Basics
eSIM vs physical SIM: what actually changes
Same network, same signal — different everything else. Here’s the honest comparison, including the three cases where plastic still wins.
What’s actually different
An eSIM is the same SIM standard, minus the plastic: a carrier profile written into a chip your phone already has.
- Delivery. A QR code replaces an envelope or a kiosk visit — install in minutes from anywhere.
- Capacity. Phones store several eSIM profiles and can keep two lines active at once.
- Permanence. No tray, nothing to lose, nothing to swap with a paperclip at 30,000 feet.
Head to head
| Physical SIM | eSIM | |
|---|---|---|
| Getting one abroad | Find a shop, queue, often show ID | Buy online, scan a QR — 2 minutes |
| Switching carriers | Swap plastic, keep the tray open | Tap a profile in settings |
| Dual line | Needs a dual-tray phone | Runs alongside your physical SIM |
| Lost / stolen phone | SIM can be pulled out and reused | Profile locked to the device |
| Privacy at purchase | Kiosks often photocopy passports | No-KYC stores ask for nothing |
| Very old phones | Works on anything | Needs ~2018+ hardware |
Where plastic still wins
- Old or basic phones. No eSIM hardware, no debate — the *#06# test settles it.
- Moving a line between devices daily. Swapping plastic is still faster than re-provisioning profiles.
- Some prepaid local deals. A few markets still sell their best promos as physical-only.
Where eSIM wins outright
- Travel. Connected before the seatbelt sign turns off — no kiosk, no queue, no passport photocopy.
- Privacy. Digital delivery makes anonymous purchase possible; plastic almost always crosses a counter.
- Redundancy. Keep your home line active while local data runs on a second profile.
- Security. A thief can’t pop an eSIM out of your phone to intercept your SMS.
Three myths, retired
False. The radio does the work either way — profile format changes nothing measurable.
False. Tracking happens at the network layer (IMEI, towers) — identical for both formats.
False. Same networks, same bands, same signal. Only the delivery method differs.
Questions, answered
Can I use an eSIM and my physical SIM at the same time?
Yes — that’s the standard travel setup: your number stays on the physical SIM for calls and texts while the eSIM carries local data. You pick which line does what in settings.
Can I convert my main number to an eSIM?
Most major carriers can convert a physical SIM to eSIM — that’s between you and your home carrier. Travel eSIMs like ours are separate, data-only profiles that sit alongside whatever your main line is.
Do I need internet to install an eSIM?
Yes, once — Wi-Fi is enough. That’s why we recommend installing at home before you fly. Using the eSIM afterwards needs no Wi-Fi, obviously.
