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Airalo review: how I beat mobile roaming charges abroad using travel eSIMs

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Using your phone abroad can quickly get expensive when you rely on your existing phone line.

Fortunately, a simple workaround has emerged in the past few years, enabled by new eSIM technology found in virtually all modern handsets.

For example, Vodafone will charge you £2.42 per day just to use your normal allowance in France. Outside of Europe it can be £5+ per day – Dubai is now £7.39 per day for Vodafone customers for example.

Airalo review

For EU roaming, O2 remains the best UK mobile network

O2 is now the only mobile network of the big four to include free roaming in Europe for all pay monthly customers. It’s one of the reasons I swapped a few years ago (although the signal in London is rubbish ….)

48 countries/territories/areas are included. The full list is on the O2 website here but basically it covers all of the EU and European Economic Area. Switzerland, for example, is included, as is Norway, despite neither being part of the EU.

Calls and texts to UK numbers are also free or charged at the same rate as they would be if you were in the UK. Calls to international numbers are separate – although O2 offers an paid-for ‘International Bolt On’ that reduces the cost of these too.

If you are on a monthly plan, you can use your data in O2’s Eurozone up to a maximum of 25GB (or less, if your plan includes fewer GBs.) Any data usage beyond this will be subject to throttling.

Outside of the four major carriers, you’ll also find free EU roaming on these virtual mobile networks:

  • Asda Mobile (5GB fair use limit, uses Vodafone)
  • GiffGaff (5GB fair use limit, uses O2)
  • iD Mobile (30GB fair use limit, uses Three)
  • Lebara (30GB fair use limit, uses Vodafone)
  • Lycamobile (fair use limit varies, uses EE)
  • Smarty (12GB fair use limit, uses Three)
  • Superdrug Mobile (12GB fair use limit, uses Three)
Airalo review

Finding local eSIMs with Airalo

If you’re travelling beyond the European Union, or you’re with EE, Vodafone, Three or another network, then your best option is purchasing a local SIM card at your destination.

This has been made even easier with the introduction of eSIM across many mobile devices, including from 12th generation iPhones (the 2018 iPhone XR and XS). Samsung was a bit behind the curve and only introduced eSIMs to its 2020 Galaxy S20 phones but too are now standard.

Most handsets from the last 2-5 years come with dual SIM support, either in the form of two SIM card slots or a physical SIM slot and eSIM support.

That means you can now connect to two mobile networks at once – letting you retain your UK number and SIM whilst supplementing it with a local SIM depending on where you’re travelling.

eSIMs make this even easier because you don’t need to wait until you arrive at the airport or faff around with tiny SIM cards. You can simply scan a QR code to add a data plan to your phone.

This has led to a number of third party companies popping up to connect travellers with local SIM cards, including Airalo which is what I use.

Airalo – website here – bills itself as the world’s first eSIM store. It gives you access to 200+ eSIMs globally, including a range of local, regional and global SIM cards.

I have now used Airalo over fifty times and have been very impressed. The process is extremely simple, as demonstrated by this infographic:

How Airalo works

In reality, you do not need even need to install the app. You can also use the web interface.

What I particularly like about Airalo and eSIMs is that I can install my international data plan before I leave the UK. This means I have a seamless data connection once I land at my destination. This is especially useful in case I need to show any documents on my phone but can’t connect to Wi-Fi.

How does Airalo work?

On Monday I am heading to the United States to try out Iberia’s new A321XLR aircraft in business class. This is unfortunately outside of my O2 free roaming destinations. Looking at Airalo, I have six options:

  • 1GB with seven days validity for £4
  • 2GB with 30 days validity for £7
  • 3GB for 30 days validity for £9.50
  • 5GB for 30 days validity for £13.50
  • 10GB for 30 days validity for £21.50
  • 20GB for 30 days validity for £35

In my experience, 1GB is enough data for a few days for basics such as mapping tools, email and browsing online. You’ll need more if you plan on streaming or watching video or photo-heavy content, obviously.

Airalo doesn’t actually manage the eSIM, it just connects you to the mobile network. In this case it’s a provider called ‘Change’ which piggy backs on both T-Mobile and Verizon’s 5G networks – two of the three major US carriers.

Once you purchase an eSIM on Airalo all you have to do is add it to your phone. Apple makes this very easy on iPhones – all you have to do is scan a QR code and enter a few settings and you’ll have local 5G data within 30 seconds or so.

After you fly home it’s just as easy to remove, by going into your settings and removing the data plan.

If you want to try Airalo, then you can use my referral code ‘RHYS4258’ when you sign up or at checkout to get $3 off. I’ll also get $3 off my next plan – thank you.

The Airalo website is here.

Comments (239)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • CheshirePete says:

    Only discovered recently that Trip have esims. I got 3gb for 5 days free as a Diamond member with their Global Sim when in OZ and NZ. But it was only £1.89 anyway!

  • Jan M says:

    Discovered that Three Pay as you go customers still get free roaming in the US. Was tempted to get a SIM before my next trip with them.

    • CamFlyer says:

      I have used Airalo regularly fprbthe past 18 months. My OH and I had a string of cases where the eSIMs failed to work:
      – regional eSIM worked in Oman, but not UAE
      – original UK eSIM worked in UK, but it stopped working after adding a data top up
      – Azerbaijan and Mauritius did not work
      I have no idea what went wrong, and Airalo have no meaningful customer service.

      I have gone back to Three PayGo for general usage, after using IDMobile since Three cut back its roaming; it worked perfectly on my recent holiday travels in the US.

  • S13SFC says:

    I originally had a Virgin SIM only deal at £8.99 a month.

    When O2 took over they doubled my data to 200gb a month plus unlimited calls/texts and with the Volt add ons that gives me free roaming in the US and Oz.

    For SA I use Airlo, as my wife and daughter when in California and it is effortless.

  • Throwawayname says:

    – The UK MVNO free EU roaming list is definitely bigger than that, I use Now Mobile and it’s included.

    – I am not convinced that eSIM support is that ubiquitous. The ‘flagship’ Asus ZenFone 10 model I use was launched in August ’23 and doesn’t support them.

    – However, there are quite a few providers that’ll happily post you a SIM that works everywhere. I normally use Surfroam (PAYG) and/or Flexiroam (prepaid time-limited packages), both of which work fine in most of the world.

  • Robert says:

    I read your article looking for an answer as to how to avoid triggering the £2 or £5 access charge on your paym sim even if you have a data esim alongside it if you use your ohone to answer a call or send an sms. I quite often emd up paying the access charges (in my case O2) as well as the costs for having purchased a data esim.

  • Oswald Quek says:

    Remember to install BEFORE you leave the UK! I landed in the South Africa last week and I couldn’t install it using the airport Wifi which defeated the purpose.

    • meta says:

      You must not actually install it full before you leave the UK as it will become unusable. It can only be installed on arrival (unless you have global esim). The airport wifi was probably too weak or you may have not followed properly the instructions for installation.

  • ed_fly says:

    Last time I used airalo in USA I only had a data package and had a couple of very expensive phone calls to confirm restaurant reservations. Does anyone have experience with the airalo calls and text package? Do you get a local phone number that others can call you on? Thanks

    • Nick says:

      Most US hotels have free local calls from the phone in the room, or if not they’ll let you do it from reception (local only, not national) – easily good enough for making/confirming reservations.

      • ed_fly says:

        Thanks for the reply, it wouldn’t have worked on my last trip, as heading back to the hotel to confirm a reservation would’ve been a considerable pita. Looks like tello / t-mobile provide a local number.

  • Arun T says:

    Better strategy for longer trips is a smallest data eSIM pre departure for arrival and airport logistics and then a local provider eSIM or physical SIM usually at the airport. Local SIM cards are often 3-4x cheaper and give you a local number for voice calls albeit with the added hassle of sorting things out at the airport – but for longer trips it makes sense

    • MF176 says:

      eSIM’s do that? I used Airalo last year in Thailand it had a local Thai number

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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