Save money
eSIM vs roaming: stop paying airport prices
Your home carrier’s “travel pass” is a subscription to anxiety: per-day fees, surprise caps, throttled speeds. Here’s the honest math — including the cases where roaming is genuinely fine.
Why roaming bills explode
- Per-day billing. Passes charge for calendar days — open one app at 23:55 and you’ve bought a full day.
- Pay-as-you-go fallback. Outside a pass, rates of several dollars per MB still exist in 2026.
- Tiny caps. “Unlimited” passes often throttle after 500 MB–1 GB — a morning of maps and photos.
- Auto-renewal. Passes quietly re-buy themselves every day you stay connected.
The math, side by side
| Carrier roaming pass | Travel eSIM | |
|---|---|---|
| Cost model | $5–15 per day, every day | One prepaid pack, 30 days |
| One-week trip | $35–105 | Often under $10 total |
| Data included | Frequently capped or throttled | The GB you bought, full speed |
| Setup | Text a shortcode, hope | Scan a QR before you fly |
| Identity | Tied to your carrier account | None — if you buy no-KYC |
Live example: our packs start around $2–5 for 1 GB / 30 days in most destinations — check your country on the destinations page.
When roaming is actually fine
- EU-to-EU travel on an EU plan — “roam like at home” makes roaming free by law.
- Sub-24h layovers — one day-pass beats any setup, however cheap.
- Company phones — if the employer pays, optimize your time instead.
How to switch for one trip
- 01Buy a destination pack
Pick your country, pay in crypto, get the QR — nothing changes on your home plan.
- 02Install before flying
Two minutes on home Wi-Fi. Validity only starts at first connection abroad.
- 03Land → flip two switches
Mobile data → eSIM. Data roaming → ON for the eSIM only.
- 04Kill the trap
Data roaming → OFF on your home SIM. Calls and SMS still arrive; data can’t bill.
Avoiding the double-charge trap
Do
- Keep your home SIM active for calls & SMS
- Turn data roaming OFF on the home line
- Label lines clearly (“Home” / “Travel data”)
Don’t
- Leave both lines with data enabled — iOS “allow switching” can silently roam
- Answer long calls abroad without checking voice rates
- Buy the airline’s Wi-Fi and a day pass out of panic
Questions, answered
Will I still receive SMS and calls with roaming data off?
Yes — disabling data roaming only blocks internet on that line. Calls and texts (including bank OTPs) still arrive on your number; answering calls may cost roaming voice rates, so let unknown numbers go to voicemail.
Does “roam like at home” make eSIMs pointless in Europe?
For EU residents traveling inside the EU — mostly yes, and we say so honestly. Flying in from outside the EU, or an EU resident leaving the zone: the eSIM math wins again.
Can I just use airport Wi-Fi instead?
For a layover, sure. For a trip: open networks are where your traffic gets watched, and you’ll want maps in the taxi — exactly when there’s no Wi-Fi.
