Heading abroad for a semester or a full degree? Staying connected is the backbone of a smooth start: maps for orientation week, group chats with classmates, OTPs from your bank, timetables, and calls home. An eSIM gives you local-rate data without the shock of roaming bills, keeps WhatsApp running on your usual number, and can be topped up remotely by parents or sponsors. This guide shows you how to set up an eSIM for students, pick the cheapest sensible plan for your study destination, and keep your home number active for security codes. You’ll also get safety tips and troubleshooting that work in the real world. Whether you’re off to Paris, Milan, Madrid, or New York, we’ll help you choose a regional or country plan now and switch on data the moment you land. Browse coverage by country on Destinations, or jump straight to Esim Western Europe or Esim North America.
Why eSIM beats roaming for study abroad
An eSIM is a digital SIM you install via QR code. It’s ideal for students:
- Low cost: Local and regional eSIMs usually beat home-network roaming by a large margin.
- Instant activation: Install before you fly; switch it on at the airport.
- Dual lines, one phone: Keep your home SIM for OTP banking and WhatsApp; use the eSIM for cheap data.
- Flexible durations: 7, 15, 30‑day and multi-month options, plus easy top-ups.
- Regional cover: One plan can cover multiple countries during weekend trips.
Pro tip: If you’ll travel widely across the EU, choose a regional plan like Esim Western Europe. For Canada/USA travel, look at Esim North America. If you’re staying in one country, a country-specific plan (e.g., Esim France, Esim Italy, Esim Spain or Esim United States) is often cheapest.
Pre-departure checklist for students
Run through this before you fly.
1) Confirm your phone supports eSIM and is unlocked
- iPhone XR/XS or newer, most recent Google Pixel, Samsung Galaxy S20+ and above support eSIM.
- Check your device settings: Search “eSIM” or “Add mobile plan”.
- Ask your home carrier to unlock your handset if it’s locked.
2) Decide your setup
- Keep your physical/home SIM inserted to receive OTP texts and calls.
- Use a local/regional data eSIM for affordable internet.
- Turn off Data Roaming on your home SIM to avoid accidental charges.
3) Pick the right plan and duration
- Short programmes or orientation? 10–15 GB for 2–4 weeks is usually enough.
- A semester? 20–40 GB per month is a good baseline if you have campus Wi‑Fi.
- Frequent city breaks in Europe? Choose Esim Western Europe.
- US/Canada semester? Choose Esim North America or Esim United States.
4) Share your plan details with family
- Let parents/sponsors know your chosen plan so they can top up or resend a QR if you lose yours.
- Store the QR/email in cloud notes.
5) Back up and update
- Update iOS/Android before travel.
- Back up contacts, photos, and authenticator codes.
Step-by-step: Installing and activating your eSIM
You can install at home over Wi‑Fi and activate on arrival, or install/activate at the airport after landing.
1) Buy your plan
- Choose your destination on Destinations and select a country or regional plan.
- Complete purchase; you’ll receive a QR code or activation link.
2) Add the eSIM to your phone
- iPhone: Settings > Mobile Data > Add eSIM or Add Mobile Plan > scan QR.
- Android (varies): Settings > Network & Internet > SIMs > Add eSIM > scan QR.
If you only have the activation code, select “Enter details manually”.
3) Label your lines
- Name the eSIM “Study Data” and your home SIM “Home OTP”.
4) Set defaults and roaming
- Set Mobile Data to use “Study Data” (the eSIM).
- Turn OFF Data Roaming on the “Home OTP” line.
- Leave Voice/SMS on “Home OTP” if you need to receive calls/SMS, but place most calls over WhatsApp/FaceTime.
5) Activate on arrival
- After landing, switch on the eSIM line and ensure Data Roaming is ON for that line (it’s local roaming within the plan’s coverage).
- Wait for signal; if no data, toggle Airplane Mode or reboot.
6) Test
- Load a map and a web page.
- Send yourself a WhatsApp message.
- Ask your bank to send a test OTP if possible.
Pro tips:
- APN usually configures automatically. If data won’t start, check the eSIM’s APN settings in your plan email and enter them manually.
- Keep the QR and plan email safe; you might need them if you switch phones.
Budget-friendly plan sizing for students
Use these guide rails to avoid overpaying.
- Light user (messages, maps, email, ride-hailing, occasional video): 5–10 GB/month.
- Typical student (classes, social media, light streaming on Wi‑Fi first): 15–25 GB/month.
- Heavy user (lots of video/Hotspot, off-campus housing with weak Wi‑Fi): 30–50 GB/month.
Regional picks:
- EU/Schengen semester with weekend trips: Esim Western Europe saves money compared with buying separate country plans.
- North American campuses and cross-border trips: Esim North America.
- Country stays: choose Esim France for Paris or Lyon, Esim Italy for Rome or Milan, Esim Spain for Barcelona or Madrid, or Esim United States for US campuses.
Ways to save:
- Use campus and accommodation Wi‑Fi for updates and video calls.
- Download lectures and playlists over Wi‑Fi.
- Turn off auto-play in social feeds.
- Enable Low Data Mode/Data Saver in your phone settings.
- Share a single, larger regional plan across trips rather than buying multiple short plans.
Keeping your number for OTPs and WhatsApp continuity
Banks, government portals, and university systems often send one-time passwords (OTPs) to your home number. Here’s how to keep that working while using a local data eSIM.
- Keep your home SIM in the phone and active for calls/SMS, but with Data Roaming OFF to avoid fees.
- Set your iPhone/Android to use the eSIM for mobile data, keeping the home SIM for calls/SMS.
- WhatsApp: You can continue using your existing WhatsApp account tied to your home number even if data comes from the eSIM. Do not change your WhatsApp number unless you intend to move permanently.
- If your bank supports app-based authentication or email OTPs, enable them before you travel as a backup.
- If your home carrier offers Wi‑Fi calling at no extra cost, enable it to receive calls over Wi‑Fi when available.
Pro tip: If you must put your home SIM in a safe place (e.g., you’re using a single‑SIM phone), move critical services to app‑based authentication first and update recovery options before you leave.
Parental top-ups and remote support
Parents or sponsors can keep you connected without you sharing card details.
- They can purchase a new plan or top-up and forward the QR/activation email to you.
- Share your plan choice and timing so they buy the right validity window.
- Keep a shared note with your chosen eSIM product link (e.g., Esim Western Europe or Esim United States) to avoid mistakes.
- If you’re in a larger cohort, study-abroad offices can coordinate connectivity via For Business, and student organisations can explore benefits via the Partner Hub.
Safety and sensible settings for students abroad
A few settings and habits go a long way.
- Save local emergency numbers and your university’s 24/7 support line.
- Enable “Send Last Location” in Find My/Find My Device. Share your location with a trusted friend.
- Download offline maps for your host city and campus.
- Turn on data alerts and caps to avoid accidental overuse.
- Add campus security and programme coordinators as phone contacts.
- Keep a small balance on your home SIM for incoming SMS in case your carrier charges for it.
Troubleshooting: quick fixes
If things don’t work first time, try this sequence.
1) No data after landing
- Toggle Airplane Mode for 10 seconds.
- Ensure Mobile Data is set to the eSIM line.
- Turn Data Roaming ON for the eSIM line only.
- Manually select a network (Settings > Network Operators).
2) APN issues
- Check your plan email for APN details and enter them in the eSIM’s Access Point Name field.
3) iMessage/FaceTime not activating
- Temporarily set the eSIM line as your default for both data and iMessage activation; wait a few minutes, then switch defaults back.
4) Can’t receive bank OTPs
- Confirm the home SIM has signal.
- Turn off Do Not Disturb/Focus.
- Ask your bank to resend as SMS, not voice call.
- If your home SIM is out of balance for inbound SMS, top it up.
5) Battery drain
- Disable Background App Refresh on cellular for heavy apps.
- Use Low Power Mode and Low Data Mode.
6) Hotspot not working
- Check the plan allows tethering; if allowed, set the eSIM line as the data source, then enable Personal Hotspot.
Use-case snapshots by region
- United States semesters: Choose Esim United States for campus life, with Esim North America if you’ll visit Canada or Mexico on breaks. Data usage is higher stateside—size up your plan if you rely less on campus Wi‑Fi.
- France, Italy, Spain: City campuses mean strong public Wi‑Fi, so 15–20 GB often suffices. Country-specific plans like Esim France, Esim Italy or Esim Spain are cost‑effective if you mostly stay put.
- Wider European travel: Weekend trips across borders? Pick Esim Western Europe to avoid switching plans at every border.
- Mixed continent exchange: Starting in the US then heading to Europe? Combine a month of Esim United States with a follow‑on Esim Western Europe.
FAQ: eSIM for students
1) Should I buy my eSIM before or after I fly?
Buy before you fly if you can. Install over home Wi‑Fi and activate data on arrival. If you forget, airport Wi‑Fi is usually fine for purchase and installation.
2) Can I keep my WhatsApp number while using a data-only eSIM?
Yes. WhatsApp remains tied to your existing number. Use the eSIM for data and do not change your WhatsApp number unless you want to migrate permanently.
3) How do I receive bank OTPs abroad?
Keep your home SIM active for calls/SMS with Data Roaming OFF. Your phone will still receive SMS on that line. Where possible, enable app-based authentication as a backup before travel.
4) How much data do students typically need per month?
Most students manage on 15–25 GB with regular Wi‑Fi. If you stream a lot on the go or hotspot a laptop, consider 30–40 GB.
5) Can I hotspot from an eSIM?
Often yes, but it depends on the plan. Check your plan details. If allowed, set the eSIM as the active data line and enable Personal Hotspot.
6) My phone is locked to my home carrier. Can I still use an eSIM?
No. You’ll need an unlocked device to use a third‑party eSIM. Ask your carrier about unlocking before you travel.
Next step: Browse your study destination and pick a plan on Destinations. Install at home, land connected, and keep your home number live for OTPs and WhatsApp.