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How to use an eSIM on your iPhone for international travel

Use your iPhone's eSIM for affordable international data while keeping your primary home number active for calls and texts.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Nov 6, 2025, 2:01 AM EST
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A screenshot of an iPhone screen showing a pop-up titled 'Activate Your eSIM' in the Cellular settings. The pop-up asks for confirmation to proceed, with 'Cancel' and a highlighted 'Activate' button.
Image: Apple
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Ditch the paperclip. Forget the fumbling. If you’ve ever landed in a new country, desperate for a data connection, you’ve probably played the “SIM swap” game—juggling tiny, easy-to-lose plastic chips just to get Google Maps to load.

That era is over.

Staying connected while traveling internationally used to be a choice between two bad options: paying your home carrier’s exorbitant roaming fees or wasting your first hour abroad finding a kiosk to buy a local SIM. But for the last few years, a quiet revolution has been building inside your iPhone: the eSIM.

An eSIM (or embedded SIM) is a digital SIM card that’s already built into your phone’s hardware. It lets you add a second (or third, or fourth) cellular plan to your device without needing a physical card. For a traveler, this is more than a convenience; it’s a game-changer.

You can keep your primary home number active for calls and texts (like those all-important two-factor authentication codes from your bank) while using a separate, cheaper, local data plan on your eSIM.

This is the definitive guide to becoming a “dual-SIM” globetrotter, from the pre-trip setup to the moment you land.

1. What’s the big deal about eSIMs, really?

In short, it’s about cost and convenience.

Your home carrier (think Verizon, AT&T, O2) loves when you roam. They can charge you $10 a day or $100 for a monthly pass just to use the data you already pay for.

An eSIM plan, purchased from a global provider, might offer you a full 10GB of data for 30 days in Europe for just $15. Total.

Beyond the savings, you get:

  • No fumbling: You don’t need to find a SIM “ejector tool” (a paperclip) to swap cards on a cramped airplane tray.
  • Keep your home number: This is the big one. You can still receive texts and calls on your primary number. This is crucial for iMessage/FaceTime (which will work over the travel eSIM’s data) and for security codes.
  • Plan ahead: You can buy and install your travel eSIM from your couch a week before your trip, and it will only activate once it connects to a network in your destination country.

2. First, a quick gear check

Before you go shopping for data plans, you need to make sure your gear is ready.

  • Your iPhone: You need an iPhone XS, XS Max, XR, or any later model (including the 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17 series, etc.).
  • Your software: Your phone must be running iOS 12.1 or newer. (If your phone is from the last five years, you’re almost certainly fine.)
  • Your carrier status: This is the most important part. Your iPhone must be “unlocked.” If you bought your phone directly from Apple, it’s unlocked. If you bought it on an installment plan from your carrier, it might be “locked” to their network.

How to check if your iPhone is unlocked: Go to Settings > General > About. Scroll down, and if you see a line that says “No SIM restrictions,” you are unlocked and good to go. If it says “SIM locked,” you must call your home carrier and ask them to unlock your phone before you can use an eSIM from another provider.

3. Your three main options for staying connected

You have three paths. Which one you choose depends on your budget and how much work you want to do.

  1. International roaming (the “easy button”): This means using your home carrier’s international plan.
    • Pros: It’s simple. You just land and it works. You use your existing number and bill.
    • Cons: It’s almost always the most expensive option, by a long shot.
  2. Local carrier eSIM (the “local” experience): This means walking into a carrier’s store after you land (like Orange in France or Vodafone in Italy) and asking for a prepaid eSIM.
    • Pros: Often, the absolute cheapest rates and you might get a local phone number.
    • Cons: You have to wait until you arrive. You may need to show your passport, and there could be a language barrier.
  3. Worldwide prepaid eSIM provider (the “travel hack”): This is the modern traveler’s choice. You use a global eSIM marketplace (popular apps include Airalo, Holafly, Nomad, or GigSky) to buy a data plan for your destination before you even leave.
    • Pros: Super convenient. Great, competitive pricing. You can be online the moment you turn off Airplane Mode.
    • Cons: Most of these plans are data-only. This means you don’t get a local phone number for making regular calls (but you can still use WhatsApp, FaceTime Audio, or Skype over data).

For the rest of this guide, we’ll assume you’re using Option 3, as it’s the most popular and flexible.

4. How to purchase and activate your travel eSIM (do this at home)

Here’s your pre-flight checklist. Do this while you’re still at home and connected to your Wi-Fi.

  1. Shop for your plan: Download an app like Airalo or browse a provider’s website. Buy the plan that fits your trip (e.g., “10GB / 30 Days / Europe”).
  2. Get your QR code: After purchase, the provider will email you a QR code or show you one in their app. This code is your eSIM.
  3. Add the eSIM to your iPhone:
    • Go to Settings > Cellular > Add eSIM.
    • Tap “Use QR Code” and scan the code from your email or the provider’s website (you might need to use a computer or tablet to display it so your phone can scan it).
    • Your iPhone will download and install the eSIM profile. This only takes a minute.
  4. Label your lines: This is the most important step for not getting confused. Your iPhone will prompt you to label your SIMs.
    • Label your existing, physical SIM (or primary eSIM) as “Home.”
    • Label your new travel eSIM as “Travel” (or “Europe,” “Japan,” etc.).
  5. Set your defaults (for now): Your iPhone will ask you to choose a “Default Line” for calls, texts, and data.
    • Default line (for calls/texts): Keep this on “Home.”
    • iMessage & FaceTime: Keep this on “Home.”
    • Cellular data: Set this to “Travel.”

That’s it. Your “Travel” eSIM is now installed but inactive. It will only light up and connect (and start its 30-day clock) when it senses a network in the country you’re traveling to.

5. “Wheels down”—what to do when you land

You’ve landed. The seatbelt sign is off. You grab your phone and turn off Airplane Mode. Here’s what to do next to get online without getting a $200 bill.

  1. Go to Settings > Cellular.
  2. Tap on your “Travel” line. Make sure the toggle for “Turn On This Line” is ON.
  3. Now, tap on your “Home” line.
  4. THIS IS THE CRITICAL STEP: Make sure the toggle for “Data Roaming” is OFF. This single switch prevents your home carrier from charging you for data.
  5. Go back one screen to Settings > Cellular.
  6. Look at the “Cellular Data” option. Make sure it is set to your “Travel” line.

You are now set up correctly. Your “Home” line is on (so you can receive texts and see who is calling), but all data is being routed through your cheap, prepaid “Travel” eSIM. Your iMessage and WhatsApp will work perfectly.

6. Keep your data usage in check

Those gigabytes can disappear quickly if you’re not careful. To make your plan last, enable Low Data Mode.

  • Go to Settings > Cellular > Cellular Data Options (you may need to tap your “Travel” line first).
  • Toggle “Low Data Mode” on.

This stops apps from doing background refreshes and pauses automatic downloads, saving you a huge amount of data. Also, use your hotel’s Wi-Fi whenever possible and pre-download your Google Maps for offline use.

7. Welcome home: switching back

Your trip is over, and you’ve just landed back home.

  1. Go to Settings > Cellular.
  2. Tap on “Cellular Data” and switch it back to your “Home” line.
  3. Tap on your “Travel” line and toggle “Turn On This Line” to OFF.

That’s it. Your phone is back to normal. The best part? You don’t need to delete the travel eSIM. You can just leave it turned off. The next time you travel, you can often just go back into the provider’s app and “top up” that same eSIM with a new data package, making your next trip even easier.


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