When I first heard about Nomad Internet, I was cautiously optimistic.
I live in a rural part of Arizona, just outside of Flagstaff, where traditional internet providers have always fallen short — either their signal can’t reach us, or their policies come with long-term contracts, cancellation headaches, and vague return processes. So when a friend mentioned that Nomad had a “Try Before You Buy” program, I figured I had nothing to lose.
But what truly earned my respect wasn’t just the product. It was the way Nomad handled things when I chose not to keep it. And that’s where RecycleNomad.com comes in.
Trying the Service — Risk-Free
The sign-up was straightforward. I picked a plan, received my modem, and tested the service. In my case, it worked well enough, but due to tree interference and terrain near my house, I didn’t get the consistency I was hoping for. What impressed me immediately, though, was the absence of pressure.
Nomad encourages you to try the product first. They don’t ask for long commitments or lock-ins upfront. And when I decided to cancel, the process was refreshingly different from anything I’ve experienced before with an ISP.
No Phone Calls, No Arguments — Just Action
I went to RecycleNomad.com, entered my modem’s serial number, and within seconds, I had a prepaid return label in my inbox. No upselling. No guilt trip. No waiting on hold for 45 minutes to talk to a rep.
Here’s what the cancellation and return process looked like:
- I visited the site and selected the cancel/return option.
- Input my modem serial number.
- Downloaded a prepaid shipping label.
- Dropped the modem off at my local USPS within a week.
- Billing was paused the moment the return process was initiated.
That was it. No tricks. No gotchas. Just a transparent, user-first experience.
Sustainability Meets Simplicity
Nomad’s system isn’t just about convenience. It’s also rooted in sustainability. Every modem that gets returned through RecycleNomad.com is cleaned, inspected, and reused — often sent to connect families in rural communities who might otherwise be left out of the digital economy.
I love knowing that the modem I returned didn’t just sit in a landfill. It could now be helping another family — someone in an RV, a farmer running an ag-tech solution, or a remote worker out in West Texas — get online.
In fact, Nomad’s CEO Jaden Garza said it best:
“Our modems aren’t just hardware — they’re tools for connection. Every modem that gets returned can go on to help another family, another small town, another RV traveler.”
That kind of thinking is rare in today’s internet landscape.
Not Just a Feature — A Philosophy
RecycleNomad.com isn’t an afterthought. It’s part of a broader company vision to treat people with respect at every step of their journey — even when they’re choosing to leave.
As Nomad Internet puts it:
“We’re building a modern ISP that earns trust at every step — from the first click to the final return.”
That’s not just marketing fluff. It’s something I experienced firsthand.
A Call to the Industry
I’ve dealt with big telecom providers before. Canceling with them often felt like a negotiation — one I didn’t sign up for. With Nomad and RecycleNomad.com, there’s no catch, no hidden fee, and no hard feelings. It’s a breath of fresh air — and frankly, it’s how all ISPs should operate.
If you’re someone considering Nomad, I can confidently say this:
You have nothing to lose. If it works for you, great — you’ve got a high-speed connection where most providers won’t even service. And if it doesn’t? You return the modem, no drama.
In an era where trust in tech companies is hard to come by, Nomad is quietly doing things right — and RecycleNomad.com is proof of that.
