Last updated: 12 June 2026Prices re-checked monthly
Written by Peter Moore, eSIM Content Writer
✓Fact-checked by Eric Stevens
The cheapest eSIM for Europe starts at $1.98 for a 500MB short plan from eSIM4 (prices verified 12 June 2026). The real win for a Europe trip is going unlimited: across the 8 providers we compared, eSIM4 has the cheapest unlimited plan at 3, 5, 7 and 15 days, with only Nomad shading the 10-day by under a dollar.
On the fixed sizes, rivals are honestly cheaper. Jetpac runs a $1.00 teaser at 1GB, and Roamless undercuts everyone from 2GB up ($5.95 for 2GB, $7.45 for 3GB, $10.95 for 5GB). What sets a Europe eSIM apart is that one plan covers around 42 countries, so you stay connected crossing borders on a train from Paris to Rome without swapping anything.
The cheapest eSIM for Europe depends on whether you want a fixed bucket of data or unlimited, and the honest answer splits the two. We priced every major provider plan by plan across the region.
eSIM4 leads on unlimited plans, winning four of the five durations on sale and tying close on the fifth, while Roamless owns the fixed sizes and Jetpac dangles a $1 teaser at 1GB. The detail that matters most on a Europe trip is coverage breadth.
A regional eSIM works across roughly 42 countries on a single plan, which beats buying a separate SIM in every nation you pass through.
The europe esim plans here range from a small data package to an esim with unlimited data, so there are data options for every kind of trip to Europe. We explain how that works, the EU roaming rule that trips up visitors, and which countries are sometimes left off the list, then walk through each esim provider. For the full picture on coverage, apps and support, see our best eSIM for Europe guide.
Think of an eSIM Europe profile as a network profile that lives inside your smartphone instead of on a plastic SIM card. After you pay, an emailed QR code loads the data plan onto the phone, and the moment your plane touches down in, say, Barcelona, it latches onto a local Spanish carrier.
The word that does the heavy lifting here is regional: a single esim plan keeps working as you move around Europe between roughly 42 countries, so the same purchase covers a flight into Amsterdam, a train south through Belgium, and a hire car winding through the Dolomites. You manage it in your phone settings or the provider’s mobile app, with the running data total in view.
On a cross-border trip, none of this disturbs your everyday line. Your physical SIM card stays exactly where it is, holding onto the number your bank texts codes to. Everything sold on this page is a data-only esim, nothing more.
Set against grabbing a fresh local SIM card at each frontier you cross, one regional Europe profile spares you the airport kiosk queues, the per-country sign-ups, and a roaming invoice you will not see. It is why one esim makes more sense than a different esim in every country.
Most short trips run fine on 1GB to 3GB, a typical week needs 5GB to 10GB, and heavy use calls for unlimited. Tell us how long you’re going and how you use your phone, and we’ll point you to the smallest plan that won’t run out, so you pay the least.
A rough guide based on typical use with offline maps and some free wifi. If you stream a lot or tether a laptop, lean to unlimited.
On the fixed sizes, eSIM4 is not the cheapest, and we will not pretend otherwise. Roamless undercuts the field from 2GB up ($5.95 for 2GB, $7.45 for 3GB, $10.95 for 5GB, $17.45 for 10GB, $24.95 for 20GB), and Jetpac runs a $1.00 teaser at 1GB. The cheapest price at each size is highlighted green. eSIM4’s strength sits in the unlimited table below, not here.
| Data | eSIM4 | Saily | Nomad | Jetpac | GigSky | aloSIM | Airalo | Roamless | Cheapest |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1GB | $3.98 | $4.99 | $5.50 | $1.00 | $4.99 | $5.00 | $4.00 | $3.95 | Jetpac |
| 2GB | $6.98 | – | – | – | – | $9.50 | – | $5.95 | Roamless |
| 3GB | $9.98 | $12.49 | $13.00 | $10.00 | $8.49 | $15.00 | $9.50 | $7.45 | Roamless |
| 5GB | $17.98 | $19.49 | $17.00 | $15.00 | $12.32 | $20.00 | $14.00 | $10.95 | Roamless |
| 10GB | $29.98 | $35.99 | $20.00 | $19.99 | $20.39 | $37.00 | $24.00 | $17.45 | Roamless |
| 20GB | $46.98 | – | $30.00 | – | – | – | – | $24.95 | Roamless |
Roamless prices these as 30-day plans drawn from a prepaid balance, so leftover credit rolls over rather than expiring. Jetpac’s $1.00 1GB is a short 4-day teaser. If you want a fixed bucket for a Europe trip, Roamless is the value pick at most sizes. Prices checked on 12 June 2026 against each provider’s own Europe page. We re-check monthly and update when they change.
The size a lot of short trips settle on. A shorter bar means a cheaper plan.
A low sticker price can mislead you on a cheapest search. A tiny plan with a small headline price often costs the most per GB. Here is what you actually pay per GB at each size, eSIM4 against the cheapest rival that sells a travel-ready plan.
| Data | eSIM4 price | eSIM4 $/GB | Cheapest rival $/GB | Better value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1GB | $3.98 | $3.98 | $1.00 (Jetpac) | Jetpac |
| 2GB | $6.98 | $3.49 | $2.98 (Roamless) | Roamless |
| 3GB | $9.98 | $3.33 | $2.48 (Roamless) | Roamless |
| 5GB | $17.98 | $3.60 | $2.19 (Roamless) | Roamless |
| 10GB | $29.98 | $3.00 | $1.74 (Roamless) | Roamless |
| 20GB | $46.98 | $2.35 | $1.25 (Roamless) | Roamless |
Price per GB is rounded to the nearest cent.
This is where eSIM4 earns its place on a Europe trip. The cheapest unlimited eSIM for Europe is eSIM4 at $9.98 for 3 days, $17.98 for 5, $25.98 for 7 and $47.98 for 15, the lowest at each of those durations.
Nomad edges the 10-day at $33.00 against eSIM4’s $33.98, a difference of under a dollar. One thing to know before you buy any unlimited Europe plan: ‘unlimited’ usually means full speed up to a daily ceiling, then a slowdown, which we explain further down.
| Duration | eSIM4 | Nomad | Cheapest |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 days | $9.98 | – | eSIM4 |
| 5 days | $17.98 | $18.00 | eSIM4 |
| 7 days | $25.98 | – | eSIM4 |
| 10 days | $33.98 | $33.00 | Nomad |
| 15 days | $47.98 | – | eSIM4 |
eSIM4 is the cheapest unlimited option at 3, 5, 7 and 15 days. Nomad edges the 10-day by under a dollar. No provider sells a 30-day unlimited Europe plan yet.
The cheapest pick for a Europe trip depends on the kind of traveller you are. This esim comparison covers the destinations in europe most people visit, and our esim recommendation for europe in 2026 splits by need. For an unlimited plan on a multi-country trip, eSIM4 is the value choice at almost every duration. For a fixed bucket, Roamless undercuts it at most sizes, and Jetpac wins the rock-bottom 1GB. Here is the quick pick for each type of traveller.
For a few days in one or two cities, a small bucket does the job. Jetpac’s $1.00 1GB is the cheapest entry, though four days is all you get. Roamless’s 2GB at $5.95 or 3GB at $7.45 suits a long weekend in Paris or Barcelona with maps and messaging.
A week hopping between two or three countries usually means 5GB to 10GB. Roamless is cheapest here at $10.95 for 5GB and $17.45 for 10GB. If you would rather not watch a meter while changing cities, eSIM4’s 7-day unlimited at $25.98 is the cheapest unlimited for that window.
Riding from Amsterdam to Berlin to Prague, the eSIM stays connected the whole way because the plan spans all 42 countries. There is nothing to swap at each border. An unlimited plan suits this best, since you cannot easily top up mid-journey, and eSIM4 is cheapest on most unlimited durations.
For streaming, tethering or two weeks plus across the region, unlimited is the safer buy. eSIM4 has the cheapest unlimited at 3, 5, 7 and 15 days. For a 10-day unlimited trip only, Nomad is under a dollar cheaper.
If you want the lowest price on one specific fixed size, Roamless wins almost all of them (2GB to 20GB) and Jetpac takes the 1GB teaser. For unlimited, or one plan you do not have to think about across borders, eSIM4 is the better value.
We compared the major travel eSIM providers below. Each is strongest in a different niche, so here is how they stack up one by one.
| Rating: | |
| Networks: | 4G / LTE and 5G across Europe |
| Starting price: | $1.98 (1GB) |
| Plan range: | 1GB to 20GB, plus unlimited |
| Calls & texts: | Data-only across all 42 countries; pair the Yabb app if you need a number |
| Customer support: | 24/7 |
(‘eSIM4 is the value pick for a Europe trip when you want unlimited data, with the cheapest unlimited plan at 3, 5, 7 and 15 days and only Nomad shading the 10-day by under a dollar.
One plan covers around 42 countries, so a single profile works as one of the few esims across europe that carries you over borders without a swap. There is no app to install, since it runs from your phone settings rather than a separate mobile app. It is not the cheapest on fixed buckets, where Roamless undercuts it, so the call comes down to fixed versus unlimited.’,)
Setup. Scan the QR code and the profile installs in minutes. As you cross each border the eSIM reconnects to a local network on its own, with 4G LTE and 5G where available, so you stay quick in the cities.
Networks. eSIM4 connects to major local networks across the covered countries, giving you high-speed data with 4G LTE in most places and 5G in the cities and along the main corridors. Your data stays on a local European connection, so location services, maps and regional apps behave normally as you move between countries. It makes for a reliable esim provider on the routes most travellers take.
Customer support. Support runs around the clock, handy if a setup hiccup hits you at the airport or a border crossing leaves you troubleshooting on a train at night.
| Data | Validity | Was | Now | You save |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 500 MB | 3 days | $1.98 | $3.42 | |
| 1 GB | 7 days | $3.98 | $5.02 | |
| 2 GB | 15 days | $6.98 | $8.32 | |
| 3 GB | 30 days | $9.98 | $9.82 | |
| Unlimited | 3 days | $9.98 | $10.72 | |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $17.98 | $17.12 | |
| Unlimited | 5 days | $17.98 | $17.12 | |
| Unlimited | 7 days | $25.98 | $22.62 | |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $29.98 | $25.82 | |
| Unlimited | 10 days | $33.98 | $29.02 | |
| 20 GB | 30 days | $46.98 | $39.42 | |
| Unlimited | 15 days | $47.98 | $40.22 |
| Rating: | |
| Networks: | 4G / LTE and 5G across Europe |
| Starting price: | $4.99 (1 GB) |
| Plan range: | 1GB to 25GB, plus short unlimited |
| Customer support: | App chat |
Land in Europe as a first-time eSIM buyer and Saily makes the start gentle: its app is uncluttered, and the same NordVPN engineers behind it have folded in ad and tracker blocking, which earns its keep on dodgy hotel and station wifi.
Networks. Across the continent Saily leans on the big local carriers at 4G LTE and 5G, steady in the cities for pulling up maps, scanning tickets and general browsing. As with any reseller, the further you stray into rural Europe the more its signal simply mirrors whatever the host network manages.
Customer support. Questions go through the in-app chat, brisk Monday to Friday and a touch slower over the weekend, something to bear in mind if your flight gets you in on a Saturday.
| Data | Validity | Price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 GB | 7 days | $4.99 |
| 3 GB | 30 days | $12.49 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $19.49 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $35.99 |
| 25 GB | 60 days | $48.99 |
| Rating: | |
| Networks: | 4G / LTE and 5G across Europe |
| Starting price: | $5.50 (1 GB) |
| Plan range: | 1GB to 50GB, plus short unlimited |
| Customer support: | Email and app chat |
On a two-week European rail loop where unlimited matters, Nomad is the single name that pips eSIM4, claiming the 10-day unlimited at $33.00 to eSIM4’s $33.98, a gap of less than a dollar. The app is neat and the running data total easy to read.
Networks. Nomad sits on the major local networks the region over, with dependable LTE and 5G wherever there are people. The unlimited tiers come with a fair-usage rule that eases off the speed once daily use stays heavy for a stretch.
Customer support. You reach them by email or in-app chat, and reply times rise and fall with how busy they are, so it is not the channel for an instant fix mid-journey on a train.
| Data | Validity | Price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 GB | 7 days | $5.50 |
| 3 GB | 30 days | $13.00 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $17.00 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $20.00 |
| 20 GB | 45 days | $30.00 |
| 50 GB | 45 days | $72.00 |
| Unlimited | 5 days | $18.00 |
| Unlimited | 10 days | $33.00 |
| Rating: | |
| Networks: | 4G / LTE and 5G across Europe |
| Starting price: | $1.00 (1 GB) |
| Plan range: | 1GB to 40GB |
| Customer support: | App chat |
One number does the talking on the Europe table for Jetpac: a $1.00 plan for 1GB. Around it sit a points scheme and flight-delay perks pitched at people forever in departure lounges. Step past that opener, though, and the pricing settles back to ordinary.
Networks. In European cities and their suburbs Jetpac holds up well on the major local carriers at 4G LTE and 5G. The familiar footnote applies: out in the countryside the coverage answers to the host network, not the Jetpac badge.
Customer support. The in-app chat copes with the run-of-the-mill setup and account queries, but it is not where you turn when something needs fixing this minute.
| Data | Validity | Price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 GB | 4 days | $1.00 |
| 3 GB | 7 days | $10.00 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $15.00 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $19.99 |
| 15 GB | 30 days | $29.99 |
| 30 GB | 30 days | $39.99 |
| 40 GB | 30 days | $44.99 |
| Rating: | |
| Networks: | 4G / LTE and 5G across Europe |
| Starting price: | $4.99 (1 GB) |
| Plan range: | 1GB to 100GB |
| Customer support: | In-app |
If your European route strays off the beaten track, GigSky is worth a look: it is one of the veterans of travel data, with years of carrier relationships behind it and coverage into corners that newer apps overlook. The flip side is a Europe price tag that openly reflects that history.
Networks. Performance on the major local networks across Europe stays even and unfussy, and GigSky’s long-running wholesale agreements tend to keep speeds upright in spots where smaller resellers start to wobble.
Customer support. It is dealt with in-app, and GigSky carries a name for answering promptly, one of the things that softens the premium you are paying.
| Data | Validity | Price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 GB | 7 days | $4.99 |
| 3 GB | 15 days | $8.49 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $12.32 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $20.39 |
| 50 GB | 90 days | $56.09 |
| 100 GB | 180 days | $84.14 |
| Rating: | |
| Networks: | 4G / LTE and 5G across Europe |
| Starting price: | $5.00 (1 GB) |
| Plan range: | 1GB to 100GB |
| Customer support: | App chat |
For the European traveller who would sooner tap a button than go plan-shopping every few days, aloSIM keeps the whole thing pared back, with in-app top-ups that take seconds to add another few gigs.
Networks. The big local carriers carry aloSIM, and across Europe’s cities and the main travel corridors it does the everyday jobs well: directions, messaging and a bit of light browsing.
Customer support. It runs on in-app chat, shaped around the two things people ask most, adding a top-up and getting set up the first time.
| Data | Validity | Price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 GB | 7 days | $5.00 |
| 2 GB | 15 days | $9.50 |
| 3 GB | 30 days | $15.00 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $20.00 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $37.00 |
| 100 GB | 180 days | $185.00 |
| Rating: | |
| Networks: | 4G / LTE and 5G across Europe |
| Starting price: | $4.00 (1 GB) |
| Plan range: | 1GB to 100GB |
| Customer support: | App chat |
When a first-time traveller to Europe types ‘eSIM’ into a search bar, Airalo is usually what comes back: the biggest marketplace of the lot, a slick app, and device support that stretches to almost any handset. On Europe’s fixed prices it stays in the race without ever topping it.
Networks. Along Europe’s main travel routes Airalo taps the major local carriers at 4G LTE and 5G, and through the populated stretches its day-to-day performance stands up nicely.
Customer support. Help is in-app chat within set hours, fine for the ordinary query though sluggish once you fall outside the busy window.
| Data | Validity | Price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 GB | 3 days | $4.00 |
| 3 GB | 7 days | $9.50 |
| 5 GB | 7 days | $14.00 |
| 5 GB | 15 days | $14.50 |
| 10 GB | 15 days | $24.00 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $15.00 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $25.00 |
| 50 GB | 90 days | $69.00 |
| 100 GB | 180 days | $89.00 |
| Rating: | |
| Networks: | 4G / LTE and 5G across Europe |
| Starting price: | $3.95 (1 GB) |
| Plan range: | 1GB to 20GB |
| Customer support: | In-app chat |
For a Europe trip built around fixed buckets, Roamless is the one to beat on price, sitting below the rest of the field from 2GB upward. Instead of a plan that expires, it draws on a topped-up balance, billing you only for what you actually use and carrying any unspent credit forward.
Networks. Roamless sits on the major local networks throughout Europe, comfortable across the cities and the main corridors, and it nibbles at your balance steadily as you travel.
Customer support. Everything runs in-app, fielding billing and account matters, though there is no cast-iron pledge of help at any hour.
| Data | Validity | Price |
|---|---|---|
| 1 GB | 30 days | $3.95 |
| 2 GB | 30 days | $5.95 |
| 3 GB | 30 days | $7.45 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $10.95 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $17.45 |
| 20 GB | 30 days | $24.95 |
Three brackets cover almost everyone, and how much data you need shapes the choice.
A few gigs (1GB to 3GB) handles a stay rooted in one city; 5GB to 10GB fits the standard week split across a couple of countries; unlimited makes sense once streaming, hotspotting or a long rail loop enters the picture.
A larger data plan or an unlimited plan suits heavy data days, while a fixed data bucket keeps cheap data trips simple.
What surprises travellers is how fast a European itinerary burns through data once rail apps, timed museum slots, currency conversion and live translation in front of a menu all pile on. Most travel-eSIM users sit below a gig of data per day in the published numbers, yet a maps-heavy run through four cities easily tops that. Treat the brackets as a starting point, not a verdict.
Pulling up Google Maps for directions, firing off WhatsApp messages and showing the odd QR ticket while you stay put in a single base. Plenty for a long weekend wandering Lisbon, Rome or the Marais in Paris.
Route-finding every day as you change cities, a steady scroll of social, the occasional video call home and a bit of streaming on the train. If you would rather not count usage, a plan with around 3GB of high-speed data per day, or unlimited, gives you high-speed data every day across several countries. This is what a one-week, two- or three-country hop usually looks like, and it lands squarely in the window where eSIM4’s 7-day unlimited comes out cheapest.
Box-set streaming, sharing the connection with a work laptop from your hotel, or a fortnight-plus Interrail loop through the region. For longer europe trips like this you need a lot of data, so going unlimited spares you scrambling to add data as you cross from one country into the next. It is the bracket where eSIM4 undercuts the field on most durations and you get unlimited data without watching a meter.
A Europe eSIM does not ride one network. In each country it connects to a major local carrier, so you get strong reach with high-speed data across Western and Central Europe.
Expect Orange or SFR in France, Vodafone and Deutsche Telekom (T-Mobile) in Germany, Telefónica and Movistar in Spain, TIM and Vodafone in Italy, and Vodafone or Orange variants across most other markets. This is a strong esim setup in the cities, and coverage along the main rail and motorway corridors is excellent.
The gaps open up in remote rural valleys, high mountain areas and some islands, where even local subscribers see patchy signal. The other thing to check before you buy is the country list.
Most regional plans cover the EU plus a handful of neighbours, but the United Kingdom, Switzerland, Turkey and parts of the Balkans are sometimes excluded or priced as add-ons. If your route touches any of those, confirm they are on the plan rather than assuming ‘Europe’ means every country.
eSIM4 connects to major local networks with 4G LTE and 5G across the covered countries, the same infrastructure the premium providers resell, so you are not trading coverage for the lower unlimited price. For a rural or mountain leg, download offline maps for the region while you still have a city signal.
Reach across the map is only half the story. How your traffic is routed matters just as much. To trim wholesale bills, a handful of bargain regional eSIMs funnel your connection back through a gateway parked in a different country before it reaches the open internet.
The side effects show up as sluggish response times, dips in speed, and apps that decide you are sitting somewhere you are not. A streaming catalogue might serve the wrong country’s library, and certain banking apps balk when the location they detect clashes with your card.
So if your trip hinges on one or two apps behaving, your bank, perhaps, or a navigation service, make sure the plan hands you a real in-country connection wherever you happen to be rather than piping it across the continent first. eSIM4 keeps traffic on the local European network you are standing in, which is why apps read your location correctly from Paris to Prague.
For ordinary travelling it holds up, but there is a wrinkle to grasp before any Europe ‘unlimited’ plan takes your money.
Nearly all of them run a fair-usage rule underneath the label: you get full pace up to a set daily quota, after which the line throttles back until the clock rolls over and resets it. The figure people quote on forums is a drop to a crawl somewhere past 2GB to 5GB in a day, occasionally down to a few hundred kbps, and the sales copy tends to stay quiet about it.
Big names like Holafly and others built their reputation on unlimited Europe plans, so the fair-usage rule is worth understanding whichever brand you pick. Routing yourself around with maps, summoning a ride, texting on WhatsApp and thumbing through social as you move between European cities, you will rarely brush that limit.
If you plan to keep HD video running all day, or to anchor a laptop to the line for work, check the daily quota first, or weigh up a chunky metered Roamless bundle rather than betting on the word ‘unlimited’. The eSIM4 unlimited tiers sit in the table above, each one duration-based, with the fair-usage small print visible as you check out.
Across a multi-country European trip, a travel eSIM tends to be both the cheapest route online and the least hassle. It loads before departure, asks for no deposit and no identity paperwork, and switches on as you land. Still, the alternatives each have their place, so here is how they stack up.
For the typical non-EU visitor crossing borders, then, a regional data eSIM is the best value on both cost and convenience. Among the esim brands and esim companies selling Europe coverage, the choice comes down to fixed data versus unlimited. For a European number that handles texts and calls on top of data, eSIM4 sells data only, so bolt on the Yabb app for a number instead of stuffing a second SIM in your bag.
Two boxes have to be ticked: the handset supports eSIM, and it is not locked to a carrier.
Nearly anything bought in the past few years clears the first hurdle, an iPhone XS or later, a Pixel from the 3 onwards, the recent Samsung Galaxy S and Note lines among them. The bands that European networks run on are common enough that mainstream phones rarely stumble over a frequency gap here, the way they sometimes do in other parts of the world. An ageing model or a grey-import oddity is the one worth a second look.
To check, punch *#06# into an iPhone and look for an EID, or open Settings and see whether ‘Add eSIM’ appears.
A phone that arrived on a contract may still be locked, so settle that question before you count on a third-party profile in Lisbon or Vienna. Apple lays out the steps in its carrier unlock guide, and Pixel owners can turn to Google’s eSIM guide. With your physical SIM left in the tray, your usual number rides along untouched while the eSIM carries data across the region.
To install your esim, load it at home and flip it on at the gate.
To install an esim over your own wifi the job runs a few minutes, and getting it out of the way early pays off, because the wifi at Charles de Gaulle or Schiphol can crawl, or insist on an SMS code that has nowhere to land yet. The same steps work for esims for europe from any provider, whether you bought a small bucket or want to enjoy unlimited data.
A dropped connection nearly always sorts itself out fast. Run down this list from the top and stop as soon as the bars return.
For anyone carrying a single phone with no second screen to scan from, snap a photo of the QR code before you leave the house. iPhone owners can press and hold that saved image to add the eSIM, while on Android, Google Lens reads it straight out of your gallery.
To find the cheapest europe esim and the best esims for europe travel, our approach was to pull the lowest Europe price each provider charges at every size and duration, then set all eight side by side tier for tier.
We compared data-only esim plans and the unlimited data options each one sells, weighing the value of europe esims across both fixed and unlimited tiers.
Other names you will see ranked elsewhere, such as Sim Local, MobiMatter and Transatel, resell the same local networks, so a reliable esim for europe comes down to price and coverage rather than the badge.
Every figure is in USD, lifted on 12 June 2026 from the providers’ own Europe pages and weighed against where the wider market sits.
eSIMply is left out, since it simply mirrors eSIM4’s pricing and is not a separate company, and free-trial tiers are skipped because a giveaway is not a plan anyone really buys. Any coverage remarks lean on the local carriers a given plan actually uses plus what travellers widely report on the ground, never on a brand’s own marketing. The prices get a fresh check each month, and this guide is updated whenever one moves.
For unlimited data, eSIM4 is cheapest at 3, 5, 7 and 15 days, with Nomad under a dollar cheaper at 10 days. For fixed buckets, Roamless is cheapest from 2GB up ($5.95 for 2GB, $10.95 for 5GB) and Jetpac runs a $1.00 1GB teaser. So the cheapest depends on fixed versus unlimited.
Yes. A regional Europe eSIM works across around 42 countries on a single plan, so you stay connected travelling from France to Italy to Germany without buying a new SIM at each border. Check the plan’s country list covers your exact route, since some exclude the UK, Switzerland or Turkey.
The United Kingdom, Switzerland, Turkey and parts of the Balkans are the common exclusions or paid add-ons. Most plans cover the EU and a few neighbours by default. If your trip touches any of those, confirm they are listed before you buy.
Only if you are an EU resident on an EU mobile plan. That rule lets EU residents roam across the bloc at domestic rates. Visitors from outside the EU pay full roaming on their home plan and are better off on a travel eSIM.
Around 5GB to 10GB covers a typical week of maps across several cities, messaging, tickets and some browsing. If you tether a laptop or stream daily, an unlimited plan is the safer pick, and eSIM4’s 7-day unlimited is the cheapest at that window.
It needs to be eSIM-compatible and carrier-unlocked. Most iPhones from XS, Pixels from 3 and recent Samsung Galaxy models are fine, and European LTE and 5G bands are well supported by mainstream phones. Dial *#06# on an iPhone to confirm it has an EID.
Yes. A regional plan reconnects to a local network in each country automatically, so there is nothing to swap on a train through several countries. If it does not switch on its own, toggle airplane mode briefly to nudge it onto the new network.
Only if you keep a number that can receive SMS. These eSIMs are data-only, so leave your home line active for SMS, or pair the Yabb app for a number that can receive texts and calls.
Not directly, since this is a data-only esim with no telephone number attached. You make calls over the internet instead, through WhatsApp or a similar app, or pair the Yabb mobile app to get a number for regular calls and texts. The Sim Local eSIM and a few rivals bundle a number, but most europe esims are data only. A bundled Sim Local eSIM costs more than a plain data plan, so weigh whether you really need calls.
Yes, widely in cities and along major routes across most countries. eSIM4 connects to 5G where available and falls back to 4G LTE elsewhere. In remote rural and mountain areas, expect LTE or patchier coverage even on local plans.
Yes. eSIM4 plans support tethering, so you can share data with a laptop or another phone. For steady hotspot use across a longer trip an unlimited plan is safest, but check the daily fair-usage allowance first.
Install over home wifi before you fly. Most plans start counting when the eSIM first connects in Europe, so you stay online from landing without burning days early.
Check the eSIM is your data line with roaming on, then wait until the arrivals hall where signal is stronger. If you just crossed a border, toggle airplane mode so the phone registers on the new country’s network. As a last resort, pick a local carrier by hand under network selection.
For unlimited data, eSIM4 is the best esim for Europe on price, winning the 3, 5, 7 and 15-day unlimited plans. For a fixed bucket, Roamless is the value pick from 2GB up. Both are reliable esim options on strong local networks, so the best europe esim for you comes down to fixed data versus unlimited.
eSIM4 offers the cheapest esim for europe on its unlimited plan at $9.98 for 3 days, $17.98 for 5, $25.98 for 7 and $47.98 for 15. Nomad edges the 10-day by under a dollar. Not many esim companies offer unlimited data plans for the whole region, which is why these esim purchases stand out for a longer europe trip.
One esim that covers around 42 countries beats juggling a different esim in each nation. A regional europe plan reconnects on its own as you cross borders, so traveling in europe stays simple. eSIM4 is the best value for unlimited data across multi-country europe, and esimdb-style esim comparison sites confirm the price gap on longer durations.
Yes. A single esim plan covers roughly 42 countries in europe on one purchase, so you get data across europe without swapping a SIM card. Check the country list before you buy, since the United Kingdom, Switzerland and Turkey are sometimes left off. For the rest of the destinations in europe, one esim europe profile keeps you online.
Install the esim over wifi at home, then to activate your europe esim you flick data roaming on for that line once you land. You do need to turn on data roaming for the eSIM line, but only that line, so your home plan is not billed. The esim technology handles the rest, hopping networks as you move.
Yes. eSIM4 plans support tethering, so your phone becomes a wi-fi hotspot for a laptop or a friend’s smartphone. Apps like WhatsApp, Google Maps and your usual browser run normally over the shared connection. For steady hotspot use, get unlimited data rather than a small data package, and check the daily fair-usage cap first.
It depends how you travel. Light users need data mainly for maps and messaging, so 3GB of high-speed data covers a short stay. If you stream or tether, you need a lot of data, and an esim with unlimited data avoids running dry. Most travellers sit near a gig of data per day, but a maps-heavy run uses more.
For most visitors, yes. A travel esim is cheaper than roaming data on a home contract and simpler than a prepaid SIM card bought in each country. You skip the queues and ID checks, and one esim for data works across europe. EU residents are the exception, since their home plan already roams across the bloc.
Look for a reliable esim that uses real local networks for high-speed data, covers the countries in europe on your route, and offers the data options you need. A plan giving 3 GB of high-speed data per day, or unlimited, is plenty for heavy days.
The best value esim provider for europe travel pairs strong coverage with a fair price, which is why eSIM4 rates well on unlimited and Roamless on fixed data. Among esim companies that offer unlimited data plans for the region, few match eSIM4 on price across longer durations.
Dozens. Across the esim brands and esim companies in this esim comparison, you can buy anything from a 1GB data package to an esim with unlimited data. Some sell fixed data only, others offer unlimited data options. Our esim recommendation for europe in 2026 is to match the plan to your trip, since the cheapest europe esim for a city break is rarely the best for a multi-country europe rail loop.