Customer reviews

143 verified reviews

4.9

Based on 143 reviews

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  • Lucas O.

    São Paulo, BR · May 2026

    Reliable connection in remote areas

    Traveling to Palawan was a breeze with esima. I was worried about connectivity in rural spots, but I was consistently connected. The install took only 30 seconds, and I had no lag during video calls — perfect for sharing my adventures!

  • Jordan A.

    Johannesburg, ZA · May 2026

    Convenient and Fast

    I loved the convenience of the esima eSIM while exploring the Philippines! It took around 30 seconds to install using the manual code, and my internet speed was more than enough for browsing and social media. Just wish it worked better in some of the more isolated spots.

  • Elena G.

    Madrid, ES · May 2026

    Perfect for Island Hopping

    I activated my esima eSIM as soon as I landed in Manila, just scanned the QR code and was online in less than a minute! The 4G speed was fantastic, making it easy to share photos while island hopping around Palawan. Highly recommend for anyone traveling to the Philippines!

  • Camila R.

    Mexico City, MX · May 2026

    Seamless Connection in Cebu

    The eSIM installed in just 30 seconds after scanning the QR code. I was able to stream Netflix without any buffering while lounging on the beach. Highly recommend for travelers to the Philippines!

  • Jordan A.

    Johannesburg, ZA · May 2026

    Seamless experience from start to finish

    I can't say enough good things about esima. The QR code setup was instant at the airport, and I enjoyed fast 4G speeds throughout my stay in Palawan. It made staying in touch with family so easy!

  • Megan H.

    Cape Town, ZA · May 2026

    Perfect for my Philippines trip

    Setting up the eSIM was a breeze! I scanned the QR code at the airport in Manila, and I was connected within minutes. The 4G speed was fantastic, perfect for sharing photos and navigating around. Highly recommend it!

  • Ava M.

    Melbourne, AU · May 2026

    Great value for travelers

    Using esima in the Philippines was a great experience. The service was fast, especially in urban areas. I did have to manually enter the code in a couple of spots, but it was manageable. Overall, a great option for travelers looking to stay connected!

  • Liam C.

    Vancouver, CA · May 2026

    Seamless connection in Boracay!

    I was worried about data issues in Boracay, but esima delivered! The 4G speed was perfect for sharing photos and navigating around. I installed it quickly using the QR code, and didn’t need to think about it for the rest of the trip!

eSIM vs roaming in Philippines

Typical home-carrier roaming

£10£18

per day

Esima eSIM

£2.57

Flat rate

Most international roaming bundles throttle data after the first gigabyte or two, cap hotspot use, and charge per-day fees that stack up fast across a week-long island-hopping trip.

A typical roaming package from a major carrier allows 500MB to 1GB at full speed, then drops you to 128kbps — enough for text messages but unusable for Maps navigation or Grab.

Hotspot tethering is often blocked entirely or limited to a small sub-quota, so sharing data with a companion or connecting a laptop means buying a second roaming pass. The eSIM gives you the full data allowance at local LTE and 5G speeds with no throttling threshold, and hotspot mode is enabled by default.

Cost is a flat rate for the validity window — seven days, fourteen days, thirty days — so you know the total before you board the flight. No bill shock when you land, no surprise overage texts, no need to ration megabytes because you are not sure what the next gig will cost.

Real trips, real travelers

Built for travelers like you

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

You fly into Manila, ferry to Palawan, boat between El Nido and Coron, then hop to Boracay. The eSIM keeps Google Maps live for tricycle routes in Puerto Princesa, Grab working in Manila, and WhatsApp calls to your next resort when the boat schedule changes. You accept the dead zones on open water and cache offline maps before each crossing.

Island-hopper

You spend a month co-working in BGC, Cebu IT Park, and Siargao. The eSIM's hotspot mode shares data with your laptop at cafés that have slow Wi-Fi, Grab gets you to client meetings on time, and 5G in Manila and Cebu keeps Zoom calls stable. You top up data mid-month when the first plan runs low rather than hunting for a 7-Eleven SIM reload.

Digital nomad

You are coordinating four people across Boracay, a day trip to Puka Beach, and a ferry to Caticlan. The eSIM keeps your phone online for Grab family rides, GCash payments at the D'Mall food court, and real-time updates when one kid wants to stay at the beach longer. You share the hotspot with your partner's phone so both of you have Maps without buying two data plans.

Family vacation planner

Apps you'll need data for in Philippines

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

  • Grab app icon

    Grab

    Ride-hailing and food delivery across Metro Manila, Cebu, Davao, and Boracay

  • Maya app icon

    Maya

    Mobile wallet for QR payments, bills, and money transfers

  • GCash app icon

    GCash

    Mobile wallet for merchant QR codes, remittances, and load top-ups

  • Move It app icon

    Move It

    Alternative ride-hail when Grab surge-prices or has no nearby drivers

  • InDriver app icon

    InDriver

    Ride-hail with negotiable fares, common backup in provincial cities

  • Angkas app icon

    Angkas

    Motorcycle taxi app for beating Manila traffic

  • Sakay.ph app icon

    Sakay.ph

    Jeepney and bus route planner for Metro Manila public transit

How much data you'll burn per day

WhatsApp

~50MB per day for text and voice messages; ~150MB per day if you make regular voice calls to hotels or tour operators.

Maps

~100–150MB per day for live navigation between Manila, Cebu, and island destinations; add another 50MB if you reroute frequently in traffic.

Rideshare

~30–50MB per day for multiple Grab or Move It rides in Metro Manila or Cebu; each booking and live tracking uses 3–5MB.

When you're travelling matters

Typhoon season runs June through November, with peak activity in August and September. Strong typhoons can damage cell towers in the Visayas and Mindanao, causing outages for 24–48 hours after landfall.

If you are traveling to Cebu, Bohol, Leyte, or Samar during these months, download offline maps for your hotel and major routes before the storm window. Metro Manila and northern Luzon usually see faster tower repairs.

Check PAGASA (the Philippine weather bureau) forecasts a few days before island-hopping trips — ferries cancel when typhoons approach, and you will want offline access to rebooking contacts and alternative routes.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Does the eSIM work in Palawan (El Nido and Coron)?

Yes. El Nido town and Coron proper have LTE on Globe and Smart. Open-water boat trips between the two islands lose signal for 30–90 minutes mid-crossing. Island-hopping tours around Bacuit Bay and Coron's lakes stay close enough to shore that you keep intermittent 4G, but do not count on live navigation during the boat ride itself.

Does the eSIM work in Boracay?

Yes. White Beach has full 4G coverage from Station 1 through Station 3 on both Globe and Smart. D'Mall, the boat stations, and most beachfront resorts stay connected. Puka Beach and Diniwid Beach have spottier coverage — Globe is usually stronger than Smart at the northern end. Boat rides to nearby islands drop signal mid-crossing.

Does the eSIM work in Siargao?

Yes, with caveats. General Luna (Cloud 9, the main tourist strip) and Dapa port have LTE on Globe and Smart. Coverage thins quickly outside town — the road to Magpupungko tidal pools, Sugba Lagoon, and the northern surf breaks all have long dead zones. Download offline maps and let your resort know arrival times in advance.

How much data do I need for a week in the Philippines?

Budget 1–2GB per day if you use Grab multiple times, run Google Maps for jeepney routes, and upload photos to Instagram. A week-long trip with moderate use (messaging, maps, occasional video calls) fits comfortably in 10GB. If you stream video on long bus rides or hotspot a laptop, add another 5–10GB to the total.

Can I make WhatsApp calls on this eSIM?

Yes. WhatsApp voice and video calls work over the cellular data connection. A 30-minute voice call uses roughly 15–20MB; a 30-minute video call uses 150–250MB depending on resolution. The eSIM does not block VoIP, so Messenger, Telegram, and Viber calls all function normally.

Does Grab work on this eSIM?

Yes. Grab needs live data to match you with drivers, update fares, and track the route. The eSIM provides the same local network access as a physical SIM, so Grab, Move It, and InDriver all work without restrictions. You can also use GrabFood for delivery orders.

Globe vs Smart coverage in Manila — which is better?

Both Globe and Smart have strong 5G in Metro Manila's business districts (BGC, Makati, Ortigas). Globe tends to hold better signal inside malls and underground parking; Smart is slightly faster on EDSA and the Bay Area. The eSIM hands off between both networks automatically, so you get whichever is stronger at your location rather than being locked to one carrier's congestion.

Globe vs Smart in Cebu — which should I expect?

Globe and Smart both cover Cebu City's IT Park and Ayala Center with 5G. Smart has a slight edge in Mactan Island resorts; Globe is stronger on the road south to Oslob and Moalboal. The eSIM switches between them, so you do not need to pick — the handoff happens automatically based on tower load and signal strength.

Does Maya work on this eSIM?

Yes. Maya (formerly PayMaya) needs data to load your balance, scan QR codes at merchants, and send money. The eSIM provides the same network access as a local SIM, so Maya, GCash, and other mobile wallets function normally. Load the app and verify your account on hotel Wi-Fi before you head to street markets.

Does GCash work on this eSIM?

Yes. GCash requires live data for QR payments, balance checks, and bill payments. The eSIM gives you the same local network connection as a physical Globe or Smart SIM, so GCash works without restrictions. Two-factor SMS codes will still go to your home number if you keep that line active for texts.

eSIM vs buying a SIM at the airport in Manila — what is the difference?

An airport SIM requires a passport photocopy, a registration form, and 10–15 minutes at the counter. The eSIM installs in under a minute from the QR code you receive before departure — no paperwork, no physical card to lose. Pricing is similar; the eSIM saves time and the risk of misplacing the tiny SIM when you swap back to your home number. You also keep your home line active for two-factor SMS.

Will the eSIM work during typhoon season?

The eSIM will work, but typhoons (June–November) can damage cell towers in the Visayas and Mindanao, causing outages for 24–48 hours after landfall. If a storm is forecast during your trip, download offline maps, cache hotel addresses, and coordinate pickup times with your resort in advance. Metro Manila and Luzon usually recover faster than island provinces.

Can I use the eSIM hotspot to share data with another phone?

Yes. Hotspot and tethering are enabled by default. You can share the eSIM's data with a travel partner's phone, a tablet, or a laptop. No extra charge, no throttling on the first few gigabytes like some Philippine carrier tourist packages. Just turn on Personal Hotspot in your phone's settings and connect the other device.

Does the eSIM work on the ferry from Manila to Batangas or Cebu?

Coverage depends on the route. Short ferry crossings (Manila Bay, Batangas to Mindoro) usually keep LTE signal for the first and last 20 minutes, with a dead zone mid-crossing. Longer overnight ferries (Manila to Cebu, Cebu to Cagayan de Oro) lose signal once you are an hour offshore and regain it when you approach the destination port. Download offline maps and entertainment before boarding.

Can I receive two-factor SMS codes while using the eSIM for data?

Yes, if your phone supports dual-SIM and you keep your home SIM or eSIM active. Set your home line to calls and texts only, and the travel eSIM to cellular data. Two-factor codes from your bank or email provider will arrive on your home number, while apps like Grab and Maps use the eSIM's data connection. Check that your home carrier allows incoming texts while roaming.

Need broader coverage?

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