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Text Me: Second Phone Number
TextMe, Inc.
Rating 4.3star icon
Editor's summary
Editor rating
star icon star icon star icon star icon empty star icon
4.3

One-line summary Text Me is easy to recommend if you need a reliable Wi-Fi-based second number for calls and texts, but the ads, subscription nudges, and occasional number-retention friction keep it from feeling truly carefree.

  • Installs

    10M+

  • Developer

    TextMe, Inc.

  • Category

    Social

  • Content Rating

    Everyone

  • Latest version

    3.33.17

  • Package

    com.textmeinc.textme

Screenshots
In-depth review
Text Me: Second Phone Number sits in a crowded category, but after spending real time with it, I came away thinking it succeeds for one simple reason: it does the core job better than many apps that promise the same thing. If what you want is a usable second number for texting and calling over Wi-Fi, this app gets you there quickly, and in day-to-day use that matters more than a flashy feature list. The initial setup is refreshingly straightforward. Getting into the app and claiming a number does not feel like a scavenger hunt, and that alone gives Text Me an advantage over some communication apps that bury the basics under too many prompts. Once inside, the app makes its value proposition obvious: this is for people who want a separate line, a fallback phone service, or a way to stay reachable without a traditional cellular plan. In practice, that can mean anything from keeping work and personal calls apart to turning a Wi-Fi-only phone or tablet into something more functional. In my testing, the strongest part of Text Me was how practical it felt. Text messages generally moved through without drama, and calls were good enough to make the app feel like a genuine tool rather than a novelty. Voice quality was especially solid on a stable Wi-Fi connection. That does not mean it performed like a premium carrier line in every situation, but it was clear and dependable enough that I would trust it for normal conversations and everyday coordination. That reliability is the first big strength here: the app feels useful, not experimental. The second strength is flexibility. Text Me works well for anyone who needs a second number for privacy, side projects, selling items, online sign-ups, or simply keeping their main number out of circulation. There is real value in having a separate line that is not your primary mobile identity. The app also makes sense as a safety net. If your main service is unavailable and you still have Wi-Fi, Text Me can keep you in the loop for calls, voicemails, and texts. That kind of backup utility gives the app more relevance than a disposable-number gimmick. Its third strength is that the free tier is actually usable. Too many apps in this category advertise “free” and then immediately put essential functionality behind a paywall. Text Me does lean heavily on ads and upgrade prompts, but it still allows meaningful use without forcing an immediate purchase. If you can tolerate some interruptions, you can genuinely get value from it. That said, this is not a perfectly polished experience. The most obvious weakness is advertising. The ads are not subtle, and after a while they become part of the rhythm of the app in a way that can feel cheap. If you only dip in occasionally, it is manageable. If you rely on Text Me regularly, especially for frequent calls or message checks, the interruptions start to wear on you. The app never quite lets you forget that you are on the free version. The second weakness is the pressure around subscriptions and number retention. Text Me offers useful upgrades, but there is a faint sense that your free number comes with conditions attached. If you are the kind of user who wants a truly permanent second line without thinking about maintenance, the app can feel a little high-maintenance unless you are willing to pay for that peace of mind. That does not make it deceptive, but it does mean the “free second number” pitch has practical strings attached. The third weakness is inconsistency across devices and situations. On a phone with a good connection, the app feels strongest. On tablets or in less stable network conditions, the experience can become less predictable. Incoming call handling is not always as smooth as I would like, and there are moments when the app feels more like an overlay on top of your device than a deeply integrated communication service. I also noticed that some parts of the interface lean more functional than elegant. Nothing is disastrously broken, but this is not one of those messaging apps that feels beautifully refined from top to bottom. For the right person, though, these drawbacks are acceptable. Text Me is for users who primarily need a cheap or free second number, people living on Wi-Fi, anyone separating business and personal communication, and those who want a backup option when cellular service is unavailable. It is also a good fit for budget-conscious users who can live with ads in exchange for real utility. It is not for people who want a seamless premium communications experience, hate ads on principle, or need absolute confidence that a number will remain untouched without ongoing attention. If your communication needs are mission-critical and you cannot tolerate occasional friction, you may find the app a little too compromise-heavy. My overall impression is positive. Text Me earns its place because it solves a real problem with less hassle than expected. It is not the prettiest or most frictionless app in its class, but it is practical, dependable on Wi-Fi, and genuinely helpful when you need a second number that works. That makes it easy to recommend, with the important caveat that the free experience is only pleasant if you can make peace with ads and the occasional nudge toward paying for stability.
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