Correct. I'm looking for travel esimI presume you mean travel eSIM, i.e. you are not looking for a new domestic cellular provider?
Got one on Amazon.ca for my US Rockies motorcycle tour in JuneCorrect. I'm looking for travel esim
I've used Airalo in both Asia and Europe and the US and found it works well.I use Airalo but gotten promotional emails from Saily, Nordvpn eSIM hustle. Would try them. Or search eSIM on App Store.
Companies like Airalo negotiate deals with various existing carriers. I'm not sure what term applies for them, MVNO doesn't seem appropriate, but it would make sense to me that the deals would be for a limited amount of licenses and that they would have to re-up their agreements continually. The parent carriers probably intentionally limit the number of these deals that are active at any one time to manage load on their networks / help preserve the artificial scarcity of cellular accessThanks for the help. I checked back with airalo later and it was back 'in stock'. I still don't understand that.
I'm sorted.
Not sure if what you mean is (for example) that someone visiting Canada should get a sim from Rogers/Bell/etc., but as far as I know, none of them offer short term plans (7,10, 15 days). Do other countries?eSim is just a provisioning service.
When traveling, *which* service provider you use is the most important decision, not the way it gets its service onto your phone.
Most providers today have an eSim option.
Which provider you should choose depends on what country or countries you are visiting. Coverage, speed and reliability are all different for each provider and the market it plays in.
Where are you traveling to? If it is a large country, which parts are you visiting? Urban or rural?
These are probably more important questions than whether the provider offers an electronic way to load their chip onto your phone - because most of them already offer eSim.
They do. Thailand for example, i bought a 3 week unlimited data plan w/30 local minutes + esim/sim in the airport after i landed from a local provider. Was $10 CAD last i recall.Not sure if what you mean is (for example) that someone visiting Canada should get a sim from Rogers/Bell/etc., but as far as I know, none of them offer short term plans (7,10, 15 days). Do other countries?
Not sure if what you mean is (for example) that someone visiting Canada should get a sim from Rogers/Bell/etc., but as far as I know, none of them offer short term plans (7,10, 15 days). Do other countries?
The option you are looking for is Pre-Paid or Pay-As-You-Go.
In Canada, here are the big three pre-paid plans.
Telus: Prepaid, Pay As You Go Phones & Plans | TELUS
Bell: Prepaid Cell Phones and Rate Plans | Mobility | Bell Canada
Rogers: Prepaid Phone Plans and Add-ons - Rogers
All of them provide provisioning via eSim.
Typically in North America, the shortest term for pre-paid is 30 days, but in other countries, you can choose the length of time and/or # of GB/minutes by plan. When the time/GB/minutes expire, you just throw out the SIM chip, or delete the eSim from your profile.
Yeah, thats what I was aware of over here. I mostly travel in the US, and only for day trips or max 2 weeks. Whenever we go to the Hawk Rally for the August long weekend, my friend has to stop after the border at a Target or someplace to pick up a SIM. Meanwhile my provider through Airalo is already working. The convenience and being able to get a 5 day plan is worth it to me, even if I'm not on the most reliable provider. But then the data is more of a nice to have than being critical. Before I started using Airalo, I just used Google offline maps on my phone for nav and then my friend's wifi at his house.