Why travelers like eSIMs
eSIMs let you add local data plans without swapping physical SIMs or visiting carrier stores. For short trips, they’re convenient and fast — but they require a little preparation to avoid activation issues overseas.
Pre-travel checklist
1. Confirm device compatibility
Use our eSIM Compatibility Checker to verify your device and the travel carrier are compatible. Check regional exceptions (some devices sold in certain countries may lack eSIM support).
2. Unlock and backup
Make sure your phone is unlocked and you have a recent backup. Travel eSIMs often require unlocked devices; if your phone is carrier-locked, activation may fail or be blocked.
3. Buy the right plan and retain local access
Choose a data-only plan that suits your trip length and speeds. Prefer providers that offer QR-based activation and clear refund policies. Keep your primary number active until you verify the eSIM works.
During activation
Follow the provider’s activation steps — scan the QR or use the app. Keep Wi‑Fi enabled during setup. If activation fails, confirm the IMEI and network bands with the provider, and consult our troubleshooting guide: Troubleshooting eSIM activations.
Security and safety while traveling
When you use public networks, protect your accounts: enable two-factor authentication, avoid sending sensitive data over unsecured Wi‑Fi, and follow the safe-browsing practices in our Safe Browsing guide. If your eSIM provider asks for personal data beyond an email, verify their privacy policy first — see Privacy.
Switching back and multi-SIM strategies
After travel, you can leave the eSIM profile on your phone for future trips or delete it. If you plan to use both physical SIM and eSIM, set clear defaults for calls and data in your device settings so you don’t accidentally use a costly line.
Real-world tips from travelers
- Buy your travel eSIM in advance to avoid poor on-arrival Wi‑Fi or store queues.
- Take screenshots of activation QR codes as a backup.
- Keep your carrier and account passwords in a manager — see our Password Manager guide.