eSIM Services: Understanding Your Options

The eSIM market offers a wide spectrum of plan types, each suited to different travel patterns, budgets, and technical requirements. This guide categorises the main service types, explains their mechanics, and helps you identify which option best fits your journey. All terminology is defined in our Glossary.

Core Service Types

Single-country eSIM

Single-Country eSIM

Designed for travel to one specific country. Typically offers the best value per GB and highest network priority. Ideal for holidays or business trips with a fixed destination.

Best for: Holidays, single-destination business travel, short stays (3–30 days).

Regional eSIM

Regional eSIM

Covers a group of countries (e.g., Europe, Southeast Asia, Americas). One plan, multiple countries — no need to switch profiles at each border.

Best for: Multi-country tours, backpacking, conference circuits.

Global eSIM

Global eSIM

Single plan covering 100–190+ countries. Higher price per GB but unmatched flexibility. Suitable for frequent international travellers.

Best for: Digital nomads, frequent flyers, journalists, aid workers.

Data-Only vs. Voice+Data Plans

The majority of travel eSIM plans are data-only. This means they provide a mobile data connection but do not assign a local phone number. Voice calls and SMS are handled via internet-based apps (WhatsApp, Signal, FaceTime Audio, etc.) using your existing home number.

A small number of carriers offer voice+data eSIM plans, which assign a local number. These are more expensive and less widely available. For most leisure travellers, data-only plans are the practical and cost-effective choice.

Included / Not Included: Detailed Breakdown

FeatureSingle-CountryRegionalGlobal
Mobile data
Local phone number
SMS
Hotspot/tethering
4G LTE
5G accessVariesVaries
Unlimited dataSome plans
Auto top-up
Refund for unused dataCarrier-dependent
Multi-device sharing
Emergency calls
Network priorityHighMediumLow

Activation Methods

eSIM activation follows one of three methods, depending on the carrier:

  1. QR Code: The most common method. Scan the QR code in your device's eSIM settings. Works on all eSIM-compatible devices.
  2. App-Based: Some carriers provide a dedicated app that installs the profile automatically. Requires downloading the app before travel.
  3. Manual Entry: Enter SM-DP+ server address and activation code manually. Used as a fallback when QR scanning fails.

Device Compatibility

eSIM support is now standard on most flagship smartphones released after 2018. However, compatibility varies by model, region, and carrier lock status. Key considerations:

Service Limitations and Exclusions

Key Terms

eSIM
An embedded SIM card built into your device that can be programmed remotely without a physical SIM swap.
IMSI
International Mobile Subscriber Identity — a unique number identifying a mobile subscriber.
Roaming
Using your mobile network while abroad, typically at higher rates unless a roaming plan is active.
APN
Access Point Name — the gateway between a mobile network and the internet, sometimes needing manual configuration.
QR Code Activation
The standard method to install an eSIM profile by scanning a QR code provided by the carrier.
Dual SIM
A device capability allowing two SIM profiles (physical + eSIM, or two eSIMs) to be active simultaneously.
LPA
Local Profile Assistant — the software on your device that manages eSIM profile downloads and activation.
SM-DP+
Subscription Manager Data Preparation — the server that securely delivers eSIM profiles to devices.
Data-Only eSIM
An eSIM plan that provides mobile data without a voice or SMS number, ideal for travellers using VoIP apps.
Coverage Map
A visual representation of geographic areas where a carrier's network signal is available.

For pricing information, visit our Pricing page. For the activation process, see Process.