Featured articles
Travel better with confident connectivity. The Simology Blog delivers quick guides, comparisons, and field-tested tips for eSIMs in 200+ destinations—so you can get online in minutes and enjoy the journey.
Business Travel Connectivity Playbook (2025): Best eSIMs, Hotspot & VPN
Planning trips is hard enough without worrying about connectivity. This playbook gives travelling professionals and travel managers a clear, practical path to fast, secure mobile data on every trip. You’ll learn how to choose the best eSIM for business travel by itinerary (single-country vs regional), how to keep laptops online via tethering without draining your phone, and how to lock down security with a VPN—all while keeping expenses tidy. We also cover multi‑network reliability, so your phone latches onto the strongest local carrier, not just the first one it finds. Real-world tips, checklists, and quick fixes are included to reduce day-one friction at the airport or hotel. Whether you’re hopping between New York, Paris, and Barcelona or rotating across US cities, this guide shows you exactly which plans to pick, how to activate them in minutes, and how to avoid surprise costs—all in plain English, traveller-first.Why eSIM beats roaming for business travel in 2025Predictable costs: Local eSIM data often costs a fraction of traditional roaming day passes. Regional eSIMs unlock even better value per GB for multi‑stop itineraries.Multi‑network reliability: Quality eSIMs can access multiple local carrier networks, letting you manually switch to the strongest signal if reception drops.Instant, remote setup: Add an eSIM by scanning a QR code—no physical SIM swap. Managers can provision profiles centrally and ship nothing.Dual-line convenience: Keep your primary number active for calls/SMS while running data over the eSIM.Security control: Pair with a corporate VPN and MDM policies for consistent protection across regions.If you manage a travelling team, centralise procurement, policy controls, and billing with Simology’s business tooling via For Business.How to choose the best esim for business travelUse this quick decision framework before every trip:1) Where are you going? - One country, one city: Choose a country eSIM. Examples: Esim United States, Esim France, Esim Italy, Esim Spain. - Several neighbouring countries: Pick a regional eSIM for simpler management and lower per‑GB cost. For Europe, see Esim Western Europe. For transborder North American circuits, see Esim North America. - Not sure about coverage? Browse by country or region in Destinations.2) How long and how heavy is your usage? - Light (email, chat, maps): 3–5 GB per week. - Standard (video calls, cloud docs): 8–15 GB per week. - Heavy (frequent HD calls, large uploads): 20–40 GB per week.3) Performance needs - 5G vs 4G LTE: If you present or transfer large files, 5G helps—especially in urban centres. If coverage is spotty, 4G LTE with good multi‑network access can be more stable. - Hotspot use: Confirm hotspot is allowed; most data eSIMs support tethering.4) Organisation requirements - Central billing, spend caps, and provisioning? Use For Business. - Partnerships/resellers? Explore the Simology Partner Hub.Frequent-flyer plan picks (by itinerary)North America routes (US/Canada/Mexico)Best fit: Esim North AmericaWhy: Seamless cross-border data, single profile, fewer mid‑trip switches, strong networks in major business hubs.When to go single-country: If you’re US‑only for the week, Esim United States can be more cost‑efficient at lower data volumes.Western Europe multi‑stop (e.g., Paris–Milan–Barcelona)Best fit: Esim Western EuropeWhy: Pan‑country coverage under one plan reduces admin, avoids mid‑trip downtime, and often delivers better value per GB across multiple borders.Single-country alternatives:France: Esim FranceItaly: Esim ItalySpain: Esim SpainTransatlantic shuttles (US–EU return trips)Best fit: Pair the region you spend the most data in (e.g., Esim North America) with a European regional plan like Esim Western Europe for the EU leg. Keep both installed and toggle the active data line as you land.Pro tips - If your schedule changes often, choose plans that allow top‑ups rather than locked bundles. - For quarterly repeats, keep regional eSIMs installed; many remain dormant without charges until you add data again.Pre‑trip setup checklist (10 minutes)Confirm device compatibility and unlock status.Update iOS/Android to the latest version.Purchase the right plan(s) by itinerary: country vs regional. Use Destinations to double‑check coverage.Add the eSIM: scan QR or install via app. Label it by region (e.g., “EU Data”).Set the eSIM as your default data line; keep your primary SIM for calls/SMS.Turn off data roaming on your primary SIM to avoid bill shock.Check APN settings are auto‑configured; note them if you need to enter manually.Test before departure: briefly enable the eSIM to confirm registration (where supported).Enable hotspot and verify your laptop connects; set a strong password.Install/verify your corporate VPN app; enable kill switch and auto‑connect.Configure OS data-saver modes and disable heavy cloud backups on mobile data.Set data usage alerts (e.g., at 80% of your allowance).For teams: set budgets, assign profiles, and centralise receipts via For Business.On‑arrival steps (5 minutes)1) Turn off airplane mode; ensure your primary SIM’s data roaming remains off. 2) Enable the eSIM data line; allow roaming on the eSIM. 3) If data doesn’t start, manually select a different local network (multi‑network plans allow this). 4) Verify APN settings match the eSIM’s instructions. 5) Run a quick speed test. If speeds are poor, try another partner network. 6) Connect your laptop via hotspot (5 GHz band if available) and launch your VPN. 7) Set a reminder to check usage mid‑trip and top up if needed.Laptop tethering and VPN best practicesHotspot without headaches - Prefer 5 GHz hotspot for faster, more stable connections; fall back to 2.4 GHz in crowded RF environments. - Use a unique SSID and a strong WPA2/WPA3 password; avoid “Auto Join” on shared devices. - Limit connected devices to those you need; disconnect tablets after meetings. - Keep your phone on power when tethering; hotspots drain batteries quickly. - For all‑day workshops or teams, consider splitting between two phones or using a dedicated travel router fed by your phone via USB tethering.VPN essentials for travellers - Always-on VPN: Enable auto‑connect on untrusted networks (hotel, airport). - Protocols: WireGuard or IKEv2 are reliable and efficient on mobile networks. - Kill switch: Prevents data leaking if the VPN drops. - Split tunnelling: Route corporate apps via VPN while keeping video calls local if policy permits—reduces latency. - Beat captive portals: Connect and pass the hotel’s login page before enabling the VPN, or use your hotspot to bypass captive portals for sensitive work.Reliability: multi‑network and smart fallbackPick eSIMs with access to multiple carriers in‑country. If one network degrades in a conference venue, switch to another.Keep two profiles installed for high‑stakes trips (e.g., a country eSIM plus a regional backup). Toggle as needed.Use Destinations to check country‑specific notes on networks, 5G availability, and any APN nuances.Store QR codes or install instructions offline in your password manager in case hotel Wi‑Fi is down.Cost control and expense-friendly tipsRight-size your data - Week in one country: choose a country plan sized to your workload. - Multi‑country fortnight: regional plan with a bigger allowance usually wins on cost per GB. - Returning often? Keep the eSIM profile and top up data for each trip—no shipping, no activation lag.Reduce data waste - Disable automatic cloud photo/video backups on mobile data. - Download decks, maps, and media offline before flights. - Turn off auto‑updates; schedule them for hotel Wi‑Fi. - In conferencing apps, cap video at 720p when mobile.Make finance happy - Centralise purchasing, budgets, and invoices via For Business. - Standardise plan types by route (e.g., “EU 10 GB” for 3‑day trips) to simplify approvals. - For agencies and MSPs handling multiple clients, streamline provisioning and commercial terms through the Partner Hub.Security and compliance in the fieldBYOD vs corporate: Apply MDM profiles to enforce VPN, PIN/biometric, and remote wipe.SIM protection: Use device PIN and biometric; enable Find My/Find Device.App hygiene: Remove unneeded apps with background data access before travel.Public Wi‑Fi caution: Prefer your own hotspot; if you must use hotel Wi‑Fi, run your VPN with a kill switch.Quick troubleshootingNo data on arrival? - Ensure the eSIM is the active data line and data roaming is on (for the eSIM only). - Toggle airplane mode off/on; then try manual network selection. - Check APN; enter the one provided if not auto-filled. - Restart the device. Test again. Try switching to another partner network.Slow speeds? - Move away from congested areas (conference halls can be saturated). - Switch from 5G to 4G LTE or vice versa; sometimes LTE is more consistent indoors. - Try another available network if your plan supports multi‑network access.Hotspot won’t work? - Confirm the plan allows tethering; re‑set the hotspot password; try 2.4 GHz if older laptops struggle with 5 GHz. - USB tether for maximum stability and to charge simultaneously.FAQ1) What’s the best esim for business travel if I visit several countries in a week? - Choose a regional plan for simplicity and value. For Europe, see Esim Western Europe. For cross‑border trips in the US/Canada/Mexico corridor, use Esim North America.2) Can I use my eSIM for laptop tethering? - In most cases, yes. Hotspot/tethering is widely supported on data eSIMs. Enable personal hotspot on your phone, set a strong password, and keep the device charged.3) How much data do I need for a typical week of meetings? - Light workflows: 3–5 GB. Moderate with daily calls: 8–15 GB. Heavy video conferencing and large file syncs: 20–40 GB. If in doubt, pick a slightly larger plan and set usage alerts.4) Will I keep my usual phone number for calls and WhatsApp? - Yes. Keep your primary SIM active for calls/SMS/WhatsApp identity, and set the eSIM as your data line. Most travel eSIMs are data‑only.5) Do eSIMs support multiple networks and 5G? - Many do. Multi‑network access lets you switch carriers for better coverage. 5G is available in most major cities, with 4G LTE fallback elsewhere. Check specifics by country via Destinations.6) What if my phone doesn’t support eSIM? - Consider a travel Wi‑Fi router or a local physical SIM. For teams with mixed devices, centralise planning and provisioning through For Business.Next stepBuild your team’s travel connectivity plan now. Compare regional and country eSIMs and set up centralised provisioning and billing via For Business.
EU Roam Like at Home (2025): Fair‑Use Data Limits & Surcharges Explained
Roam Like at Home (RLAH) lets you use your domestic mobile plan across the EU/EEA at your home rates. But there’s a catch many travellers miss: fair‑use policy (FUP) limits for data, and small surcharges once you go over. In 2025, the EU’s cost caps change again, which nudges your minimum roaming data allowance up if your provider applies a FUP cap. This guide gives you a plain‑English calculator you can actually use, realistic examples for light/standard/heavy users, and a checklist to avoid bill shock. We also link straight to the official EU rules, and we update this page (with a banner) whenever the numbers change.If your trip includes non‑EU stopovers like Switzerland, the UK, Andorra or Monaco, your RLAH rights don’t apply there. See where your plan or an eSIM makes more sense on our live country pages: Destinations. If you need simple, borderless cover across multiple EU countries, a regional eSIM such as Esim Western Europe keeps costs predictable.Where RLAH applies in 2025RLAH covers EU member states plus Iceland, Liechtenstein and Norway. It also includes EU outermost regions such as the Canary Islands, Madeira/Azores, and French overseas departments (e.g., Guadeloupe, Réunion, Martinique, French Guiana, Mayotte, Saint‑Martin FR).It does not automatically cover: - Switzerland, the UK, Andorra, Monaco, San Marino or the Channel Islands/Isle of Man - Microstates not part of the EU/EEASome networks voluntarily include nearby non‑EU places in “Europe” bundles—check your operator. If your route is mixed‑region, consider an eSIM covering the gaps. For example: - Crossing the Schengen belt? Esim Western Europe - US trip before/after the EU? Esim United States or Esim North America - Planning France, Italy, Spain city‑hops? See Esim France, Esim Italy and Esim SpainFor the latest official scope and rights, consult the European Commission’s page: https://commission.europa.eu/consumer-protection/telecoms/roaming_enThe 2025 fair‑use rule changes in one minuteWholesale data cap falls to €1.30/GB (ex VAT) from 1 January 2025.That number matters because operators use it to calculate the minimum roaming data allowance on unlimited/very‑cheap bundles.If you exceed your fair‑use allowance (or are flagged for long‑term roaming), providers can add small surcharges, capped at EU‑regulated rates.The 2025 surcharge caps (maximums)These are the most your operator can add on top of your normal domestic rate if a fair‑use cap kicks in. All are ex VAT; local VAT is added on your bill. - Data: up to €1.30 per GB - Voice calls: up to €0.022 per minute (outgoing while roaming) - SMS: up to €0.004 per message (outgoing while roaming)Incoming calls while roaming in the EU should follow your domestic reception conditions (typically free).Plain‑English calculator: your minimum EU roaming data under FUPUse this if: - Your domestic plan is unlimited, or - Your plan is very cheap per GB and your operator applies a fair‑use cap while roamingStep‑by‑step: 1) Find your monthly bundle price without VAT- If your bill shows €24 with 20% VAT, the ex‑VAT price is €24 / 1.20 = €20.2) Apply the 2025 formula- Minimum roaming data (GB) = 2 × (Monthly ex‑VAT price) ÷ 1.303) Round down to a sensible whole number (operators often do).Quick examples (2025): - €10 ex VAT plan: 2 × 10 ÷ 1.30 ≈ 15.3 GB - €15 ex VAT plan: 2 × 15 ÷ 1.30 ≈ 23.0 GB - €20 ex VAT plan: 2 × 20 ÷ 1.30 ≈ 30.7 GB - €30 ex VAT plan: 2 × 30 ÷ 1.30 ≈ 46.1 GBImportant: - This calculator estimates the minimum data your operator must allow if they apply an “open‑bundle” fair‑use cap (typical for unlimited plans). Your operator can be more generous, but not stingier than the formula. - If your plan has a fixed domestic data cap (e.g., 5 GB, 30 GB), you can usually use that full allowance while roaming at domestic rates. Some very cheap large bundles may still be treated as “open” and be capped using the above formula—check your plan’s roaming terms.How operators apply fair‑use (and why you might see a cap)Open data bundles: Unlimited or very cheap data plans can be capped for EU roaming using the calculator above. Once you hit the cap, surcharges may apply for more data in the same billing period.Fixed data bundles: Most users can use up to their domestic data limit while roaming. If the domestic limit is higher than the calculator result and your plan is priced unusually low, your operator may still set a roaming cap around the calculator result.Long‑term roaming: If you spend more time abroad than at home and use more data abroad over a 4‑month window, your provider can warn you. If your usage pattern continues, they may apply the regulated surcharges. This is to stop permanent roaming on a cheaper foreign SIM.Pro tips: - Always check the roaming annex of your plan: it will state your EU roaming data allowance and any fair‑use limits. - Watch how your provider counts a “month”—billing cycle vs calendar month can affect when your cap resets. - If crossing non‑EU borders mid‑trip, keep your phone in flight mode until you confirm you’re in an RLAH country, or switch to a regional eSIM.Real‑world examples: light, standard and heavy usersThese scenarios assume 2025 caps and common operator practices. Your own plan may differ—always confirm your exact allowance in your account or app.1) Light user: 5 GB domestic cap, €12/month (incl. VAT 20%)- Domestic allowance: 5 GB- Ex‑VAT price: €12 / 1.20 = €10- Calculator result: ≈ 15 GB (but you don’t have unlimited)- Likely EU roaming allowance: 5 GB at domestic rates (because your domestic cap is 5 GB).- Beyond 5 GB: your operator may block or charge overage/surcharges—check your plan.2) Standard user: 50 GB domestic cap, €24/month (incl. VAT 20%)- Domestic allowance: 50 GB- Ex‑VAT price: €24 / 1.20 = €20- Calculator result: ≈ 31 GB- Likely EU roaming allowance: Either the full 50 GB or around 31 GB if your operator treats it as an open/very‑cheap bundle. Many mainstream plans allow the full 50 GB; budget plans may cap closer to the calculator.3) Heavy user: Unlimited domestic data, €36/month (incl. VAT 20%)- Ex‑VAT price: €36 / 1.20 = €30- Calculator result: ≈ 46 GB- Likely EU roaming allowance: About 46 GB at domestic rates. After that, your provider may add up to €1.30/GB (ex VAT) or throttle per policy.4) Frequent traveller flagged for long‑term roaming- If your usage is predominantly abroad for 4+ months, expect a warning SMS. Keep roaming heavily abroad and the operator can add the capped surcharges even before you hit your data allowance.If you need more guaranteed data across multiple borders, a travel eSIM with simple tiers can be cheaper and clearer than chasing FUP fine print. Compare regional options via Destinations or go straight to Esim Western Europe.What happens when you exceed the fair‑use allowance?Data: Your operator can add up to €1.30 per GB (ex VAT) on top of your domestic rate, until your billing period ends or a higher cap/add‑on applies. With 20% VAT, that’s up to €1.56/GB on your bill.Voice: Up to €0.022/min (ex VAT) for outgoing calls while roaming, if a FUP on calls applies.SMS: Up to €0.004 per message (ex VAT) for outgoing texts while roaming, if a FUP on SMS applies.Notifications: Operators must inform you when you approach and reach your data fair‑use limit, and when surcharges begin.Add‑ons: Many providers sell EU roaming bolt‑ons that reset or increase your allowance. Compare the per‑GB price of an add‑on vs the regulated surcharge; sometimes the surcharge is already the cheapest route, sometimes not.Pro tips: - Turn off automatic cloud backups, app auto‑updates and high‑bitrate streaming while roaming. - Download maps/playlists on Wi‑Fi before crossing borders. - If you’re heading beyond the EU/EEA (e.g., US), set up a separate eSIM like Esim United States to avoid out‑of‑bundle roaming.Traveller checklist: do this before you goConfirm your plan type: Fixed data cap or unlimited? Note the monthly price ex VAT.Find your EU roaming data allowance: In your carrier app or T&Cs. If “unlimited at home”, check the EU FUP value explicitly.Calculate your minimum: Use 2 × (ex‑VAT price) ÷ 1.30 to estimate the floor for 2025 if your plan is unlimited/very cheap.Set data alerts: Enable data‑use notifications at 80% and 100% in your phone and carrier app.Save key contacts offline: Booking codes, accommodation, travel insurance PDFs.Cover non‑EU gaps: Add a regional eSIM if your route includes Switzerland/UK/Andorra/Monaco—browse Destinations.For teams and frequent flyersIf you manage staff on the road, align policies with EU fair‑use to control costs. Options: - Standardise plans with transparent EU FUP terms - Add travel eSIMs for non‑EU legs or heavy‑data roles - Centralise provisioning and spend alertsSee Simology For Business. Resellers and travel partners can access tools and rates via our Partner Hub.FAQ: EU Roaming Fair Use 20251) How do I know what VAT rate to use in the calculator?Use the VAT of the country where your mobile contract is billed (shown on your invoice). To get the ex‑VAT price, divide your total by 1 + VAT rate (e.g., 1.20 for 20% VAT).2) Does RLAH cover Switzerland, the UK, Andorra or Monaco?No. RLAH rights only apply in the EU/EEA. Some carriers include these places voluntarily, but it’s not guaranteed. If they’re on your itinerary, consider a regional eSIM or local plan—see Destinations.3) Are tethering and 5G included when roaming?Generally, your roaming experience should match your domestic plan (including tethering and 5G) where technically feasible on the visited network. Some operators restrict hotspot use or cap speeds—check your plan’s roaming section.4) Will I be charged for incoming calls in the EU?Incoming calls while roaming in the EU/EEA should mirror your domestic reception conditions (typically free). Outgoing calls and SMS can incur small surcharges only if a FUP is triggered.5) What changes on 1 January 2025?The wholesale data cap falls to €1.30/GB (from €1.55 in 2024). That increases the minimum roaming data allowance on unlimited/very‑cheap plans when a fair‑use cap is applied, and lowers any per‑GB surcharges. We update this guide—and display an update banner—whenever the EU changes the caps.6) I travel every week across borders. How do I avoid long‑term roaming surcharges?Ensure your usage remains predominantly at home over any 4‑month window, or consider a travel eSIM for the roaming leg so your home SIM isn’t flagged. Business travellers with constant cross‑border use can benefit from dedicated roaming bundles—see For Business.Next step: Planning multi‑country travel in the EU? Keep it simple with a regional plan—compare options on Esim Western Europe, or browse country‑by‑country picks via Destinations.
PolicyRead blog
Paris Speed Test (Q4 2025): CDG Airport vs City Center vs Hotel Wi‑Fi
Heading to Paris and wondering if your phone or hotel Wi‑Fi will keep up? This paris speed test internet report compares real‑world performance at Charles de Gaulle (CDG) Airport, across the city centre, and on typical hotel Wi‑Fi. We focused on what travellers actually feel: stable video calls, map loads, photos backing up, and whether streaming stutters underground on the Metro. We measured download/upload speeds, latency, and jitter, and we separated indoor versus outdoor results. The short version: outdoor 5G in the centre is the fastest and most consistent, CDG cellular is fine but spiky at busy gates, the Metro works for messages and music but can wobble during handovers, and hotel Wi‑Fi quality varies wildly by property and floor.We’ve published an open CSV so you can audit or remix the dataset. If you’re planning a broader itinerary, browse our country picks on Destinations or grab a local Esim France plan before you land.TL;DR results at a glanceCity centre (outdoor 5G): median 180–260 Mbps down, 18–35 Mbps up; latency 18–30 ms; jitter 4–9 msCity centre (indoors near window): median 70–120 Mbps down; jitter rises to 8–15 ms in older buildingsCDG Airport cellular (landsid/airside): median 45–90 Mbps down, 8–15 Mbps up; latency 28–45 ms; jitter 8–18 msCDG Airport public Wi‑Fi: highly variable, typically 10–40 Mbps down, jitter >20 ms during peaksParis Metro snapshot: platforms 60–110 Mbps down; in‑tunnel 25–60 Mbps down; jitter spikes during cell handoversHotel Wi‑Fi: budget/mid‑range median 20–60 Mbps down with jitter 15–35 ms; premium/business floors often 100–250 Mbps down, jitter 6–12 msInterpretation: for calls and uploads, latency and jitter matter more than raw speed. City‑centre 5G is excellent; CDG and Metro are usable with occasional blips; hotel Wi‑Fi is the wildcard.How we tested (transparent methodology)Dates and windows: three days in Q4 2025 (morning, lunchtime, evening, and late night runs)Zones: CDG Terminals 1/2 (arrivals halls, selected gates, RER entrance), central Paris (1st, 2nd, 9th, 11th), and two hotels (one mid‑range, one upscale)Indoors vs outdoors: repeated runs on pavements, inside cafés, lobbies, and hotel rooms (window vs corridor side)Mobile tech: 5G NSA/SA and LTE where 5G unavailableDevices: recent iOS and Android flagships with eSIM; laptop for Wi‑Fi validationTools: two independent speed test engines; concurrent ping to EU anycast; jitter measured as latency variance over 30–60 secondsMetrics recorded: timestamp, coordinates (3‑digit geohash), location type (airport/city/hotel/metro), indoor/outdoor, network tech (5G/LTE/Wi‑Fi), signal stats (where accessible), download, upload, latency, jitter, packet loss, device, and notes on crowd densitySample size: 120+ mobile tests, 40+ hotel/airport Wi‑Fi tests, 30+ Metro runsWhat we didn’t do: exhaustive operator‑by‑operator benchmarking or rural coverage. This is a traveller‑centric snapshot, not a national audit.CDG Airport: cellular vs airport Wi‑FiWhat we saw: - Cellular is “good enough” for maps, ride‑hailing, and messaging, with occasional dips around crowded gates and security queues.- Airport Wi‑Fi is convenient for quick browsing but can feel laggy at peak times due to higher jitter and captive portal overheads.Typical numbers: - Cellular near arrivals: 60–90 Mbps down, 10–15 Mbps up; latency 30–40 ms; jitter 8–12 ms- Cellular at busy gates: 30–60 Mbps down; jitter 12–18 ms (spikes during boarding calls)- Public Wi‑Fi: 10–40 Mbps down, 5–20 Mbps up; latency 20–35 ms; jitter 20–40 msPractical tips: - If the airport Wi‑Fi feels sluggish on calls, switch to cellular; lower jitter helps stability.- Move a few metres away from dense crowds or metal structures; micro‑shifts can halve jitter.- Disable low‑data/low‑power modes when you need top performance for a call or upload.City centre: outdoor 5G is king, indoors is about placementOutdoors (boulevards, squares): - Consistently fast 5G, especially on wider streets with clear line‑of‑sight.- Median 180–260 Mbps down, 18–35 Mbps up; latency 18–30 ms; jitter 4–9 ms.- Excellent for hotspotting a laptop or rapid photo backups.Indoors (cafés, lobbies, apartments): - Older buildings with thick walls or deep corridors dampen mid‑band 5G.- Near windows: 70–120 Mbps down, 10–20 Mbps up; jitter 8–15 ms.- Interior tables or basement bars: speeds drop to 25–60 Mbps; latency and jitter both rise.Pro tips: - Sit by a window or door for the biggest improvement.- If your 5G is flaky indoors, forcing LTE can reduce jitter for video calls.- Prefer headset calls to mask brief jitter bursts.Paris Metro snapshot: good on platforms, variable in tunnelsCoverage across platforms is solid. Trains see more variability during handovers between cells in tunnels.Observed: - Platforms: 60–110 Mbps down, 10–20 Mbps up; latency 25–35 ms; jitter 8–12 ms.- In‑tunnel: 25–60 Mbps down; upload can sag below 8 Mbps; jitter 12–25 ms, with brief spikes on line transitions.- Music streaming and messaging are reliable; HD video calls may stutter during handovers.Quick checklist for underground reliability: - Pre‑download maps and playlists before you descend.- Use audio‑only for calls where possible; switch cameras off to withstand jitter.- Messaging apps with store‑and‑forward (e.g., sending photos) cope better than live uploads in tunnels.Hotel Wi‑Fi: the biggest wildcardMid‑range hotel (older building, multiple repeaters): - 20–60 Mbps down, 10–25 Mbps up; latency 15–25 ms; jitter 15–35 ms.- Congestion spikes between 19:00–22:00; 2.4 GHz often overloaded.- Corridor‑side rooms had weaker signal and higher jitter than window‑facing rooms.Upscale/business‑focused hotel (Wi‑Fi 6/6E): - 100–250 Mbps down, 20–50 Mbps up; latency 8–15 ms; jitter 6–12 ms.- Consistent evenings; 6 GHz band notably cleaner near conference floors.Practical hotel playbook: - Ask reception for a 5 GHz or 6 GHz SSID if available; avoid legacy 2.4 GHz.- Try a wired Ethernet adaptor when available for rock‑steady jitter on calls.- If the captive portal keeps dropping you, tether via your eSIM; mobile jitter is often lower than congested Wi‑Fi.- For multi‑country trips, carry a regional eSIM like Esim Western Europe and tether when hotel Wi‑Fi degrades.Which eSIM plan makes sense for Paris?Staying in France only: a local Esim France gives you the best price‑per‑GB and excellent city coverage.Multi‑country route (e.g., Paris → Brussels → Milan → Barcelona): go with Esim Western Europe for seamless cross‑border data. If Italy or Spain are next, see Esim Italy and Esim Spain.Starting your trip stateside: load your plan before departure with Esim United States for transit coverage, or cover both regions via Esim North America plus a Europe plan.Teams on the road: pooled data and fleet eSIMs via For Business.Travel trade and resellers: co‑brand or bundle data through our Partner Hub.Step‑by‑step: get the best speeds in Paris1) Before you fly - Install and activate your eSIM (don’t wait for the jet bridge).- Update carrier settings and OS; disable Low Data Mode/Low Power Mode if you’ll hotspot.- Add your plan to priority data line; enable Wi‑Fi Calling for weak indoor spots.2) On landing at CDG - Skip congested airport Wi‑Fi if you need a call; use cellular for lower jitter.- If speeds feel erratic, toggle Airplane Mode for 10 seconds to re‑register on a stronger cell.3) Around town - For cafés and indoors, sit near windows or doors.- If 5G is “fast but choppy”, switch to LTE for steadier calls.- Keep background cloud backups paused during important video calls.4) In hotels - Prefer 5/6 GHz SSIDs; ask for a room closer to an access point if you’re staying multiple nights.- Have your eSIM ready to tether during evening congestion.5) On the Metro - Download offline maps; switch calls to audio‑only when entering tunnels.Open dataset and reproducibilityWe’ve published an open CSV covering every run in this report. Typical columns include: - timestamp_utc- geohash_3 and location_label (e.g., “CDG T2F gate”, “Le Marais street”, “Hotel A room 5F window”)- indoor_outdoor (indoor/outdoor/platform/train)- network_type (5G/LTE/Wi‑Fi) and band note where available- rsrp/sinr (if accessible), download_mbps, upload_mbps- latency_ms_median, jitter_ms (stddev over 30–60s), packet_loss_pct- device (generic) and notes (crowd level, time pressure, observed handover)Method validation: - Dual test engines per spot to avoid single‑service bias.- Parallel latency probes to an EU anycast target.- Repeats across time‑of‑day to capture peak/off‑peak variance.Use the dataset to slice results your way (e.g., indoor vs outdoor deltas, Metro handover jitter), or compare with speeds in other cities listed on Destinations.Limitations and what’s nextThis is a city snapshot, not an operator shoot‑out. Performance varies by SIM profile, building, and crowd density.We used recent flagship devices; older phones may show lower 5G sensitivity.Hotel results represent two properties; your experience may differ considerably.We’ll expand to business districts and suburbs in the next wave, plus more granular Metro line coverage.FAQQ: Is eSIM faster than a physical SIM in Paris?A: Speed is determined by the network and radio conditions, not whether the profile is eSIM or plastic SIM. eSIM simply makes it easier to switch networks and plans.Q: What’s better for calls: hotel Wi‑Fi or mobile data?A: In many hotels, cellular data has lower jitter than congested Wi‑Fi, which makes video calls more stable. Premium Wi‑Fi (Wi‑Fi 6/6E or wired) can be excellent, but mid‑range hotel Wi‑Fi often wobbles during evening peaks.Q: Does the Paris Metro have full 4G/5G coverage?A: Platforms are well covered. In tunnels, you’ll see brief dips and jitter spikes during handovers. Messaging and music are fine; HD video calls may stutter while trains move between cells.Q: How much speed do I actually need?A: For maps and messaging: 1–5 Mbps. For HD video calls: 5–10 Mbps with latency <50 ms and jitter <20 ms. For big photo backups, higher upload helps, but stability (low jitter) is more important during live calls.Q: Any quick fixes if speeds feel erratic indoors?A: Sit by a window, toggle Airplane Mode for a reselection, try forcing LTE, and pause heavy cloud syncs. If Wi‑Fi is the issue, jump to cellular tethering.Q: I’m visiting multiple countries. Can one plan cover me?A: Yes. Use Esim Western Europe for multi‑country trips. If you’re combining North America with Europe on one journey, pair a regional Europe plan with Esim North America.Next step: Choose a local eSIM for your trip with Esim France, or plan a broader route via Destinations.
Read blog
10-Day Europe Itinerary: France–Italy–Spain with One eSIM
Planning a Europe itinerary 10 days long that hits France, Italy and Spain is absolutely doable—if you keep the route tight and the logistics simple. This guide gives you a realistic, high-speed-train-first plan from Paris to Lyon to Milan and Rome, a taste of Florence, and a finale in Barcelona. You’ll carry one regional eSIM the whole way, so your maps, tickets and translators work across borders without swapping SIMs or hunting Wi‑Fi. Expect 2–3 hours on trains most move days, one short flight at the end, and well-paced city time where it matters. We’ve included setup steps for your eSIM, the right roaming toggles, typical 4G/5G speeds by city, and pro tips to keep things moving. If you need deeper country specifics, see our France, Italy and Spain eSIM guides linked throughout.Route at a glance (map this line on your phone)Day 1–3: Paris, France (arrive CDG/ORY) Day 4: Lyon, France (TGV from Paris, ~2h) Day 5: Milan, Italy (Frecciarossa from Lyon Part‑Dieu, ~5h15) Day 6–7: Rome, Italy (Frecciarossa from Milan, ~3h10) Day 8: Florence, Italy (Frecciarossa from Rome, ~1h35) Day 9–10: Barcelona, Spain (morning flight from Florence or Rome, ~1h45; final night and departure)Why this works: - You travel mostly by direct high‑speed trains. - Only one short flight (Italy to Spain) to avoid a 12–14 hour overland slog. - Big‑city anchors with one smaller-city palate cleanser (Lyon and Florence).For more country picks or alternates, browse Destinations.One eSIM for three countries (Western Europe plan)Use a single regional plan that roams seamlessly across borders. The Esim Western Europe option covers France, Italy and Spain on major networks with automatic network selection. You keep the same QR/profile the entire trip.Suggested data allowance for 10 days: - Light user (messaging, maps, email): 5–8 GB - Moderate (social, a few video calls, city navigation): 10–15 GB - Heavy (HD streaming, frequent tethering): 20+ GBCountry-specific tips and network notes: - France: Orange, SFR, Bouygues, Free Mobile are common. See Esim France for city nuances and coverage quirks. - Italy: TIM, Vodafone, WindTre, Iliad. See Esim Italy for rail corridor coverage and 5G availability. - Spain: Movistar, Orange, Vodafone, Yoigo. See Esim Spain for Catalonia and coastal speed notes.Typical city speeds (real-world ranges vary by street and time of day): - Paris: 4G 30–80 Mbps; 5G 120–300 Mbps - Lyon: 4G 25–70 Mbps; 5G 100–220 Mbps - Milan: 4G 35–90 Mbps; 5G 120–250 Mbps - Rome: 4G 25–70 Mbps; 5G 100–220 Mbps - Florence: 4G 20–60 Mbps; 5G 90–180 Mbps - Barcelona: 4G 35–90 Mbps; 5G 130–300 MbpsIf speeds dip indoors or in historic centres with thick stone, move closer to a window or switch networks manually (see steps below).eSIM setup and roaming toggles (How‑to)Follow this before you leave or on hotel Wi‑Fi on arrival.1) Buy and install - Purchase your regional plan: Esim Western Europe. - iPhone: Settings > Mobile Data > Add eSIM > Use QR code or “Use activation code”. - Android (varies): Settings > Network & Internet > SIMs > Download a SIM > Add via QR/activation code. - Name the line “EU Data” for clarity.2) Set data line and keep your number - Keep your physical/home SIM for calls/SMS (if needed). - Set “EU Data” as “Mobile Data” line; disable “Allow Mobile Data Switching” if you want to force data to eSIM only. - Turn OFF data roaming on your home SIM to avoid surprise charges.3) Roaming and 5G toggles - Turn ON Data Roaming for the “EU Data” eSIM. - Preferred network: 5G Auto (iOS) / 5G preferred (Android) if your plan includes 5G; otherwise LTE/4G. - Low Data Mode/Data Saver: OFF unless you’re trying to conserve.4) APN check - Most plans auto‑configure. If not, enter the APN provided in your eSIM email/profile. If no APN is listed, leave default; do not guess as it can block data.5) Crossing borders - Keep the eSIM active; it will register on a local partner within 1–3 minutes. - If no data after 3–5 minutes: toggle Airplane Mode ON/OFF, then manually select a network: Settings > Mobile Network > Network Operators > choose a listed partner.6) Tethering/hotspot - Supported on most plans; check your plan details. Enable only when needed to conserve data.Pro tip: Download offline maps for Paris, Rome and Barcelona on Google Maps and your train e‑tickets into your wallet app before each move day.Day-by-day: 10 days from Paris to BarcelonaDay 1 – Paris: Arrive and orientArrive CDG/ORY. Activate eSIM on Wi‑Fi if not already installed.Afternoon: Île de la Cité (Notre‑Dame exterior), Sainte‑Chapelle, and a Seine walk to the Louvre courtyards.Evening: Latin Quarter or Canal Saint‑Martin for a casual first meal.Connectivity tip: Expect excellent 5G around central arrondissements, but the Louvre basement and Metro tunnels can throttle to 4G.Day 2 – Paris: Classics efficientlyMorning: Louvre (time‑slot ticket), Jardin des Tuileries.Afternoon: Eiffel Tower/Trocadéro viewpoints; pre‑book summit if you must go up.Evening: Seine cruise or rooftop sunset (Galeries Lafayette Haussmann terrace).Transport: Metro day pass; Apple/Google Pay taps work on many gates.Day 3 – Paris: Neighbourhoods and foodMorning: Montmartre loop (Sacré‑Cœur, Rue Lepic).Lunch: Marché des Enfants Rouges or Rue Cler.Afternoon: Musée d’Orsay or Pompidou (shorter queues later in day).Dinner: Bistro near Le Marais. Pack tonight for an early train.For network specifics and tips, see Esim France.Day 4 – Paris to Lyon (2h TGV) + Old LyonTrain: Paris Gare de Lyon → Lyon Part‑Dieu (~2h; book seats in advance).Drop bags; tram to Vieux Lyon. Walk the traboules, Fourvière hill for views.Dinner: Bouchon menu (book ahead).Practical: Lyon 5G is strong in Presqu’île; coverage softens in some Renaissance alleys—download dinner directions before you wander.Day 5 – Lyon to Milan (5h15) + Duomo at duskMorning train: Lyon Part‑Dieu → Milano Centrale (direct Frecciarossa; scenic Alps views).Afternoon: Duomo exterior/rooftop; Galleria Vittorio Emanuele II; aperitivo in Brera.Tip: Milano Centrale has robust 5G; if your phone clings to 4G, manually select Vodafone or TIM for better station throughput.For Italy network notes, see Esim Italy.Day 6 – Milan to Rome (3h10) + Trastevere nightLate morning Frecciarossa to Roma Termini. Hotel check‑in.Afternoon: Colosseum exterior/Forum views from Via dei Fori Imperiali; sunset in Trastevere.Data tip: Around the Colosseum, 5G can fluctuate with crowd load; keep offline tickets handy.Day 7 – Rome: Ancient + BaroqueMorning: Vatican Museums early slot or Colosseum/Forum/Palatine with skip‑the‑line entry.Afternoon: Pantheon, Trevi Fountain, Spanish Steps (walkable cluster).Evening: Testaccio for Roman classics.Practical: Maps can misroute in narrow lanes; rely on saved pins and short bursts of live navigation to conserve data.Day 8 – Rome to Florence (1h35) + Renaissance highlightsTrain: Roma Termini → Firenze S. M. Novella.Day plan: Duomo exterior (time slot for the dome if you want the climb), Piazza della Signoria, Ponte Vecchio, Uffizi late‑day entry.Night: Pack for an early flight to Spain tomorrow.Connectivity: Florence’s historic core has patchy 5G inside thick‑walled buildings—step outside for stronger signal.Day 9 – Florence (or Rome) to Barcelona (1h45 flight) + Gothic QuarterMorning flight to BCN (flights also run from Pisa; Rome has more frequency if you prefer to fly from there).Aerobus/metro into the city. Gothic Quarter walk: Cathedral, Plaça Reial, La Rambla (stay pickpocket‑aware).Speed note: Barcelona’s 5G is widely deployed; 150–300 Mbps isn’t unusual outdoors.Day 10 – Barcelona: Gaudí and beach timeMorning: Sagrada Família (pre‑book timed entry).Afternoon: Park Güell, then Barceloneta or El Born tapas crawl.Evening: Sunset at Bunkers del Carmel or Montjuïc.For more on Spain coverage and regional nuance, see Esim Spain.Getting between stops: booking and seat strategyBook high‑speed trains 2–4 weeks ahead for best fares and seat choice.TGV (France) and Frecciarossa (Italy) require seat reservations; sit on the aisle if you plan to work, window for scenery on Lyon–Milan.Keep e‑tickets in your wallet app and PDFs offline. Station Wi‑Fi can be busy.For the Italy–Spain leg, a morning flight maximises day time on the ground and reduces disruption if delayed.Data discipline that stretches your gigabytesDownload city areas on offline maps and Spotify/YouTube playlists on hotel Wi‑Fi.Toggle low‑data mode during intercity trains when you’re just messaging.Prefer 720p for video calls; switch off HD if your signal steps down to 4G.Turn off background app refresh for heavy apps (social, cloud photos) on move days.Troubleshooting on the moveNo data after border crossing: Airplane Mode 10 seconds > OFF; then manually select a partner network.Good signal bars, slow speeds: move outdoors, toggle 5G/LTE, or switch network operator.QR lost: Most providers let you reissue from account portal/support (keep your order number).Hotspot not working: Reboot the phone; confirm tethering is included in your plan; check APN isn’t blank.Who this itinerary suits (and who should tweak it)Best for: First‑timers who want flagship sights with fast intercity links and minimal airport time.Tweak if: You dislike one‑night stops—drop Lyon or Florence and add that night to Paris or Rome.Travelling as a team? See For Business for pooled data and device management.Travel trade or creators? Our Partner Hub has co‑marketing and affiliate options.Alternatives and add‑onsStarting in the US or transiting stateside? Pre‑arrange stateside coverage via Esim United States.Continuing to Canada/Mexico after Spain? Switch regions with Esim North America.Want different countries? Explore regional options on Destinations.FAQ1) Do I need multiple eSIMs for three countries? - No. A single Esim Western Europe plan covers France, Italy and Spain with automatic network selection.2) How much data should I buy for 10 days? - Most travellers are comfortable with 10–15 GB for maps, socials, light streaming and a few video calls. Heavy streamers/tethering users should consider 20+ GB.3) Will I get 5G everywhere? - Major city centres and many train corridors have 5G, but it can drop to 4G indoors, in historic districts, tunnels or rural stretches. Your phone will fall back automatically.4) Can I keep my WhatsApp and number while using an eSIM? - Yes. Keep your home SIM active for calls/SMS (roaming off if you want to avoid charges) and set the eSIM as the data line. WhatsApp continues with your existing number.5) My data stops working when I cross a border. What now? - Wait 1–3 minutes, toggle Airplane Mode, then manually pick a partner network in settings. Ensure Data Roaming is ON for the eSIM and APN is present.6) Is train Wi‑Fi reliable? - It’s hit‑and‑miss. Use your eSIM for consistent service; expect drops in tunnels and rural valleys. Download heavy files before boarding.Next step: Choose your cross‑border plan and install it before you fly. Start with Esim Western Europe.
Read blog
Set Up eSIM on iPhone 16 (iOS 18): Step-by-Step + Fixes
Travelling with an iPhone 16? eSIM on iOS 18 makes it simple to add a local or regional data plan in minutes—no plastic SIM, no stores, no queues. This guide walks you through every way to install an eSIM on iPhone 16, how to run dual-SIM while travelling, and how to fix the most common activation errors fast. If you’re setting up for a trip, you’ll also find regional picks like Esim United States, Esim Western Europe and Esim North America, plus country options such as Esim France, Esim Italy and Esim Spain.Below you’ll find clear steps for QR code, manual entry and Quick Transfer, along with traveller-first tips—what to set for roaming, which line to use for iMessage, and how to avoid bill shock. Prefer to decide by destination? See all travel eSIMs by region on Destinations.Before you start: quick checklistiPhone 16 running iOS 18 (Settings > General > Software Update).Unlocked device (check with your home carrier if you bought it subsidised).Stable Wi‑Fi or a strong mobile connection for activation.eSIM details from your provider: QR code or SM‑DP+ server, activation code and (if provided) confirmation code.Power above 20% (or connect to a charger).Keep your original SIM/eSIM active until your travel eSIM is confirmed working (for any verification SMS).Pro tip: Take a screenshot or print your eSIM QR code before you fly. Airports Wi‑Fi can block email links or carrier portals.How to add an eSIM on iPhone 16 (iOS 18)All methods start in the same place.1) Open Settings2) Tap Mobile Data (Cellular)3) Tap Add eSIMOn iOS 18 you’ll typically see options like: - Use QR Code - Use Carrier/App - Transfer From Nearby iPhone (Quick Transfer) - Enter Details ManuallyOption A: Scan a QR code (fastest for most travellers)1) Go to Settings > Mobile Data (Cellular) > Add eSIM.2) Choose Use QR Code and point the camera at the code.3) When your plan appears, tap Continue > Add eSIM.4) Wait for “Activating…” then “Mobile Plan Added”.5) Assign a label (e.g., “Travel – Spain”) and set your default lines.What you’ll see: - “Activating…” progress bar- “Turn On This Line” toggle- “Set Default Line” and “Set Default for Data”Pro tip: If the scan fails, tap Enter Details Manually and type the SM‑DP+ server and Activation Code exactly as provided (case sensitive).Option B: Enter details manually (SM‑DP+)1) Settings > Mobile Data (Cellular) > Add eSIM > Enter Details Manually.2) Type the SM‑DP+ address, Activation Code and optional Confirmation Code.3) Tap Next and wait for activation to complete.Manual entry is useful if: - Your QR code is on another phone you can’t scan.- The camera won’t recognise the code under low light.- You’re adding a plan while offline (you’ll still need connectivity to complete activation).Option C: Add via carrier/provider app1) Install your provider’s app from the App Store.2) Purchase/select a plan, then choose Install eSIM in-app.3) Approve the eSIM install when iOS prompts you.4) Follow the same labelling and default line setup.Pro tip: If the app says “Installed” but you don’t see the plan, go to Settings > Mobile Data (Cellular) and look under Mobile Plans. If it’s listed but Off, tap it and enable Turn On This Line.Option D: eSIM Quick Transfer from your old iPhoneIf you’re moving your existing number from an older iPhone:1) Keep both iPhones nearby, unlocked, with Bluetooth on.2) On your iPhone 16, go to Settings > Mobile Data (Cellular) > Add eSIM.3) Choose Transfer From Nearby iPhone.4) Approve the transfer on your old iPhone and follow prompts.Notes: - This moves the plan; it usually deactivates on the old device.- Some carriers require re‑verification or a new QR. If transfer fails, contact your carrier.Set up dual‑SIM for travel (keep your number, use local data)Once your travel eSIM is added, optimise your settings:1) Label your lines- Settings > Mobile Data (Cellular) > Your Plans > Label (e.g., “Primary – UK” and “Travel – EU”).2) Choose default line for calls/messages- Settings > Mobile Data > Default Voice Line.- Pick Primary to keep your usual caller ID while roaming.3) Set data to the travel eSIM- Settings > Mobile Data > Mobile Data (Cellular Data).- Select your Travel eSIM.- Enable Data Roaming for the travel eSIM only.4) Stop bill shock on your home line- Tap your Primary plan > turn off Data Roaming.- Leave it On for calls/SMS only (or disable the line if you won’t use it).5) Allow “Cellular Data Switching” (optional)- If enabled, iPhone can briefly use Primary for data if your travel eSIM drops.- Travellers often keep this Off to avoid accidental roaming charges.6) iMessage and WhatsApp- iMessage: Settings > Messages > Send & Receive > tick your preferred number and Apple ID.- WhatsApp: linked to your account; it keeps working over your travel eSIM data.7) Network options- Settings > Mobile Data > Travel eSIM > Voice & Data: try 5G Auto first; switch to 4G/LTE if coverage is patchy.- Network Selection: leave Automatic On unless your provider advises a specific network.8) Personal Hotspot- Many travel eSIMs allow tethering. Check your plan.- Settings > Personal Hotspot to enable.Pro tip: Data‑only eSIMs won’t support normal calls/SMS. Use your Primary for voice/SMS, and use apps (WhatsApp/FaceTime/Teams) over the travel eSIM data.Top 10 activation errors on iPhone 16 (iOS 18) — and how to fix them1) “Unable to complete cellular plan change”- Toggle Airplane Mode On/Off, then retry.- Reboot the iPhone.- Try a different Wi‑Fi network (avoid captive portals).- Update carrier settings: Settings > General > About (wait for a prompt).2) “Activation failed” or “Could not activate eSIM”- Confirm the phone is unlocked.- Check date/time are automatic.- Enter SM‑DP+ and activation code manually.- Contact your provider to reissue the QR or refresh the profile.3) “This code is no longer valid” / “eSIM already in use”- Many QR codes are single‑use. Ask your provider for a new one.- If you deleted the plan, you may still need a fresh QR to reinstall.4) “Cellular plans from this carrier cannot be added”- Your carrier may not support eSIM on this device or market.- Confirm regional support or switch to a compatible travel eSIM.5) “No Service” / “SOS Only” after install- Turn Data Roaming On for the travel eSIM.- Settings > Mobile Data > Travel eSIM > Network Selection > Automatic (or pick the advised network).- Try 4G/LTE instead of 5G Auto.- Restart the iPhone.6) eSIM added but no data- Confirm Mobile Data is set to the travel eSIM.- Check APN settings if your provider supplied them (Settings > Mobile Data > Travel eSIM > Mobile Data Network).- Disable any VPN/Private Relay temporarily.7) “Invalid SM‑DP+ address”- Re‑type carefully; avoid extra spaces.- Ensure you’re using the activation code for the correct plan/region.8) Quick Transfer times out- Keep both phones on Wi‑Fi with Bluetooth enabled, screens unlocked.- Move them closer.- If it keeps failing, request a QR from the carrier instead.9) Stuck on “Activating…”- Wait 2–3 minutes; don’t exit the screen immediately.- Toggle Airplane Mode; then retry.- Reboot; try another Wi‑Fi network.- Update iOS and carrier settings.10) “Plan cannot be added” on eSIM‑only models- You may have reached the maximum stored profiles. Delete an unused plan: Settings > Mobile Data > tap plan > Remove eSIM.- Then add the new plan again.If you still can’t activate, capture the error wording and EID (Settings > General > About > EID) and contact your provider’s support—those two details speed up a resolution.Quick fixes that solve most issues (do these in order)1) Refresh radios: Airplane Mode On (10 seconds) > Off.2) Reboot the iPhone.3) Update iOS and carrier settings (Settings > General > Software Update, then Settings > General > About).4) Toggle the line Off/On (Settings > Mobile Data > tap plan > Turn On This Line).5) Set the travel eSIM as Mobile Data line and enable Data Roaming.6) Switch Voice & Data between 5G Auto and LTE to force re‑registration.7) Reset Network Settings (Settings > General > Transfer or Reset > Reset > Reset Network Settings).8) Try a different Wi‑Fi network for activation (or disable Wi‑Fi and use mobile data if available).Pro tip: Don’t remove the eSIM unless support advises it. Many plans can’t be reinstalled without a new QR code.Regional picks for common tripsUSA trip: choose Esim United States for coast‑to‑coast coverage.Canada + USA: go with Esim North America.Multiple EU countries: use Esim Western Europe.Single‑country Europe: Esim France, Esim Italy, Esim Spain.Browse every region and country: Destinations.Teams and frequent travellers: centralise plans and billing via For Business. Travel agencies and resellers can find tools in our Partner Hub.Expert traveller tipsInstall before you fly so you can test on home networks.Keep Primary for calls/SMS; use travel eSIM for data to avoid roaming charges.Turn off Wi‑Fi Assist (Settings > Mobile Data) if you don’t want surprise data use on the wrong line.Save your eSIM QR and plan info offline (Files app) for airports without reliable Wi‑Fi.If data is slow, switch to LTE—many destinations still have broader 4G coverage than 5G.After landing, toggle Airplane Mode Off/On once to force quick network registration.If you replace your iPhone mid‑trip, you’ll almost always need a new QR from your provider.FAQs1) How many eSIMs can iPhone 16 store and use at once?iPhone 16 can store multiple eSIM profiles (typically eight or more, carrier‑dependent) and use two lines at the same time. You can keep many plans saved and switch which one is active for data.2) Do I need Wi‑Fi to activate an eSIM?Wi‑Fi is best, but strong mobile data can also work. Avoid captive Wi‑Fi (airport/hotel login pages) during activation; tether from another device if needed.3) Can I keep my normal number for calls while using a travel eSIM for data?Yes. Set your Primary as Default Voice Line and your travel eSIM as Mobile Data. Turn off Data Roaming on the Primary to avoid charges, and leave Data Roaming On for the travel eSIM.4) Will iMessage and WhatsApp still work?Yes. iMessage uses the settings under Send & Receive; you can keep your usual number and Apple ID. WhatsApp works over whichever line provides data.5) Can I reuse or move an eSIM to another phone?Most travel eSIMs are single‑device and non‑transferable once installed. If you switch phones, you’ll usually need a new QR code from your provider.6) My iPhone 16 doesn’t have a SIM tray—can I still get my number onto it?Yes. Use eSIM Quick Transfer from your old iPhone or request a carrier eSIM/QR to convert your physical SIM to eSIM.Remove or pause an eSIM (when the trip is over)To pause: Settings > Mobile Data > tap the travel plan > Turn On This Line (toggle Off).To delete: Settings > Mobile Data > tap plan > Remove eSIM (you cannot usually reinstall without a new QR).Pro tip: Keep the line toggled Off for a future trip if your plan hasn’t expired and supports reactivation in the same region.The bottom lineOn iPhone 16 with iOS 18, adding a travel eSIM takes minutes and gives you local‑rate data without touching your primary number. Install via QR (or Quick Transfer), set your travel eSIM for data, and use the error‑fix list above if activation stalls. Ready to pick a plan for your route? Explore regions and countries on Destinations.Next step: Choose your plan by region now on Destinations.
Read blogAll blog posts
Andes Highlights (3 Weeks): Peru–Bolivia–Chile–Argentina Connectivity
Planning a south america itinerary 3 weeks through the high Andes? This route stitches together Peru’s Sacred Valley, Bolivia’s La Paz and Salar de Uyuni, Chile’s Atacama Desert, and northern Argentina’s quebradas or Mendoza wine country—often by long-distance bus and a couple of short flights. Connectivity is different at altitude: coverage is strong in cities but drops in high passes and salt flats; bus Wi‑Fi is patchy; border towns can be blackspots. The smart move is an eSIM with multi‑country coverage, backed by offline maps, offline translations, and a simple routine for crossing borders by bus without losing service. Below you’ll find a practical, connectivity-first itinerary; checklists to prep your phone, apps and documents; and on-the-ground tips for staying online where it matters: booking transport, hailing taxis, backing up photos, and navigating when the signal disappears.If you’re transiting via Europe or North America, you can also add a layover eSIM to stay connected door-to-door. Start with our country list on Destinations, then follow the steps, and you won’t waste time chasing SIM shops at 3,500 metres.The 3‑week Andes route at a glanceWeek 1: Peru (Cusco, Sacred Valley, Machu Picchu) - Fly into Cusco (or Lima then connect). - Base in Cusco; day trips to Pisac/Chinchero/Maras–Moray. - Train to Aguas Calientes; Machu Picchu visit; return to Cusco or continue to Puno/Lake Titicaca.Week 2: Bolivia and Chile (La Paz, Uyuni, San Pedro de Atacama) - Bus/collectivo via Copacabana to La Paz. - Fly or overnight bus to Uyuni. - 3‑day Uyuni–altiplano tour ending in San Pedro de Atacama (Chile).Week 3: Chile and Argentina (Atacama to Salta or Mendoza/Buenos Aires) - Choose: - North: San Pedro to Salta/Jujuy by bus; fly to Buenos Aires. - Or South: San Pedro–Calama flight to Santiago; bus or flight to Mendoza; onward to Buenos Aires.Connectivity notes (quick): - Cities: generally strong 4G/4G+; 5G in major hubs (Santiago, Buenos Aires). - Altitude/rural: expect long no‑signal stretches (Uyuni, altiplano passes, Paso Jama). - Bus Wi‑Fi: often advertised, rarely reliable. Plan to be offline onboard. - Border regions: networks switch; a multi‑country eSIM avoids sudden loss.eSIM vs local SIMs for a 4‑country tripFor a route with multiple borders and remote legs, eSIM wins on time and reliability.What a multi‑country eSIM gets you: - One plan across Peru, Bolivia, Chile, Argentina (check coverage per country on Destinations). - No passport/SIM registration queues at kiosks. - Keep your home number active on the physical SIM for calls/SMS codes. - Instant top‑ups if you burn data on photos or navigation.When a local SIM still helps: - Long stay in one country with heavy data use (e.g., a month in Buenos Aires). - Dead zones where a different local network performs better (rarely worth the hassle on a 3‑week pace).Practical approach: - Use an eSIM as your primary data line across all four countries. - If you find a specific local network far better in one region, add a cheap local SIM and keep the eSIM as backup.Device readiness checklist (before you fly)1) Check eSIM compatibility and SIM‑lock status on your phone.2) Buy and install your eSIM while on home Wi‑Fi. Keep a PDF/printed copy of the QR code.3) Label lines clearly (e.g., “eSIM Andes Data”, “Home SIM”).4) Turn on data roaming for the eSIM; leave roaming off for your home SIM to avoid charges.5) Set up dual‑SIM rules: data on eSIM; calls/SMS default to home SIM if needed.6) Download offline: Google Maps/Organic Maps for all target regions; language packs (Spanish at minimum); bus/air tickets; hotel confirmations.7) Cloud backups: set to upload on Wi‑Fi only; pre‑create shared albums for travel companions.8) Test tethering/hotspot with your laptop/tablet.If you’re transiting popular hubs, consider a short layover eSIM: - USA connections: add an Esim United States or a broader Esim North America.- Europe connections: Madrid/Barcelona? Use an Esim Spain. Paris or Rome? See Esim France and Esim Italy. Multi‑country layovers? Try Esim Western Europe.City‑by‑city connectivity notesCusco & the Sacred Valley (Peru)Coverage: Good in Cusco city; variable in high villages (Maras/Moray) and along Inca Trail approaches.Tips: Download Sacred Valley maps offline; pin viewpoints and ruins. most taxis use WhatsApp—save your accommodation’s number.Machu Picchu/Aguas Calientes: Patchy to none at the citadel. Upload your photos later; don’t rely on live ticket retrieval.Lake Titicaca: Puno and CopacabanaPuno: Reasonable 4G; bus terminals crowded—screenshot QR tickets.Crossing to Copacabana: Expect a signal drop around the border; have directions saved offline.La Paz (Bolivia)Good urban 4G; the cable car network has decent signal but tunnels do not.Yungas/“Death Road” tours: Mountain valleys cause dead zones—share your emergency contacts with the operator, carry a charged power bank, and don’t plan remote calls.Uyuni and the Altiplano (Bolivia to Chile)Uyuni town: OK 4G; ATMs finicky—use Wi‑Fi for banking apps.Salt flats/lagunas: Assume offline for most of the 3‑day tour. Guides often carry satellite phones; agree a pickup time/place in San Pedro and preload your map route.San Pedro de Atacama (Chile)Town: Solid 4G; accommodations often have Wi‑Fi but speeds vary.Geysers, Valle de la Luna: Offline navigation essential; sunrise trips start before mobile networks wake up in some areas.Salta/Jujuy or Mendoza/Buenos Aires (Argentina)Salta/Jujuy: Good city coverage; quebradas have long no‑signal sections.Mendoza: City 4G/5G; vineyards outside town can be patchy.Buenos Aires: Strong 4G/5G; ideal for cloud backups and large downloads before you fly home.Border crossings by bus: step‑by‑stepThe big ones on this route: Peru–Bolivia (Puno/Copacabana), Bolivia–Chile (Uyuni–San Pedro via Hito Cajón), Chile–Argentina (Paso Jama to Salta or Los Libertadores to Mendoza).How to keep service and sanity:1) The day before:- Top up your eSIM data.- Confirm your plan includes both countries you’re entering/leaving.- Download offline maps for both sides of the border and your town of arrival.- Save bus company WhatsApp and terminal address offline.2) On departure morning:- Keep a paper copy or offline PDF of tickets, insurance, and accommodation proof.- Charge phone and power bank; pack a short cable in your daypack.3) On the bus:- Don’t count on bus Wi‑Fi. Keep your eSIM as primary, but expect drops near mountain passes.- If your phone supports it, enable “Wi‑Fi calling” for later when you reach accommodation Wi‑Fi.4) At the border posts:- Data may be unavailable. Keep QR codes and booking numbers offline.- After exiting one country and entering the next, toggle Airplane Mode off/on to re‑register on the new network.- If the eSIM doesn’t attach, manually select a network in Mobile Settings.5) Arrival:- Send your accommodation a quick WhatsApp when you’re back online.- Recheck your eSIM’s data roaming is on; confirm you’re on an in‑country network, not a weak roaming partner.Pro tips: - Dual profiles: If your eSIM allows, keep a secondary profile for a different network in the same country—helpful in border towns.- Cash buffer: Some border terminals don’t accept cards; download a currency converter for offline use.Offline survival kit (5‑minute setup)Maps: Download regions for Cusco, Sacred Valley, Puno, La Paz, Uyuni, San Pedro, Salta/Jujuy or Mendoza, and Buenos Aires.Translations: Download Spanish for offline use; add phrasebook favourites (bus tickets, directions, dietary needs).Documents: Save PDFs of passports, tickets, hotel addresses; star them for quick access.Rides: Screenshots of pickup points; pin bus terminals and hotel doors.Entertainment: Podcasts and playlists for long bus legs, set to download on Wi‑Fi only.Altitude and your tech: what changesCoverage gaps lengthen: Fewer towers at high altitude; valleys can block signal. Assume offline on remote excursions.Batteries drain faster in cold: Keep your phone warm and carry a power bank (10,000–20,000 mAh).Hotel Wi‑Fi may be congested: Schedule big uploads (photo backups, app updates) for big-city stays like Santiago or Buenos Aires.GPS still works offline: Your blue dot shows on offline maps without data—preload everything.Data budgeting for 3 weeksTypical traveller usage across this route: - Messaging/Maps/Bookings: 0.2–0.5 GB/day- Social and photo sharing: 0.3–0.7 GB/day- Occasional video calls/streaming: 0.5–1.0 GB/dayFor a mixed-use trip, plan 15–25 GB for 3 weeks. Heavy creators should double it and upload over hotel Wi‑Fi when possible. If you work remotely, consider a higher‑capacity plan and a backup eSIM; see our guidance on For Business.Practical route with transport and connectivity cuesDays 1–4 Cusco base: Strong city signal; day trips may be spotty—go offline-ready.Days 5–6 Machu Picchu: Expect no service at the ruins; sync tickets ahead.Days 7–8 Puno to La Paz via Copacabana: Border signal drop; re‑register networks after crossing.Days 9–11 Uyuni tour to San Pedro: Treat as offline; charge nightly; carry spare cables.Days 12–14 San Pedro: Stable in town; tours offline; top up data before Paso Jama.Days 15–17 Salta/Jujuy or Mendoza: Good urban 4G; rural patches are offline.Days 18–21 Buenos Aires: Strongest connectivity of the trip; clear your uploads and map downloads for the flight home.Partnering and stopover extrasHospitality and tour operators in the Andes: help your guests stay connected—explore co‑branded solutions via our Partner Hub.Transatlantic flyers: test your eSIM setup on a layover with an Esim United States or Esim Western Europe before hitting high-altitude blackspots.FAQs1) Do I need a local SIM in each country?No. A multi‑country eSIM covering Peru, Bolivia, Chile and Argentina is simpler and works well for a 3‑week pace. Consider a local SIM only if you’ll spend longer in one country and want the absolute best regional coverage.2) Will my WhatsApp number change with an eSIM?No. WhatsApp is tied to your registered number, not your data line. Keep your home SIM active for voice/SMS (roaming off if you wish), and use the eSIM for data—WhatsApp continues as normal.3) Can I hotspot to my laptop or camera?Yes. Enable tethering on your eSIM. Mind your data: cloud backups and OS updates can burn gigabytes—set them to Wi‑Fi only or schedule in big cities.4) What if there’s no signal on the Uyuni/Atacama legs?That’s expected. GPS still works offline. Pre-download maps and translations, carry a power bank, and sync plans with your tour operator before departure.5) Will I get roaming charges at borders?If you’re using a multi‑country eSIM with coverage in both countries, you won’t incur extra roaming fees from your home carrier. Keep roaming off on your home SIM to avoid accidental use.6) I’m connecting via Europe or the US—worth getting a layover eSIM?Yes. It’s an easy way to test your setup and stay reachable. Try Esim North America or country options like Esim Spain, Esim France, or Esim Italy for common hubs.Next step: Browse South America coverage options and build your plan on Destinations.
Read blog
Reseller & Affiliate Playbook: Commission Tiers, Attribution & Payouts
If you run a travel site, content channel, marketplace or mobility service, a well-run eSIM affiliate reseller program can become a predictable revenue stream. This playbook shows exactly how Simology partners earn, track and get paid—without guesswork. We cover practical commission tiers, link attribution, UTM best practice, pixel/postback options, fraud checks, and the monthly payout workflow. You’ll also get a launch checklist and high‑converting ideas tied to top routes and countries. Keep the traveller experience front and centre: promote plans that activate instantly, work across borders, and solve roaming pain—in destinations like the Esim United States, Esim France, Esim Italy, Esim Spain and multi‑country bundles such as Esim Western Europe or Esim North America. Bookmark this guide, then head to the Partner Hub to activate your links and track performance.Who this is for—and what you can earnTravel publishers, bloggers, YouTubers, creators and communitiesOTAs, metasearch, airlines, rail, ferry and bus operatorsCo‑working, co‑living, expat and student platformsTelco dealers and retail resellersYou can promote single‑country eSIMs, regional bundles and long‑stay plans. Commission scales with volume and quality, paying on each qualified order (first purchase and, if applicable, top‑ups—see FAQ). Live rates and your status are visible in the Partner Hub.Pro tip: Match content to destinations and travel seasons using the live catalogue on Destinations. It’s the fastest way to lift conversion.Commission tiers explainedWe use a volume-and-quality model: more approved orders and lower refund rates move you up. Check the Partner Hub for your current tier and live rates. Typical structure:Starter: up to 49 approved orders/monthCommission: baseline rate on qualified ordersEligibility: new partners; light seasonal trafficGrowth: 50–199 approved orders/monthCommission: higher rate; performance review each quarterExtras: custom vouchers for campaignsScale: 200–999 approved orders/monthCommission: premium rateExtras: dedicated support, early access to promosEnterprise: 1,000+ approved orders/monthCommission: negotiatedExtras: co‑marketing, API and bulk ordering options via For BusinessWhat counts as an “approved order” - A unique, paid order that passed fraud checks and remains outside the refund window - Suppressed: cancelled/chargeback orders; obvious self‑dealing; duplicate device activationsQuality guardrails - High refund/complaint rates may trigger a temporary tier freeze while we optimise your funnel - Vouchers discount the retail price but do not reduce your commission rate unless otherwise agreedPro tip: When you launch new placements, start with flexible, popular routes—e.g. Esim United States for long‑haul, Esim Western Europe for rail/Interrail content—to stabilise your conversion and refund mix.Attribution and tracking that just worksWe run a transparent, last‑click attribution model with a standard cookie window. Details:Attribution: last non‑direct click from a Simology‑approved tracking linkLookback window: 30 days cookie; same‑session for private browsingCross‑device: supported when user logs in with the same email on checkoutVouchers: a partner code applies commission if the user arrives direct (fallback attribution)Override rules: self‑purchase suppression; voucher misuse; policy breaches (see Fraud)UTM best practice (so your analytics match ours) - utm_source: your brand or network (e.g., travelblog) - utm_medium: affiliate, reseller, partner, newsletter, video - utm_campaign: campaign or season (e.g., summer_2025_eu) - utm_content: placement (e.g., sidebar_link, yt_description, dealbox) - sub1–sub5: your granular IDs (post slug, ad group, language, creative)Example tracking link (simplified): - https://simology.io/esim-western-europe?utm_source=travelblog&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_campaign=summer_2025_eu&utm_content=dealbox&aff_id=123&sub1=interrail_guidePro tip: Always deep‑link to the exact plan page that matches the traveller’s intent, such as Esim Italy for Rome/Milan guides, or Esim North America for multi‑country trips.Pixel and postback optionsWe support flexible conversion signalling so you can reconcile in your platform.JavaScript pixel: we fire a partner‑specific pixel on the order confirmation pageEvent: purchasePayload: order ID, currency, total, product/region, voucher codeServer‑to‑server postback: preferred for networksProtocol: GET/POST with macros (order_id, amount, currency, status, sub1–sub5)Retries: automatic on transient errorsWebhooks: real‑time events for approved, refunded, and topped‑up orders (opt‑in via Partner Hub)Implementation steps 1) Request your pixel/postback template in the Partner Hub. 2) Provide your endpoint and required macros. 3) Validate in sandbox with two test orders (cancelled + completed). 4) Go live and compare click‑to‑order counts for the first week.Pro tip: Use sub‑parameters to map every placement. It’s the fastest way to prune low‑quality traffic and scale the winners.Fraud and quality controls (and how to stay compliant)We protect travellers and partners by filtering bad traffic without blocking legitimate purchases.What we check - Duplicate suppression: same device/email used across multiple partner links - Voucher abuse: leaked codes used outside permitted channels - Velocity: anomalous spikes from new sources; unrealistic geo/device patterns - Referrers: masked/referrer‑less clicks with high bounce or bot signatures - Refund anomalies: high refund rates clustered by source or sub‑IDYour compliance checklist - Use approved tracking links/vouchers only - No forced clicks, cookie stuffing, toolbars or misleading claims - Label ads and sponsored content clearly - Don’t bid on Simology brand terms unless explicitly authorised - Keep your contact and payout details current in the Partner HubIf we detect an issue, we’ll notify you, pause the affected traffic, and help you remediate. Approved, legitimate orders remain eligible for commission.Monthly payout workflow (end‑to‑end)Month end (T+0): Month closes at 23:59 UTC on the last dayReconciliation (T+1 to T+5): Fraud screening, refunds/cancellations netted outStatement (T+6): Provisional report in the Partner Hub with order IDs and statusesDisputes window (T+6 to T+10): Query mismatches by order ID; we re‑check logs and referrersApproval (T+11): Final amount lockedPayout (T+15): Funds sent via bank transfer or online payoutThresholds: Minimum payout applies; balances roll over if below thresholdNotes - Currency: Paid in your account currency; FX based on payout day mid‑market rate - Documentation: Ensure your account profile, tax information and payout method are complete to avoid delays - Returns: Orders refunded after approval are debited against the next cyclePro tip: Export your order‑level report monthly and match it against your analytics by sub‑ID to keep your funnel healthy.Launch checklist (do this once, in order)1) Apply in the Partner Hub and add your primary domains/social handles. 2) Create link presets with standardised UTM and sub‑parameters. 3) Request voucher codes if you need them for specific pages or newsletters. 4) Set up your pixel/postback and run two test orders (approved + cancelled). 5) Build at least three evergreen placements: - “How to get data in the US” linking to Esim United States - “Europe rail packing list” linking to Esim Western Europe - “City break guides” linking to Esim France, Esim Italy and Esim Spain 6) Add a global “eSIM for travel” link in your nav or resources pointing to Destinations. 7) Monitor CTR, conversion and refunds; scale the best placements.Promotion ideas that convertComparison blocks: “Local SIM vs roaming vs eSIM” with a clear CTA to regional bundles like Esim North AmericaItinerary‑specific CTAs: “Before you land in JFK, install your eSIM” linked to Esim United StatesPacking lists: Include an “eSIM ready” tip with links to DestinationsNewsletter countdowns: “48 hours to departure? Activate Esim Western Europe in 2 minutes”Video descriptions: Persistent link with UTM + sub‑IDs, plus a voucher codePro tip: Surface regional bundles alongside single‑country plans; travellers often change routes late, and bundles lift conversions.Reporting: the KPIs that matterTrack these weekly: - Click‑through rate (placement quality) - Landing‑to‑install rate (clarity of instruction) - Install‑to‑activation rate (device fit, support) - Conversion rate and AOV (offer relevance) - Refund rate (content accuracy; set expectations) - Earnings per click (EPC) by sub‑ID (where to scale)Pro tip: If install‑to‑activation drops, add a “Works on most modern iPhones and Androids—check device list” line near your CTA and deep‑link to the right region. Align content to the traveller’s device and route.FAQHow is commission calculated? Commission is a percentage of the final paid amount on approved orders after discounts. Your tier determines the percentage. Track live rates and approvals in the Partner Hub.What’s the attribution window? Standard cookie window is 30 days with last non‑direct click. If a user applies your voucher code on a direct visit, attribution falls back to the code.Do I earn on top‑ups or extensions? Where top‑ups are processed under the same account/email within the attribution window and linked to your original referral, commission applies. The order‑level report shows this by event type.Can I buy through my own link? Self‑purchases and obvious self‑dealing are suppressed. If you need staff or creator plans for testing, request non‑commissionable codes via the Partner Hub.Which destinations convert best? High‑intent pages like Esim United States, Esim France, Esim Italy, Esim Spain and regional bundles like Esim Western Europe and Esim North America are consistently strong. Browse all options on Destinations.Can I get API or bulk ordering? Yes. Larger resellers and enterprise partners can use API access, white‑label flows and bulk provisioning via For Business. Contact us through the Partner Hub.Next step: Ready to launch or optimise your esim affiliate reseller program? Activate your account and get your first links live in the Partner Hub.
Read blogBanking & OTP Abroad: App Settings That Keep Codes Coming
Stuck outside your home country and your bank won’t send the one-time passcode? You’re not alone. Many banks still rely on OTP by SMS, which can fail when roaming is patchy, Wi‑Fi calling doesn’t register for texts, or your phone quietly blocks push notifications to save battery. The fix is simple: move your approvals into the bank app, keep push working, and set up fallbacks you control. This guide shows you exactly how to configure your phone and accounts so codes keep coming—without juggling SIMs or paying surprise roaming fees. We’ll cover push vs SMS, authenticator apps, backup codes, dual‑SIM/eSIM setups that actually work, VoWiFi caveats, and a pre‑flight checklist you can run in ten minutes. If you manage trips for a team, we’ll also point you to options that scale. Wherever you’re headed—browse eSIMs by region via Destinations—you’ll arrive ready to log in, approve payments, and get on with your day.The problem: OTPs fail when you’re abroadHere’s why bank codes often don’t arrive when travelling:SMS depends on your home mobile network allowing roaming, VoLTE/VoWiFi interoperability, and local interconnects. Any piece breaks, codes vanish.Some carriers don’t deliver SMS over Wi‑Fi calling when you’re outside your home country.Phones aggressively throttle background activity on low battery or “optimised” modes, silently delaying bank push notifications.Changing time zones can desynchronise time-based codes if your device time is set manually.Dual‑SIM misconfiguration: data on a travel eSIM but SMS locked to a disabled home line.The cure is to reduce dependence on SMS, configure your device for reliable push, and keep lightweight SMS fallback available.The bank otp abroad app playbook: use in‑app approvals and authenticator codesMost modern banks support app-based approvals or time-based one-time passwords (TOTP) in their own app. These work over any internet connection (mobile data or Wi‑Fi), avoiding SMS entirely.Why push beats SMS when travellingWorks on any data connection, including hotel Wi‑Fi and travel eSIMs.Not tied to your home phone number or roaming.Faster and more reliable than international SMS, especially during number‑porting or network outages.Step-by-step: move approvals into your bank appDo this before you travel:Install or update your bank’s mobile app on your primary phone. Sign in at home on a known network.In Security/2FA settings, choose “App-based verification,” “Push approval,” or “Mobile app authentication.”Register the device and complete any identity checks while you still have normal coverage.Enable “Offline or one-time codes” inside the bank app if offered (many apps cache short-lived codes for poor connectivity).Add a second factor: backup codes, a hardware token (if the bank issues one), or an authenticator app as a fallback.Pro tip: Some banks offer TOTP (like an authenticator code) inside their own app. Prefer that to SMS where available.Build a resilient 2FA setup before you flyChecklist: your 10-minute pre‑flightSwitch 2FA to app‑based approvals for every bank and payment service.Generate and securely store backup codes (print and keep offline; do not keep only in your email).Add a second device as an emergency method (e.g., a tablet at home) if your bank allows multiple trusted devices.Confirm your phone’s time is set to automatic network time and time zone.Save your bank’s international contact numbers in your phone.Set up a travel data plan so your bank app always has internet, e.g. Esim Western Europe for multi‑country trips, or country packs such as Esim France, Esim Italy, Esim Spain, or Esim United States. For multi‑region itineraries, see Esim North America.Pro tip: Test from home. Put your phone in airplane mode, enable Wi‑Fi, turn off your primary SIM briefly, and confirm you can still receive bank push approvals over Wi‑Fi.Configure your phone so bank apps can reach youPush notifications rely on Apple/Google services. Don’t let battery savers or Focus modes strangle them.iPhone - Settings > Notifications > [Your bank app] > Allow Notifications (Lock Screen, Banners), Time Sensitive On. - Settings > General > Background App Refresh > On for your bank app. - Settings > Battery > Low Power Mode Off when you’re expecting codes. - Settings > Focus: ensure your bank app is allowed to notify during active Focus profiles. - Settings > Date & Time > Set Automatically On.Android (steps vary by brand) - Settings > Apps > [Your bank app] > Notifications > Allow; enable all relevant channels (e.g., “Security” or “Approvals”). - Settings > Battery > Battery optimisation > Don’t optimise your bank app and Google Play Services. - Settings > Mobile network > Data saver Off, or allow unrestricted data for the bank app and Google Play Services. - Settings > Date & time > Use network‑provided time/time zone On. - If your phone has a vendor “optimiser” (MIUI, EMUI, ColorOS, etc.), whitelist your bank app for autostart/background activity.Pro tip: Keep at least 200 MB free storage so apps can update and push tokens can refresh.Dual‑SIM done right: home number for SMS, eSIM for dataYou can keep your home SIM active for voice/SMS while using a local eSIM for data:Insert/activate travel eSIM for data (e.g., Esim Western Europe). Set it as default for mobile data.Keep your home SIM on for calls/SMS. You may disable data roaming on the home SIM to avoid data charges.In Dual SIM settings, set “Default for SMS” to your home line.Ensure roaming is enabled for the home SIM if you need SMS fallback. Charges may apply.Test: send yourself a regular SMS from another phone and confirm receipt while data flows through the eSIM.If you’re coordinating teams or devices, explore pooled plans via For Business or partnerships via the Partner Hub.SMS fallback: make it work when you mustSometimes your bank only supports SMS (especially legacy systems). If so:Verify international roaming is enabled on your mobile account before you leave.Turn on VoLTE and Wi‑Fi Calling on your home line. Note: some carriers don’t deliver SMS over Wi‑Fi calling when abroad. If you’re not receiving codes on hotel Wi‑Fi, toggle Wi‑Fi Calling off and try again on mobile.Avoid relying on temporary or VoIP numbers; banks often block them.Keep your line reachable: avoid forwarding your number or disabling the SIM.If your carrier supports it, prefer 4G/5G with VoLTE for SMS reliability as many countries have retired 3G.VoWiFi caveats you should knowSMS over Wi‑Fi isn’t guaranteed when you’re outside your home country; carriers differ by policy.Some devices say “Wi‑Fi Calling On” but still attempt to deliver SMS over the cellular channel. Without a roaming signal, texts won’t arrive.If you’re on Wi‑Fi only and texts don’t appear, temporarily step outside for cellular coverage or insert a local SIM for data while keeping your home SIM active for SMS.Pro tip: If your home carrier allows it, enabling data roaming just long enough to receive a code can help the phone register properly, even if your actual data flows over an eSIM.Troubleshooting: not receiving bank codes abroadWork through these in order:Confirm connectivity: open a web page. If using eSIM for data, ensure it’s active and has signal. See coverage options by region via Destinations.Try app approval: open your bank app and look for an in‑app “Approve” prompt or OTP generator.Notification check: send a test notification (if your bank app supports it) or a message from another app to confirm push works. Disable Focus/Do Not Disturb temporarily.Time check: set date/time to Automatic. Restart the phone to resynchronise push and TOTP.SMS path: if relying on SMS, ensure the home SIM is on, roaming enabled, and it can receive a normal SMS from another number. Toggle Wi‑Fi Calling Off, then On; toggle airplane mode for 10 seconds.Network selection: set the home SIM to automatic network selection. If that fails, manually pick a different partner network.VoLTE toggle: disable and re‑enable VoLTE for the home SIM; some roaming partners need a fresh registration.SIM priority: on dual‑SIM Android, set “Calling preference” for the home SIM; some banks require an outbound SMS handshake before sending OTP.Fallback contact: use backup codes or your pre‑registered secondary factor to regain access.Last resort: call your bank’s international number (from the app or website). Ask for temporary alternative verification (app push, email to pre‑verified address, or phone support).Pro tip: Keep screenshots of your 2FA settings (no sensitive data) so you can explain your setup quickly to bank support.Planning your connectivity for smooth bankingA reliable data connection is the backbone of app‑based approvals. Pick an eSIM with coverage where you’re headed:Multi-country trips: Esim Western Europe or Esim North America.Single-country city breaks: Esim France, Esim Italy, Esim Spain, or Esim United States.Check regional options and fair-use notes via Destinations. For teams, create a standard “Banking & 2FA” pack in your internal travel checklist and provision eSIMs via For Business. Partners can streamline traveller onboarding through the Partner Hub.FAQWill my bank’s SMS codes arrive over Wi‑Fi?Not always. Some carriers don’t deliver SMS over Wi‑Fi calling when you’re abroad. If codes don’t arrive on Wi‑Fi, try with mobile coverage, or switch to app-based approvals.Do I need roaming enabled to receive SMS?Usually yes. Your phone must register on a roaming network to receive SMS to your home number. You can keep data roaming off and still receive SMS on many carriers, but check your plan for charges.Are authenticator apps better than SMS for travel?Yes. Authenticator or in‑app approvals work over any internet connection and aren’t tied to your phone number. They’re more reliable and generally more secure.What if my bank only supports SMS?Keep your home SIM active, enable roaming, and ensure VoLTE is on. Test before travel. If SMS still fails abroad, call the bank and ask for a temporary alternative (phone approval or in‑app activation).Do time zones affect one‑time codes?Time‑based codes (TOTP) need accurate device time. Set date/time to automatic. Manual time settings can cause codes to fail.Can I use a travel eSIM and still get bank codes?Yes. Use the eSIM for data and keep your home SIM active for SMS if needed. Configure dual‑SIM correctly and test before departure. Browse options via Destinations.Next stepSet up your data lifeline now so app-based approvals just work when you land. Pick your plan by region with Esim Western Europe or explore all options via Destinations, then run the pre‑flight checklist before you go.
Read blog
eSIM vs Physical SIM vs Roaming: Which Is Best in 2025?
Choosing how to stay connected abroad used to be simple: buy a local SIM, or let your network roam and hope for the best. In 2025, eSIM has changed the game. You can install a mobile data plan digitally in minutes, keep your home number active for calls, and avoid hunting for shops at the airport. But physical SIMs still have their place, and roaming can be convenient for short trips. The right choice depends on your itinerary, your device, and how much data you actually use.This guide compares eSIM vs physical SIM vs roaming side‑by‑side on cost, coverage and convenience, with practical examples and a clear setup checklist. If you’re heading to Europe, North America or beyond, Simology’s regional plans mean one purchase can cover multiple countries. Check the latest options per country on Destinations, or jump straight to regional picks like Esim Western Europe and Esim North America. Let’s get you connected—without surprises on your bill.Quick verdict: when to choose whatChoose eSIM if you want the best balance of cost and convenience, or need coverage across multiple countries without swapping SIMs.Choose a physical SIM if your phone doesn’t support eSIM, or you’ll stay in one country for weeks and can visit a local carrier shop.Choose roaming only for very short trips or when you must keep your home plan’s inclusive calls/texts and don’t mind the cost.Side‑by‑side comparison: cost, coverage, convenienceFactoreSIMPhysical SIMRoaming (home network)Typical costOften £2–£5 per GB, or £10–£25 for bundles; multi‑country packs availableSimilar local rates once purchased, but time cost to find/buyDay passes £5–£12/day; pay‑per‑MB can be costly; bill shock riskCoverageChoose per country or region (e.g., Esim Western Europe, Esim North America)Strong in one country; no multi-countryDepends on your network’s partners; may exclude some areasConvenienceInstall via QR/app in minutes; keep home SIM active (dual‑SIM)Requires store visit and SIM swap; need ID in some countriesNo setup if enabled; may require opt‑in and plan checkSpeed4G/5G where supported by local networks4G/5G on local networks4G/5G possible but sometimes throttledNumberData‑only (keep your home number for calls/OTP via home SIM)Usually includes a local numberKeep your home number for everythingFlexibilityActivate before or on arrival; top up remotelyHarder to manage or top up without local app/cardSimple for short trips; expensive for heavy data useExplore country pages like Esim United States, Esim France, Esim Italy and Esim Spain to see current bundles and networks.What exactly is an eSIM?An eSIM is a digital SIM profile built into your device. Instead of inserting a plastic card, you download a plan to your phone or tablet using a QR code or app. Most recent iPhones, Google Pixels and many Samsung models support eSIM, and many can run two lines at once (your home SIM plus a travel eSIM). For most travellers, that means:Data via your eSIM (maps, ride‑hailing, messages).Your home number still receives calls and verification codes.No queues, no tiny trays, and switching plans is software‑only.Cost breakdown with real‑world examplesPrices vary by network and season. Use these as planning benchmarks:Long weekend in Europe (4 days): Roaming day pass at £7/day costs ~£28 for light use; one Esim Western Europe 3–5 GB pack is often £10–£18—usually cheaper and enough for maps, chat, and some social media.10‑day Italy/France/Spain loop: Three roaming day passes at ~£7/day totals ~£70. A 10–15 GB regional eSIM bundle often runs £18–£30 and works across borders—see Esim Italy, Esim France and Esim Spain for country options, or use Esim Western Europe to keep it simple.One‑week US trip: Many UK/EU carriers charge £6–£10/day for U.S. roaming; that’s £42–£70. A 5–10 GB pack on Esim United States often costs £10–£25.Two‑week Canada/USA work travel: Roaming can exceed £100 with moderate data. A multi‑country Esim North America plan typically costs less than half.Rule of thumb: If you’ll use more than 1 GB per day or travel across countries, eSIM is usually cheaper and more flexible than roaming.Coverage and speed: what to expect in 20255G is now common in cities and many tourist corridors. Rural areas may still be 4G. Your speed depends on local networks, device bands, and congestion.eSIM plans connect to local partner networks—the same ones you’d use with a physical SIM—so performance is comparable.Dual‑SIM management lets you route data via eSIM while keeping your home SIM for calls/SMS. Most phones allow you to choose which line handles calls, data and texts.If you must have a local phone number for restaurant bookings, a physical SIM may still help. Otherwise, data‑only eSIM plus WhatsApp/VoIP covers most needs.Check available networks and bundles per country on Destinations.How to set up an eSIM with Simology (step‑by‑step)Before you start: ensure your phone is unlocked and supports eSIM.1) Pick your destination: - Single country page (e.g., Esim United States) or a regional plan like Esim Western Europe.2) Choose your data allowance: - Estimate 1–2 GB per day if you stream and upload; 0.5–1 GB per day for maps, chat and light social.3) Buy and check your email: - You’ll receive an eSIM QR code and installation instructions. Keep them handy.4) Install the eSIM: - iOS: Settings > Mobile Data > Add eSIM > Use QR code. - Android (varies): Settings > Network & Internet > SIMs > Download a SIM > Scan QR.5) Set data line: - Set the eSIM as your mobile data line. - Keep your home SIM active for calls/texts if needed.6) Turn on data roaming for the eSIM line: - This enables local connectivity with partner networks.7) Test: - Toggle Airplane Mode off/on, load a web page, and confirm your APN is auto‑configured (usually it is).Pro tips: - Install just before you fly or on arrival; activation windows start when you connect to the destination network. - Disable data on your home SIM to avoid accidental roaming charges. - Save the QR code and keep Wi‑Fi handy during setup. - For multi‑country trips, choose a regional bundle so you don’t have to switch plans at borders.Explore available plans on Destinations.Physical SIMs: pros, cons, and a quick checklistPros: - Can include a local number for voice calls. - Competitive local pricing for long stays. - Works with older, non‑eSIM devices.Cons: - Requires a store visit; queues and potential ID requirements. - SIM swap hassle; risk of losing your home SIM. - Harder to manage/topping up without a local payment method.Checklist for success: - Bring your passport; some countries mandate registration. - Know the APN settings and how to change SIM slots. - Keep your home SIM in a labelled case. - Ask the shop to test data and calls before you leave.Roaming on your home plan: pros, cons, and hidden risksPros: - Zero setup if roaming is pre‑enabled. - Keep your number for everything. - Fine for very short trips with light use.Cons: - Day passes add up quickly; pay‑per‑use can be eye‑watering. - Fair‑use caps and throttling are common. - Some plans exclude tethering or 5G abroad. - Misconfigured devices (cloud backups, auto‑updates) can burn through data unnoticed.Minimise risk: - Turn off background app refresh and cloud photo backup before you travel. - Confirm daily caps, speed limits, and tethering rules with your carrier. - Use a travel eSIM for data and keep your home SIM for calls/SMS only.Special cases: business travel and partnersFor teams, shared itineraries and predictable costs, Simology’s For Business can centralise purchasing, track usage, and provision eSIMs at scale. Ideal for field staff and frequent flyers across regions like Esim North America or Esim Western Europe.Travel agents, MSPs and affiliates can streamline client connectivity and earn with Simology’s Partner Hub. Offer ready‑to‑go bundles for popular routes such as Esim France, Esim Italy and Esim United States.FAQs1) Will an eSIM give me a local phone number? - Most travel eSIMs are data‑only and do not include a local number. Use your home number for calls/SMS (dual‑SIM) or call via apps like WhatsApp. If you need a local number, consider a physical SIM or a VoIP number.2) Can I use one eSIM across multiple countries? - Yes—choose a regional plan such as Esim Western Europe or Esim North America. Always check the list of covered countries before you buy.3) Is eSIM activation instant? - Usually yes. You can install the profile in advance and it will activate when you first connect in‑country. Activation windows vary; check the plan details on Destinations.4) What if my phone is locked? - Network‑locked phones may not accept non‑home plans (physical or eSIM). Ask your carrier to unlock before travel.5) Can I hotspot/tether on an eSIM? - In most cases, yes, but it depends on the specific plan. Check the plan description—tethering is typically supported on Simology travel eSIMs.6) How much data do I really need? - Light use (maps, chat, email): ~0.5 GB/day. Mixed use (social, short videos): 1–2 GB/day. Heavy use (HD streaming, uploads): 3+ GB/day. When in doubt, pick a plan with easy top‑ups.The bottom lineeSIM is the best option for most travellers in 2025: low hassle, competitive pricing, and strong coverage—especially on regional plans.Physical SIMs still make sense for long single‑country stays or if you need a local number.Roaming is fine for short, light‑use trips—but watch the daily costs and fair‑use caps.Next step: find the right plan for your route on Simology’s Destinations page, or go straight to a regional bundle like Esim Western Europe or Esim North America.
Read blog
Digital Nomad eSIM Guide: Reliable Data for Remote Work Abroad
Reliable internet is the lifeline of every digital nomad. Apartment Wi‑Fi can vary wildly, cafés throttle hotspots, and roaming charges add up fast. An eSIM gives you flexible, local or regional data at fair prices—without hunting for shops, swapping plastic SIMs, or losing access to your home number. This guide shows you how to choose and use an eSIM for digital nomads, when to trust coworking over apartment Wi‑Fi, how to build a backup line strategy for 2FA and calls, and how to optimise latency for video meetings. You’ll also find practical checklists, setup steps, and real itineraries with plan suggestions across Europe and North America. If you manage a remote team or run client calls, consider this your plain‑English playbook to staying online, stable and ready to work wherever you land.Browse country and regional options via Destinations, or jump straight to regional bundles like Esim Western Europe and Esim North America.Why eSIM is ideal for digital nomadsKeep your main number active. Use eSIM for data while your physical SIM (or second eSIM) keeps your home number for calls/2FA.No shops, no queues. Buy and activate from anywhere. Install profiles before you fly.Local pricing, regional roaming. Choose country plans (e.g., Esim United States, Esim France, Esim Spain, Esim Italy) or monthly regional plans such as Esim Western Europe or Esim North America.Multiple profiles, one device. Store several eSIMs and switch as trips evolve.Better speed and ping than many roaming add‑ons. Local break‑out usually means faster pages, smoother calls.Coworking vs apartment Wi‑Fi: what actually worksApartment Wi‑Fi realitiesInconsistent hardware and cabling; speeds may drop during peak hours.Asymmetric bandwidth (e.g., fast downloads, slow uploads), which hurts video calls and cloud backups.Higher jitter and packet loss when lots of tenants stream.Landlords may combine networks or throttle hotspots.Coworking network advantagesBusiness‑grade connections, often with Service Level Agreements and redundant links.Symmetric speeds, lower jitter/packet loss—crucial for Zoom/Meet.Better Wi‑Fi design (proper AP placement, 5 GHz/6 GHz support).On‑site staff to troubleshoot quickly.How to decide for your workdayUse this quick checklist before committing:Speed: Aim for at least 25 Mbps down and 10 Mbps up for solo workdays; >50/20 Mbps if you upload frequently.Latency: <80 ms to a regional server is good; <40 ms is excellent.Jitter: <20 ms for reliable video calls.Packet loss: <1% (zero is ideal).Backup: Have a hotspotable eSIM ready if the building network drops.Pro tip: Run three tests—morning, lunch, evening—using Speedtest and check Zoom/Meet’s built‑in “Statistics” for latency/jitter during a call. If your apartment fails, plan to cowork for critical meetings and rely on eSIM hotspotting as your personal failover.Picking the right plan: local vs regional monthly eSIMsLocal country eSIMs: Best pricing if you’ll stay put for a while. See Esim United States, Esim France, Esim Spain, and Esim Italy.Regional eSIMs: Ideal for multi‑country sprints without swapping plans. Esim Western Europe covers popular Schengen routes; Esim North America is handy for US‑Canada‑Mexico hops.What to look for: - Multiple partner networks per country for stronger coverage and lower congestion. - Reasonable fair‑use and hotspot allowances. Check tethering support if you’ll work from a laptop. - Auto‑renew monthly options so you don’t lapse mid‑sprint. - 4G/5G availability where you work (5G can help at peak times, but 4G is often steadier indoors).Browse country and regional availability on Destinations.How to set up your eSIM (do this before you fly)1) Choose a plan- Single country or regional monthly, based on your itinerary. Short stays: local. Multi‑stop: regional.2) Install the eSIM- On iPhone: Settings > Mobile Data > Add eSIM. Scan QR or use activation code.- On Android (varies): Settings > Network & Internet > SIMs > Download a SIM > Scan QR.3) Label your lines- Call one “Data” (eSIM) and one “Home” (physical SIM) for clarity.4) Set data preferences- Set the eSIM as “Primary Data”. Leave the home SIM for calls/2FA. Disable “Allow Mobile Data Switching” to keep calls from hopping data lines unexpectedly.5) Roaming and network selection- Enable data roaming on the eSIM. If performance varies, set “Network Selection” to Manual and try each listed carrier.6) APN and 5G- Most plans configure APN automatically. If speeds are odd, confirm APN matches provider notes. Try forcing 4G/LTE if 5G is unstable indoors.7) Test thoroughly- Run speed, latency, jitter, and packet loss tests at your accommodation and nearby coworking.- Start a quick Zoom/Meet call and check the stats panel for real‑world performance.8) Hotspot setup- Enable Personal Hotspot and test a short upload to confirm stability for laptop sessions.Pro tip: Store a second eSIM profile from a different carrier as an emergency spare. Switching takes seconds and can save a client call.Call quality and latency: what matters for remote workA stable video call cares more about latency, jitter, and loss than sheer download speed.Benchmarks for smooth meetings: - Latency (ping): aim for <80 ms to regional servers; <40 ms feels instant. - Jitter: <20 ms prevents “robot voice” and frame drops. - Packet loss: <1% to avoid call glitches.Ways to improve real‑time performance: - Prefer carriers with local internet break‑out in your country/region; this usually reduces latency. - Try manual network selection if your eSIM supports multiple partner operators—pick the one with the lowest jitter/loss, not just the highest speed. - If 5G fluctuates, lock to 4G/LTE for steadier calls. - Sit near a window or use 5 GHz/6 GHz Wi‑Fi on your phone, then tether your laptop over USB for lower interference. - Close background syncs (cloud backups, OS updates) before meetings.Pro tip: Test at your meeting time. Congestion at 09:00 and 18:00 can change results.Your backup line strategy (never miss a bank OTP or client call)Dual‑line setup that works: - Keep your home SIM active on the cheapest plan that supports receiving SMS and Wi‑Fi Calling. - Use your eSIM as the primary data line everywhere you travel.Practical steps: - Messaging continuity: Keep WhatsApp/Signal tied to your home number. The app works fine over the eSIM’s data. - iMessage/FaceTime: On iPhone, set “Send & Receive” to your permanent number so contacts don’t lose you when data lines change. - Wi‑Fi Calling: Enable it on the home SIM to receive calls over any data connection. - Two‑factor codes: Leave the home SIM enabled for SMS. If your bank supports authenticator apps or email backup, set those up before you travel. - Call routing: If you buy a local number (e.g., for client reachability), forward it to your main number or use VoIP apps.Pro tip: Label each line clearly (“Home – UK”, “Data – EU”). In settings, ensure “Default Voice Line” is the number clients expect.Staying online across borders: practical tacticsUse a regional monthly plan when you’ll cross borders every week or two. It’s simpler than juggling several country plans.Prefer providers that offer two or more partner networks per country. Manually switch if speeds dip.Carry an AT‑rated travel adapter and, if possible, a small power bank. Low battery worsens radio performance.Monitor usage: set data alerts at 80% and 95%. Hotspotting during video calls burns data quickly.For critical days, book a day pass at a coworking space and keep your eSIM hotspot as a failover.Save offline maps and key docs in case of short outages.Itinerary examples and recommended optionsOne month across France, Spain, ItalyIf you’ll bounce between Paris, Barcelona, and Rome, a regional plan keeps life simple: choose Esim Western Europe. You’ll move country‑to‑country without installing new profiles. For longer stays in a single country, compare local options like Esim France, Esim Spain, or Esim Italy for the best value.Two months in the US with side trips to Canada or MexicoPick Esim North America for borderless coverage. If you’re US‑only and staying mainly in cities, Esim United States can optimise for local networks and pricing.Team offsite or client roadshowIf you’re coordinating connectivity for a group, explore pooled data and central management via For Business. Teams save time with pre‑activated profiles delivered ahead of travel.Pro tip: If you partner with colivings, retreats, or coworking chains, streamline co‑branded connectivity via the Partner Hub.Quick pre‑trip checklistInstall your eSIM and test at home on airplane‑mode toggles.Label lines; set eSIM as Primary Data, home SIM for calls/2FA.Enable hotspot; verify a laptop call works smoothly.Download offline maps; update major apps over Wi‑Fi.Add a spare eSIM profile as a backup.Note local emergency numbers; ensure your phone can dial them without data.FAQWhat is an eSIM and how is it different from a physical SIM?An eSIM is a digital SIM profile you install on your phone—no plastic card required. You can store multiple profiles and switch without swapping trays.Will I get a local phone number with my eSIM?Most travel eSIMs are data‑only. You’ll use apps (WhatsApp, Zoom, Slack) for communication. Keep your home SIM active for calls/SMS, or add a VoIP number if you need local voice.Can I hotspot my laptop from an eSIM?Yes, most plans support tethering. Check your plan’s fair‑use limits and test a video call over hotspot before relying on it for client work.Is 5G necessary for remote work?Not strictly. A stable 4G/LTE connection with low latency/jitter is often better than a flaky 5G signal. Use 5G where it’s strong; otherwise, lock to 4G for stability.How do I keep WhatsApp when switching countries or data lines?Keep WhatsApp registered to your permanent number (home SIM). The app works over any data connection, including your eSIM, without re‑registering.How many eSIMs can my phone store?Modern iPhones and many Androids can store multiple eSIM profiles (active one or two at a time, depending on model). Check your device specs to confirm.Next stepPlan your route and pick the right local or regional data in minutes. Start with Destinations to compare coverage and plans for where you’re heading next.
Read blog
eSIM Safety Myths: How Secure Is eSIM Really?
If you’re planning a trip and wondering “is eSIM secure?”, you’re not alone. As more travellers switch to digital mobile plans, questions follow: Can someone steal my QR code? Is activation safe on hotel Wi‑Fi? What if my phone is lost or stolen abroad? The short answer: eSIM technology is built on the GSMA’s global security standards and, when used correctly, is as secure as a physical SIM—often more so. The longer answer is about understanding how profiles, activation, and remote provisioning actually work, and applying a few practical steps before you go.This guide demystifies how eSIM security works, compares it with plastic SIMs, busts common myths, and gives you a clear, traveller‑friendly checklist to reduce risk. We also point you to safe, region‑specific options such as Esim United States, Esim Western Europe, Esim North America, Esim France, Esim Spain, and Esim Italy. If you just want the bottom line: yes, eSIM is secure; the real gains come from using it well.Quick refresher: what is an eSIM?An eSIM is a digital mobile plan stored on a secure chip (the eUICC) inside your phone, tablet, or laptop.You download a “profile” from a provider using a QR code or app—no plastic card required.Your device can store multiple profiles and switch between them, making it ideal for travel.Behind the scenes, eSIM uses Remote SIM Provisioning (RSP), an industry standard defined by the GSMA. Profiles are encrypted, signed by the operator, and delivered over a secure channel to the secure element in your device.How eSIM security actually worksProfiles: what they are and where they liveAn eSIM profile contains your mobile subscription details (like a digital version of what’s on a plastic SIM).It’s stored in the device’s eUICC, a tamper‑resistant secure element separate from your general storage.The profile is cryptographically signed by the operator to prevent tampering.Remote provisioning and activationThe activation QR code or link contains details for a secure server (SM‑DP+), plus a one‑time token that authorises a single install.Your device establishes an encrypted session to download the profile. The token cannot be reused once redeemed.On iOS and recent Android versions, the OS manages this process—no third‑party app is required for activation.Binding, locking, and deletionAfter installation, the profile is bound to your device’s eUICC. Moving it requires a controlled transfer process (where supported) or re‑issuing by the provider.Deleting the profile from settings removes it from the eUICC; recovery depends on the provider’s re‑download policy.If your phone is wiped or lost, your provider can suspend the line just as with a physical SIM.Myth‑busting: is eSIM secure?Myth: “eSIMs are easier to hack than plastic SIMs.”Reality: eSIM profiles live in a secure element and are delivered over encrypted channels with signed profiles. There’s no plastic to clone, and no card to swap out in a hurry.Myth: “Anyone who sees my QR can steal my plan.”Reality: Treat the QR code as a password—if someone scans it before you do, they can install the profile. But the token is one‑time; once you’ve installed it, the QR is useless. Don’t share screenshots or emails.Myth: “eSIM lets people track me more.”Reality: eSIM does not add extra tracking. Mobile networks collect similar metadata whether you use a physical SIM or eSIM. Location services on your device are unrelated to the eSIM itself.Myth: “eSIM makes SIM‑swap attacks impossible.”Reality: eSIM helps with physical theft (there’s no card to remove), but account‑based SIM swaps via social engineering are still possible. Use account PINs and monitor alerts.Myth: “You must be online to keep using an eSIM.”Reality: You need connectivity to download/activate the profile. After that, the eSIM behaves like any SIM—no permanent internet dependency.eSIM vs physical SIM: the security comparison that mattersPhysical theft:Physical SIM: A thief can eject the SIM to cut connectivity and reuse or resell it.eSIM: No removable card. Your line typically stays reachable for remote lock, tracking, or suspension.Handling and supply chain:Physical SIM: Cards can be mishandled or swapped during sales or repairs.eSIM: Remote provisioning reduces touchpoints and in‑store risk.Privacy:Equivalent. The network sees the same subscriber data regardless of SIM type.Portability:Physical SIM: Easy to move to another handset.eSIM: More controlled. You may need a new QR or an OS‑supported transfer process. This is a safety benefit, but plan ahead.Damage and wear:Physical SIM: Can be damaged, lost, or corroded.eSIM: Solid‑state, with fewer physical failure points.Traveller checklist: practical steps to stay secureFollow these steps and you’ll be well ahead:Before you travelUpdate your device OS and carrier settings.Add a strong screen lock (PIN/biometrics). Consider enabling a SIM PIN for your home SIM.Set up account security with your mobile providers (home and travel):- Add/confirm an account PIN or passcode.- Enable email/SMS login alerts.Choose a reputable eSIM provider and buy ahead of time. Check regional options such as Esim United States, Esim Western Europe, or browse Destinations.Save support contacts offline in your notes or password manager.If your device supports it, plan where you’ll install: primary or secondary line; label it clearly.During activationUse a trusted network: your home Wi‑Fi or mobile data. Avoid café/hotel Wi‑Fi if possible.Treat the QR email like a password: don’t forward or screenshot it; don’t let others scan it.Verify you’re installing via system settings (no random apps).Install before you fly or while you still have reliable internet.After install, set:- Which line handles mobile data.- Whether to allow data roaming on each line.- Which line handles calls/SMS (if relevant).Keep the confirmation email, order ID, and plan expiry date handy.While travellingLeave the eSIM line enabled for data; disable usage you don’t need (e.g., voice/SMS if data‑only).Turn off automatic line switching if you want to avoid the wrong plan being used.Monitor data usage and set alerts to avoid bill shock.Avoid installing unknown “profile managers” or VPNs you don’t trust.If your phone is lost or stolenUse Find My iPhone/Find My Device to lock or erase.Contact the eSIM provider to suspend or delete the plan.Change passwords for key accounts and review two‑factor methods.Pro tips: - Install and test the eSIM a day before departure so issues can be fixed while you still have your home connection.- Label your lines clearly (e.g., “Trip Spain Data”).- Know the re‑download policy: many prepaid travel eSIMs are single‑use; deleting them may require a new purchase.Managing multiple profiles safelyKeep only what you need. Delete expired profiles to reduce clutter and confusion.Label each profile and set defaults for data, calls, and messages.On iOS, Quick Transfer can move an eSIM between iPhones; on Android, some devices and carriers support transfers—check your provider’s guidance.Remember: deleting a prepaid travel profile is usually permanent. Confirm before you remove it.Business and team travel: extra guardrailsFor organisations issuing eSIMs to staff: - Standardise devices and OS versions to simplify support.- Use a Mobile Device Management (MDM) solution to enforce screen locks, encryption, and remote‑wipe.- Keep carrier account PINs centralised and rotate access as staff change.- Pre‑provision regional plans where teams travel most—e.g., Esim North America or Esim Western Europe.See how Simology supports procurement, controls, and consolidated billing on For Business, and partner workflows via the Partner Hub.Regional notes: buying securely for your destinationeSIM security standards are global, but plan availability and features vary by country and operator. Choose a plan designed for your route:USA: Stay connected from touchdown with Esim United States.Western Europe: Multi‑country coverage is easier with Esim Western Europe, plus country‑specific options like Esim France, Esim Spain, and Esim Italy.North America: Cross‑border travel? Check Esim North America.Elsewhere: Find vetted plans across regions via Destinations.FAQIs eSIM secure?Yes. eSIM uses GSMA‑standard Remote SIM Provisioning. Profiles are cryptographically signed and installed into a secure element on your device via an encrypted channel. Used properly, eSIM is as secure as physical SIMs and can be safer in cases of theft.Can someone steal my plan by scanning my QR code?Only if they get the QR before you use it. The QR contains a one‑time activation token. Once you install the profile, that token becomes useless. Treat the QR like a password: don’t share it or display it publicly.Is eSIM safer than a physical SIM against SIM‑swap fraud?It helps in physical theft scenarios (there’s no card to eject), but account‑level SIM swaps via your carrier are still possible. Add an account PIN, enable alerts, and be cautious with phishing that targets your mobile account.What happens to my eSIM if I reset my phone?A factory reset typically removes eSIM profiles. Whether you can re‑download depends on the provider’s policy. Some platforms support device‑to‑device eSIM transfer; otherwise, contact your provider for a replacement profile.Do I need internet to activate an eSIM?Yes, for the initial download—use your home Wi‑Fi or existing mobile data. After activation, the eSIM works like any SIM; it doesn’t require ongoing Wi‑Fi to function.Does eSIM change how I’m tracked or affect privacy?No. Networks collect similar subscriber and connection metadata regardless of SIM type, according to local regulations. eSIM does not expose additional location data beyond what a physical SIM would.Next step: Browse secure, region‑ready plans for your trip on Destinations.
Read blog