Telecom Packages

Warid Internet Packages — Which One to Activate

Our Verdict

Warid Monthly Super Internet (Rs. 410, 4 GB) is the right default for everyday smartphone use. Because Warid rides on the Jazz network, you get Jazz-level 4G speeds in cities. Skip the daily bundles unless you're patching a one-day gap — their per-MB economics break against any regular user. For hotspot or heavy streaming, jump to Warid Monthly Super Plus (Rs. 1,250, 25 GB).

Top Warid internet bundles compared side-by-side

CriteriaDaily BrowserWeekly PremiumMonthly Super Internet
PriceRs. 25Rs. 145Rs. 410 Best default
Data volume100 MB3 GB4 GB
Cost per MBRs. 0.25Rs. 0.048Rs. 0.10
Validity1 day7 days30 days
4G speed capNoNoNo
FUP after volumeThrottled to ~64 kbpsThrottled to ~64 kbpsThrottled to ~64 kbps
Activation*114*11#*114*77#*114*31#

How Warid internet works after the Jazz merger

Since the 2017 acquisition, Warid internet has been delivered on the merged Jazz network — same spectrum, same towers, same core infrastructure. A Warid SIM authenticates against the Jazz core network and receives the same 4G signal as a Jazz user in the same location. The Warid brand still exists at the retail and bundle-naming level, but the engineering reality is that you're using Jazz's network. This is mostly good news: Jazz has the broadest 4G coverage among Pakistani carriers, so Warid users automatically benefit. The only minor friction is the separate activation-code namespace — Warid uses the *114* range, Jazz uses the *117* range, despite identical bundle structures.

The bundle prices and volumes you see in the Warid lineup mirror Jazz's lineup closely. Sometimes Jazz launches a new bundle first and the Warid version follows a few weeks later; sometimes promotional pricing differs by a small amount during launch windows. The activation code is always the authoritative source for the live price — dial it and the system quotes the current deduction before you confirm. Anywhere else (comparison sites, forum posts, retail signage) the price should be treated as approximate.

Warid daily internet — for one-off days

The Warid daily lineup runs from the Daily Browser at Rs. 25 (100 MB) to the Daily Premium at Rs. 38 (1 GB). The Browser at 100 MB is essentially emergency-only — that volume lasts about 20 minutes of normal modern smartphone use. The Daily Extreme at Rs. 30 for 500 MB is the most reasonable daily option, fitting a single travel day or a Wi-Fi-out day at home.

Stacking daily bundles for a full month makes no economic sense — thirty Daily Extreme activations cost Rs. 900 for 15 GB total, while the Warid Monthly Super Plus at Rs. 1,250 delivers 25 GB plus the convenience of one activation. The daily band exists for genuinely sporadic needs: a Sunday at a relative's place, an unexpected work day without broadband, a long commute one day a week.

Warid weekly internet — for the travel weeks

The Warid weekly band has three steps: Mega (Rs. 99, 1.5 GB), Premium (Rs. 145, 3 GB), and Super (Rs. 245, 6 GB). The Premium at 3 GB is the most-purchased weekly because it covers a full travel week — 430 MB per day is comfortable for video calls, browsing, and a few short videos. The Mega at 1.5 GB only stretches if you're light on cellular use during the week.

The trade-off against monthlies is direct: stacking four Weekly Premiums costs Rs. 580 for 12 GB total; the Monthly Premium at Rs. 700 gives 10 GB. The monthly wins on validity convenience but the weekly stack wins on volume slightly. The weekly bundles really suit weeks-on-weeks-off usage patterns where you have predictable cellular need only on certain weeks of the month.

Warid monthly internet — where most users belong

The Warid monthly range covers four tiers: Mini (Rs. 250, 1 GB), Super Internet (Rs. 410, 4 GB), Premium (Rs. 700, 10 GB), and Super Plus (Rs. 1,250, 25 GB). The Mini is too small for most modern usage — 1 GB lasts roughly a week of normal smartphone use, then 23 days of FUP-throttled internet. The Super Internet at Rs. 410 is the right default for someone who has broadband at home and uses cellular mostly for WhatsApp and browsing.

The Premium at Rs. 700 (10 GB) covers users whose phone handles meaningful video — daily YouTube, frequent video calls, social media scrolling that pulls auto-play video. The Super Plus at Rs. 1,250 (25 GB) is the bundle for users whose phone is their primary internet device — students between hostel and home, salespeople in the field, anyone tethering a laptop. There's no Warid-specific Mega tier in the 75 GB range; if you need that volume, the equivalent Jazz Mega exists at Rs. 2,500 and you'd need a Jazz SIM to access it.

All Warid internet packages — full lineup

PackagePriceVolumeValidityCode
Daily BrowserRs. 25100 MB1 day*114*11#
Daily ExtremeRs. 30500 MB1 day*114*70#
Daily PremiumRs. 381 GB1 day*114*7#
3-Day InternetRs. 751.5 GB3 days*114*9#
Weekly MegaRs. 991.5 GB7 days*114*47#
Weekly PremiumRs. 1453 GB7 days*114*77#
Weekly SuperRs. 2456 GB7 days*114*73#
Monthly MiniRs. 2501 GB30 days*114*32#
Monthly Super InternetRs. 4104 GB30 days*114*31#
Monthly PremiumRs. 70010 GB30 days*114*30#
Monthly Super PlusRs. 1,25025 GB30 days*114*30*2#

How to activate, check, and stop Warid internet bundles

Activation follows the standard pattern — dial the *114* code from the table, confirm at the prompt, wait for the activation SMS. For checking remaining MB and validity, dial *114*1*2# for a free SMS reply with the current data balance. The Jazz World app supports Warid numbers — sign in with your Warid number and you'll see the same dashboard interface used by Jazz users, with the same usage charts and active-bundles view.

To stop a monthly internet bundle from auto-renewing, dial *101*4# or use Jazz World's Subscriptions tab. The cancellation blocks only the next renewal; the current bundle continues to its validity end. Pakistani carriers don't refund partial unused validity on cancellation, so cancelling immediately after activation doesn't get you any money back — your bundle still runs the full 30 days from when you activated it.

FUP, hotspot, and Warid-specific practical notes

Warid applies the same Fair Usage Policy as Jazz — once your bundle volume is gone, speeds drop to roughly 64 kbps for the rest of the validity period. WhatsApp text still works; everything else slows to a crawl. There's no overage charge. Tethering to a laptop or another phone is not blocked on prepaid bundles; the data deducts the same regardless of which device consumed it.

One Warid quirk worth noting: in some areas where Jazz has invested in tower capacity recently, both Jazz and Warid users see speed improvements simultaneously. Conversely, in older or rural areas where the network hasn't been upgraded in years, both brands suffer the same slow speeds. Your Warid SIM is on whatever the Jazz network gives — there's no separate-Warid quality of service.

When to pick which Warid internet package

Pick a Daily or Weekly bundle if:
  • You have broadband or strong Wi-Fi at home and office
  • Cellular use is mostly while commuting or travelling
  • Your monthly cellular usage stays under 2 GB
Pick a Monthly bundle if:
  • Your phone is your main internet device
  • You hotspot a laptop or tablet on a regular basis
  • You'd otherwise stack four weekly Premiums (Rs. 580 vs Rs. 410)
Verify before activation: Warid bundle prices and codes track the Jazz lineup but use the *114* code namespace specifically for Warid SIMs. Verify the live price by dialling the activation code or via the Jazz World app, which works the same with Warid numbers.

Warid internet — what readers want to clarify

Does Warid still operate its own 4G network or does it ride entirely on Jazz infrastructure?

Warid runs entirely on the merged Jazz infrastructure since the 2017 integration. There's no separate Warid 4G network in 2026 — the spectrum, towers, and core network are all shared with Jazz. From an engineering perspective, your Warid SIM is authenticated against the Jazz core; the only thing 'Warid' about your connection is the brand on your SIM card and the prefix on your number. The 4G speeds you get in a given area are exactly the same as a Jazz user standing next to you would experience.

Can I use Jazz internet activation codes on my Warid SIM?

No. The SIM brand determines which code namespace works — Warid SIMs respond to *114* range Warid codes; Jazz SIMs respond to *117* range Jazz codes. The underlying network is the same, but the activation infrastructure tracks the SIM brand and routes accordingly. Trying a Jazz code on a Warid SIM typically returns an error or activates an unrelated Warid bundle. The Warid bundle list above is exactly what you need from a Warid number; the equivalent Jazz bundles cost the same and behave identically.

Why do some price comparison sites show Warid internet bundles at different prices than Jazz?

Most often, outdated data. Jazz and Warid bundle prices are aligned for the equivalent tiers (Daily Browser at Rs. 25, Monthly Super Internet at Rs. 410, Monthly Premium at Rs. 700) — both Mobilink-owned brands have synchronised pricing for years. Comparison sites that show price mismatches usually haven't updated since the 2017 merger or are quoting deprecated promotional rates that one of the brands ran separately. The activation code itself is the authoritative source — dial it and the live price displays before you confirm. Anywhere else, treat the price as approximate.

What's the future of the Warid brand — will Jazz retire it eventually?

Jazz hasn't announced a Warid retirement timeline. The two brands have coexisted for nearly a decade post-merger because retiring Warid would mean migrating roughly fifteen million 0321 numbers to the Jazz brand, which carries customer-experience and customer-retention risks. The likely path is gradual brand fade — newer marketing focuses on Jazz, Warid retail stock decreases, eventually new SIMs may stop being issued, and at some far-future point the 0321 prefix gets quietly migrated. None of this affects current Warid users' service or numbers in any near-term sense.

Do Warid internet bundles automatically benefit from Jazz's 4G network upgrades?

Yes. Because Warid runs on Jazz infrastructure, any network improvement Jazz makes — new tower installations, capacity upgrades in dense areas, 4G-to-5G future rollouts when those happen — directly improves Warid users' experience. There's no separate Warid infrastructure that needs its own upgrade cycle. The same is true in reverse: if a Jazz tower has congestion at 8pm, Warid users in that area experience the same congestion. The two brands share the network's strengths and weaknesses equally.

Are there any Warid-exclusive bundles that aren't available on Jazz?

No exclusive bundles in 2026. Every Warid bundle has a Jazz equivalent and vice versa. Historically, in the early post-merger years, Warid kept a few legacy promotional bundles that Jazz didn't offer, but those have all been either retired or replicated on the Jazz side. For a user choosing between buying a new Warid SIM or a new Jazz SIM, there's no bundle-exclusivity reason to prefer one. The choice comes down to personal preference for the brand identity and the 0321 prefix versus the 0300-range Jazz prefixes.