inside the window but runs long can bill its tail at base rate depending on the offer's terms.
Before you dial anything
One last sequencing tip: activate the bundle before the first call of the day, not after the third. Jazz bills each pre-bundle call at base rate plus setup charge, and people routinely spend a bundle's worth of balance 'deciding' whether they need one. Pick your tier from the table, set a renewal reminder if it's a weekly, and let the menu stop being a daily decision.
And if this page's prices have drifted by the time you read it — they will — the structure won't have: dailies for bursts, Haftawar for routine, hybrids for households. Match the shape first, confirm the rupees in the app second.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. Warid runs on the Jazz network since the merger, so every code in the table above activates the same bundle on a Warid SIM, billed against the same balance.
Three usual suspects: the call went off-net while your bundle was on-net only, a call setup charge applied per call, or the minutes were consumed and the call silently continued at base rate. The Jazz World usage log shows which one hit you.
Fair usage policy — a hidden ceiling, typically a few hundred minutes, after which 'unlimited' throttles or bills normally. Ordinary callers never reach it; people running a phone-as-PCO operation do.
You can subscribe to more than one, and Jazz will happily bill both. Minutes deduct from the bundle the system prioritises, which isn't always the cheaper one — stacking voice bundles almost never pays off.
The Jazz World app shows live remaining minutes, SMS and data per package. By USSD, the status option inside the bundle's own activation code menu reports leftovers, though the format varies by offer.