Customer reviews

60 verified reviews

4.8

Based on 60 reviews

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  • James K.

    Manchester, GB · May 2026

    Good overall experience

    The eSIM worked perfectly throughout my trip in Cambodia. Just a note: the email with the setup instructions took a couple of minutes to arrive, which felt long when I was excited to get connected!

  • Sarah M.

    London, GB · May 2026

    Instant Setup and Use

    As soon as I landed in Cambodia, I scanned the QR code, and boom, I was online! Perfect for sending messages and sharing my adventures on social media. Loved it!

  • Niamh F.

    Galway, IE · May 2026

    Perfect for travel photos

    My esima eSIM was a lifesaver for backing up my vacation photos while in Siem Reap. Fast installation and no issues at all. I’ll definitely use this again!

  • Aoife N.

    Cork, IE · May 2026

    Perfect for Exploring Angkor Wat

    I used the esima eSIM during my trip to Cambodia, especially at Angkor Wat. The setup was a breeze with the QR scan, and I was able to share my amazing photos instantly. Highly recommend it!

  • Elena G.

    Madrid, ES · May 2026

    Seamless connection for photos

    Absolutely loved using esima in Cambodia! My data worked perfectly for backing up photos while visiting Angkor Wat. The setup was super fast, and I didn't have to think about roaming charges at all. Highly recommend!

  • Megan H.

    Cape Town, ZA · May 2026

    Good Coverage, Minor Wait

    Overall, the eSIM from esima was reliable during my trip to Cambodia. I had full coverage in major cities, but I did experience a slight wait for the activation email. Would love to see more options for different data needs!

  • Lucas O.

    São Paulo, BR · May 2026

    Perfect for exploring Cambodia

    I used esima's eSIM while traveling in Cambodia, and it was a game-changer! I scanned the QR code at Siem Reap airport, and I was connected instantly. I navigated through Angkor Wat and shared my photos with friends without any hassle!

  • Lucas O.

    São Paulo, BR · Apr 2026

    Good data plan, needs more options

    The eSIM worked well throughout Cambodia, which made my trip so much easier. I relied on it for Google Maps and staying in touch with my group. Just wish I'd chosen a bigger data plan—ran out a bit quicker than I expected!

eSIM vs roaming in Cambodia

Typical home-carrier roaming

£10£18

per day

Esima eSIM

£3.99

Flat rate

Most international carriers treat Cambodia as a high-tier roaming zone. Your home network will charge a flat daily rate or a per-megabyte overage, and many bundles throttle after the first gigabyte or two.

Hotspot is often disabled or costs extra. The eSIM flips that: you pay a single upfront price for the full data allowance, hotspot is included, and there is no throttle until you exhaust the bucket.

Roaming bundles from major networks also lock you to a single local carrier — usually Cellcard or Smart Axiata — so if that carrier has a weak spot in Siem Reap or on the road to Sihanoukville, you are stuck with it.

The eSIM hands off between Metfone and Smart Axiata automatically, giving you the stronger tower at each location. For a week in Cambodia, the cost difference is significant, and the flexibility is higher.

Real trips, real travelers

Built for travelers like you

Different trip, same eSIM — here is how it lands for the most common visitors to Cambodia.

You spend three days cycling between Angkor Wat, Bayon, and the outer temples. The eSIM keeps Google Maps live as you navigate the park roads, lets you call your tuk-tuk driver when you are ready for pickup, and uploads sunrise photos from the Angkor Wat causeway before breakfast. At the outer temples, signal drops to 3G, but you downloaded offline maps the night before.

Temple-hopper

You base yourself in Phnom Penh for a month, working from cafés along the riverside. The eSIM hotspots your laptop when the café Wi-Fi is slow, handles video calls with clients back home, and keeps Grab running when you need a quick ride to a coworking space. KHQR payments via Wing settle your coffee tab in seconds.

Digital nomad

You take a long weekend to Koh Rong. The eSIM works perfectly in Sihanoukville for booking the speedboat and ordering a Grab to the pier. On the boat and on-island, you rely on resort Wi-Fi. Before you board, you download your return ticket, offline maps, and a few podcasts. When you are back on the mainland, 4G returns instantly.

Island weekender

Apps you'll need data for in Cambodia

The apps locals and travelers actually use — the ones that need real cell data, not just hotel Wi-Fi.

  • Grab app icon

    Grab

    Ride-hail and food delivery in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap

  • PassApp app icon

    PassApp

    Local ride-hail alternative, strong in Phnom Penh

  • Wing app icon

    Wing

    Mobile wallet for KHQR payments at vendors and tuk-tuks

  • ABA Mobile app icon

    ABA Mobile

    Banking app for KHQR payments and ATM-free cash topups

  • Tada app icon

    Tada

    Remork (tuk-tuk) ride-hail app in Phnom Penh

  • Google Maps app icon

    Google Maps

    Navigation for temple routes, city streets, and highway drives

How much data you'll burn per day

WhatsApp

~40 MB/day for text and voice messages, ~120 MB/day if you make daily voice calls, ~300 MB/day with video calls.

Maps

~80–150 MB/day for live navigation in Phnom Penh, Siem Reap, and Angkor park routes. Download offline maps to cut this to near-zero.

Rideshare

~20–40 MB/day for Grab or PassApp in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap, including real-time driver tracking and route updates.

When you're travelling matters

Cambodia's rainy season runs May through October. Heavy monsoon downpours can cause temporary network congestion in Phnom Penh and Siem Reap, slowing speeds during peak afternoon storms, but cellular infrastructure remains online.

The bigger connectivity issue is flooded roads cutting physical access to remote provinces like Ratanakiri and Mondulkiri, where towers are sparse to begin with. If you are traveling upcountry during the wet season, download offline maps and any emergency contact info before you leave the last town with reliable signal. The dry season (November–April) sees no weather-related connectivity changes.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Does the eSIM work inside Angkor Wat and the other temples?

Yes. The main Angkor Archaeological Park cluster — Angkor Wat, Bayon, Ta Prohm — has reliable 4G on Metfone and Smart Axiata. The outer temples like Banteay Srei and Phnom Kulen drop to 3G or lose signal in the forest. Download offline maps before you leave Siem Reap town if you are visiting the remote barays or the Roluos Group.

Does the eSIM work on Koh Rong and Koh Rong Sanloem?

Cellular coverage on the islands is patchy and limited to a few on-island towers. Most resorts provide Wi-Fi. The speedboat crossing from Sihanoukville is a dead zone on all carriers. Download maps, booking confirmations, and any tickets before you board the boat, and plan to rely on resort Wi-Fi once you arrive.

How much data do I need for a week in Cambodia?

A typical week — Grab rides, Google Maps navigation, WhatsApp chats, KHQR payment app checks, occasional photo uploads — runs 3–5 GB. Add another 2–3 GB if you are streaming music, posting Instagram stories, or making daily video calls. If you are only using maps and rideshare, 2 GB is enough.

Can I use Grab and PassApp with this eSIM?

Yes. Both apps work on the eSIM. Grab dominates Phnom Penh and Siem Reap; PassApp is the local alternative. Outside those cities, coverage thins and you will negotiate with tuk-tuk drivers directly. Tada and InDrive also operate in Phnom Penh for remork rides.

Does KHQR payment work on the eSIM?

KHQR is a QR-code standard, not a cellular service, so it works on any data connection. You will need a local payment app — Wing for Tourists is the easiest for foreigners, or you can top up ABA at a local agent. The eSIM provides the data to scan codes and confirm transactions in real time.

Metfone vs Smart Axiata — which has better coverage in Siem Reap?

Metfone has the densest 4G across Siem Reap town and the main Angkor temple cluster. Smart Axiata is the premium alternative with strong urban reach but slightly thinner coverage at the outer temples. The eSIM switches between both automatically, so you get the stronger signal at each location without manual intervention.

Does the eSIM work in Battambang and Kampot?

Yes. Both towns have solid 4G from Metfone and Smart Axiata. Rural stretches between Battambang and Phnom Penh, and along the coast near Kampot, drop to 3G or lose signal on remote roads. Download offline maps if you are driving the countryside or visiting Bokor National Park.

Can I make WhatsApp calls in Cambodia on this eSIM?

Yes. WhatsApp voice and video calls work on the eSIM just like any other data app. A 30-minute voice call uses roughly 15–20 MB; a video call uses 150–200 MB. If you are calling home daily, budget an extra gigabyte for the week.

Does the eSIM work on the bus from Phnom Penh to Siem Reap?

Coverage is reliable on National Road 6 for most of the route. You will hit a few dead zones in rural stretches between towns, but the bus stays on the main highway where Metfone and Smart Axiata both have towers. Download offline maps and any entertainment before departure if you want uninterrupted access.

eSIM vs buying a local SIM at Phnom Penh airport — which is better?

The airport SIM counters sell Cellcard, Smart, and Metfone prepaid cards. You will pay roughly the same price, but you have to queue, hand over your passport for registration, and swap the physical card. The eSIM activates before you land, skips the counter, and does not require passport registration. If your phone supports eSIM, it is faster and less hassle.

Does the eSIM work in the Cardamom Mountains?

Coverage in the Cardamom range is sparse. Towns like Koh Kong have 4G, but the forest roads and trekking routes are 3G or dead zones. If you are doing a multi-day trek or a remote homestay, download offline maps, trail guides, and any emergency contact info before you leave the last town with signal.

Can I hotspot my laptop on this eSIM?

Yes. Hotspot is enabled by default on esima eSIMs. You can tether a laptop, tablet, or a travel companion's phone without extra charges. Useful if you are working remotely from a Phnom Penh café or need to share connectivity on a long bus ride to Siem Reap.

Does the eSIM work during the rainy season?

Cellular infrastructure in Cambodia is not affected by rain the way it is in some countries. Heavy monsoon downpours between May and October can slow speeds temporarily due to network congestion, but coverage does not drop. The bigger issue is flooded roads cutting physical access to remote areas, not the cell towers themselves.

Need broader coverage?

Going further than Cambodia? These plans include Cambodia plus everywhere in between.