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eSIM vs Local SIM: Which Should You Use When Travelling? (2026)

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You've got three ways to get mobile data abroad: a travel eSIM, a local physical SIM bought at your destination, or roaming on your home plan. This guide focuses on the choice most travellers actually weigh up โ€” eSIM vs local SIM โ€” and helps you decide quickly.

Short answer: for trips of a few days to a few weeks, a travel eSIM is usually the better choice โ€” you set it up before you fly, keep your home number, and pay a fixed price with no shop visit. A local SIM can win on very long stays or if you need a local number and lots of local calls.

eSIM vs local SIM: the quick verdict

| | Travel eSIM | Local physical SIM | |---|---|---| | Where you get it | Online, before you travel | A shop/kiosk at your destination | | Setup time | ~60 seconds, scan a QR code | Find a shop, show ID, swap cards | | Keep your home number | Yes (runs alongside your SIM) | No, unless you dual-SIM juggle | | Local phone number | Usually no | Yes | | Price | Fixed, paid up front | Variable, top-ups, sometimes cheaper long-term | | Risk of losing your SIM | None (it's digital) | You can misplace the tiny card | | Best for | Trips of days to weeks | Very long stays / heavy local calling |

What is an eSIM?

An eSIM is a digital SIM embedded in your phone. You buy a plan online, scan a QR code, and a data plan installs in minutes โ€” no plastic card. Your existing SIM stays put, so you keep your home number while using the eSIM for affordable local data. (More on how eSIMs work.)

When an eSIM wins

  • You want to be connected the moment you land. Buy ahead, activate on arrival โ€” no airport queue.
  • You want to keep your home number for calls, texts and 2FA codes.
  • You value price certainty. A set allowance for a set price means no roaming meter.
  • You're a light-to-moderate data user on a typical holiday or business trip.
  • You travel often. Top up or buy a new destination plan in minutes each trip.

When a local SIM (or roaming) might be better

We'd rather give you the honest picture than oversell:

  • Very long stays (a month or more) where a local pay-as-you-go SIM plus top-ups works out cheaper โ€” especially if you need a lot of local calls.
  • You need a local number (for deliveries, local services, or a long-term rental).
  • Your phone doesn't support eSIM. Older or some region-locked handsets can't use one โ€” a physical SIM is then your only option.
  • EU residents within the EU may already be covered by "roam like at home" within their normal allowance โ€” check before buying anything.

How to decide in 30 seconds

  1. Is your trip under ~3 weeks? โ†’ eSIM is almost always simpler and cheaper than roaming.
  2. Does your phone support eSIM? (iPhone XS+, recent Pixel, Galaxy S20+ โ€” check your model.) โ†’ If yes, eSIM. If no, local SIM.
  3. Do you need a local number and lots of local calls? โ†’ Lean local SIM.
  4. Otherwise โ†’ eSIM, every time.

Try before you commit

Not sure an eSIM will work for you? Test it with our free trial before buying a full plan, then pick your destination:

FAQ

Is an eSIM as reliable as a physical SIM? Yes. An eSIM connects to the same local networks a physical SIM would โ€” the difference is digital delivery, not signal quality.

Can I use an eSIM and my normal SIM at the same time? On a dual-SIM phone, yes โ€” keep your home number active for calls/texts and route data through the eSIM.

Do eSIMs give me a local phone number? Most travel eSIMs are data-only, so usually no. If you specifically need a local number, a local SIM is the better fit.

Is an eSIM cheaper than roaming? For most travellers, yes โ€” a fixed-price data allowance beats per-MB roaming rates.


Ready to choose an eSIM? Browse IQ Travel destinations โ€” instant activation, high-speed 4G/5G data and reliable coverage, with no roaming fees.

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