Pay Bill Digi Today
A pop-up in the MyDigi app warned: “Pay by 23 May to avoid service barring.” She learned that Digi gives a 10-day grace period after the due date. After that, outgoing calls and data stop working (though you can still receive calls). If unpaid for 30 days, the line may be terminated, and you could owe an early termination fee if under contract.
Just as she finished, Mira received a text: “Digi: Your payment failed. Click here to update.” The link looked odd— digi-bill-verify.com —not the official digi.my . She deleted it. Real Digi will never ask for your TAC, credit card CVV, or password via SMS or email. Pay Bill Digi
She remembered that her uncle, who still used an old flip phone, paid at the local 7-Eleven. He would give the cashier his mobile number and cash. The cashier scanned a barcode, printed a receipt, and his service was renewed in minutes. Other options included Digi stores, automated payment kiosks at malls, and even some pharmacies. A pop-up in the MyDigi app warned: “Pay
It was a quiet Sunday evening when Mira remembered her Digi mobile postpaid bill was due the next day. A month earlier, she had missed the deadline and spent an annoying half-hour on the phone getting her service restored. This time, she decided to explore all the ways to pay—and discovered it was surprisingly simple. Just as she finished, Mira received a text:
That night, she paid her bill in under a minute. No stress. No service interruption. And she knew exactly what to do next month.
She tapped “Pay Now.” The app offered several choices: credit/debit card, online banking, or Digi’s own e-wallet, Digi Prepaid (which she didn’t use). She selected her saved Visa card, confirmed the amount, and within ten seconds, a green checkmark appeared: “Payment Successful. Your new balance is RM0.00.” The app even offered to save the receipt as a PDF.
Mira opened the MyDigi app on her phone. She logged in with her mobile number and the 6-digit PIN she had set up years ago. On the home screen, a bright red notification read: “Bill Due: RM45.80.”