David H.
Chicago, US · Jun 2026
No issues, just great service
esima was fantastic during my trip to Montreal! From installation to speed, everything was smooth. Customer service was helpful when I had a question. Highly recommend for travelers!
96 verified reviews
Based on 96 reviews
David H.
Chicago, US · Jun 2026
esima was fantastic during my trip to Montreal! From installation to speed, everything was smooth. Customer service was helpful when I had a question. Highly recommend for travelers!
Liam C.
Vancouver, CA · May 2026
I activated my esima eSIM by simply scanning the QR code upon landing. The 5G speed was fantastic for streaming Netflix while exploring the city. Highly recommend for anyone traveling to Canada!
Aoife N.
Cork, IE · May 2026
Overall, my experience with esima was solid. I had decent 4G coverage throughout Vancouver and surrounding areas. The setup took just a minute, but I did lose signal briefly in some remote parts of the mountains. Still, great for city travel!
Sarah M.
London, GB · May 2026
The esima eSIM made traveling through Canada a breeze. I used it mostly in Toronto and Ottawa, and had great connectivity. There were a few moments of weak signal, but overall a solid experience that saved me from hefty roaming fees.
Sarah M.
London, GB · May 2026
The coverage across Vancouver was excellent, but I had a bit of trouble with the initial setup process as the app crashed once. After a quick reinstall, it worked perfectly. Still, the fast internet made my trip enjoyable.
Ava M.
Melbourne, AU · Apr 2026
Setting up my eSIM took less than a minute! The QR code worked perfectly, and I had 5G speeds throughout my stay in Calgary. I felt connected the whole time, which made navigating a breeze! 🌟
Anna V.
Amsterdam, NL · Apr 2026
The esima eSIM offered a solid amount of data for my time in Canada. I used it mostly for navigation and social media, and it worked well in urban areas. A couple of hiccups in the mountains, but overall a great experience.
Charlotte F.
Montreal, CA · Apr 2026
This eSIM was a lifesaver in Vancouver! Got connected right away after scanning the QR code. Speed was consistently fast, and I could easily share my connection with my friends. Definitely a must-have for travelers!
Typical home-carrier roaming
$10–$20
per day
Esima eSIM
$4.29
Flat rate
Most international carriers charge a daily roaming fee for Canada — typically a flat rate that buys you a capped data bucket, often with throttling after the first gigabyte or two and no hotspot unless you pay extra.
Some networks bundle Canada into a North America zone, but the daily fee still applies every 24 hours your phone connects to a Canadian tower, even if you only check email once.
A travel eSIM flips the model: you pay a one-time price for a fixed data allocation that does not reset daily, hotspot works from the first megabyte, and there is no throttling until you exhaust your bucket.
If you are in Canada for a week, the eSIM cost stays flat while roaming fees multiply by seven.
The eSIM also hands you off between Rogers, Bell Mobility and Telus automatically, so you get the strongest available signal rather than being locked to whichever carrier your home network has a roaming agreement with — useful in rural areas where one network may have coverage and another does not.
Different trip, same eSIM — here is how it lands for the most common visitors to Canada.
You are driving the Icefields Parkway from Banff to Jasper, stopping at Peyto Lake and the Columbia Icefield. The eSIM gives you LTE in both townsites to book campsites and check trail conditions, but you cache your Google Maps route offline before leaving Banff — the 230 km parkway is a dead zone on every carrier, and you will not see signal again until Jasper village.
Rockies road-tripper
You land at Pearson, scan the eSIM QR code in the departure lounge, and you are online before baggage claim. Uber to your downtown hotel, join a Zoom call from the lobby on 5G, and hotspot your laptop for email. The TTC subway has no signal on most lines, so you download your podcast before descending to the platform.
Toronto business traveler
You are ferrying from Vancouver to Victoria, then driving up-island to Tofino. The eSIM gives you LTE on the BC Ferries route and in Victoria, Nanaimo and Tofino town. But the Pacific Rim Highway between Port Alberni and Tofino has long dead zones — you cache your AllTrails maps offline and treat the drive as offline time, reconnecting when you hit the coast.
Vancouver island-hopper
The apps locals and travelers actually use — the ones that need real cell data, not just hotel Wi-Fi.
Uber
Rideshare in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, Calgary
Parks Canada
Campsite reservations, timed-entry tickets for Lake Louise and Moraine Lake
OpenTable
Restaurant reservations in major cities
Presto
Toronto transit payment and trip planning
TransLink
Vancouver transit schedules, Compass Card top-up
VIA Rail
Train tickets and schedule changes for Corridor and long-haul routes
AllTrails
Hiking trail maps and conditions for Banff, Jasper, North Shore mountains
Google Maps
Turn-by-turn navigation, offline map caching for Rockies road trips
~50 MB/day for chats and photo sharing, ~150 MB/day if you make regular voice calls to coordinate with travel partners.
Maps
Live Google Maps navigation burns 5-10 MB per hour of driving. Cache your route offline before road-tripping the Rockies to cut usage to near zero.
Rideshare
Uber and Lyft use ~2-5 MB per ride for real-time driver tracking and fare calculation. A week of daily rideshare in Toronto or Vancouver will consume 50-100 MB total.
Winter (December through March) brings two connectivity challenges. First, Whistler and other ski resorts see network congestion on peak weekends — all three carriers struggle with capacity when tens of thousands of skiers converge on the village base.
Book reservations and lift tickets before you arrive, not on-mountain.
Second, the Rockies see heavy snow that can close the Trans-Canada Highway and Icefields Parkway for hours or days; check DriveBC road conditions before departure, but do it on LTE in Banff or Calgary — once you are on the highway, you will hit long dead zones with no way to pull live updates.
Summer (June through August) is Parks Canada peak season: Lake Louise and Moraine Lake require timed-entry reservations that sell out weeks in advance, and you will need live data to complete the booking flow. Banff townsite has LTE, but the lakeshore trails do not — reserve your slot before you leave the hotel.
Yes, in the townsites — Banff and Jasper villages have LTE on Rogers, Bell Mobility and Telus. But backcountry trails, the Icefields Parkway and most hiking routes drop to zero signal within minutes of leaving town. Download Parks Canada maps and trail guides offline before you enter the parks.
No, on most lines. The TTC has no carrier coverage except on the newer Line 1 extension to Vaughan, which has partial LTE in stations but not in tunnels. Montreal's STM metro is the same — entirely underground with no signal except at a few downtown stations on the busiest line.
LTE works at the base of Grouse, Cypress and Seymour, but signal drops to zero on most trails above the gondola. If you are hiking the Grouse Grind or backcountry skiing, treat it as offline time and download maps before you leave the city.
3-5 GB is realistic if you cache your Google Maps route offline and only use live data for restaurant lookups and hotel check-ins. The Trans-Canada Highway between Calgary and Vancouver has long dead zones, so your phone will not burn data in those stretches anyway.
Yes — WhatsApp voice and video calls work over the data connection just like at home. You are on a local Canadian network, so call quality is the same as any other data app. No extra charges, no throttling on voice packets.
Yes — Uber, Lyft and local rideshare apps treat the eSIM as a normal Canadian data connection. You will get real-time driver tracking, fare estimates and in-app messaging without any restrictions. Hotspot is enabled, so your travel partner can use your connection if their phone does not support eSIM.
Bell Mobility has the stronger 5G rollout in Montreal, especially downtown and in the Plateau. Rogers covers the same areas with LTE and some 5G, but Bell typically delivers faster speeds in dense urban zones. Outside the city, Rogers and Telus share rural towers, so their footprints overlap almost perfectly.
Telus leads on 5G in Vancouver and the Lower Mainland. Bell Mobility covers the same metro area but Telus typically has faster speeds downtown and in Richmond. The eSIM hands you off automatically, so you will get whichever carrier has the stronger signal at your location.
Yes — the Parks Canada app works over the eSIM's data connection. But if you are booking campsites or timed-entry tickets for Lake Louise or Moraine Lake, do it before you enter the backcountry. Banff townsite has LTE, but the lakeshore and trails do not.
Patchy at best. The Corridor service (Toronto-Montreal-Ottawa) has intermittent LTE in southern Ontario and Quebec. The Canadian (Toronto-Vancouver) crosses days of dead zones in Northern Ontario, the Prairies and the Rockies. Treat long-haul VIA Rail as offline time and download entertainment before boarding.
A physical SIM from Rogers, Bell or Telus at the airport costs roughly the same as an eSIM for the same data bucket, but you wait in line, hand over your passport, and swap the SIM with a paperclip. The eSIM activates before you land — scan the QR code in the departure lounge, and you are online the moment you clear customs. Functionally identical coverage, faster setup.
Yes, but expect congestion. Whistler village has LTE on all three carriers, but network capacity struggles during peak ski weekends in January and February. Speeds slow in the village base around lift-opening and après hours. Book restaurant reservations and lift tickets before you arrive, not on-mountain.
Live turn-by-turn navigation burns roughly 5-10 MB per hour of driving. A full day road-tripping the Rockies — say Calgary to Banff to Lake Louise and back — will use 40-80 MB if you keep the map live. Cache your route offline before leaving the city to cut that to near zero.
No — the Icefields Parkway is a dead zone on all Canadian carriers. You will have LTE in Banff and Jasper townsites, but signal drops to zero within minutes of leaving either town. Download offline maps, and do not rely on live navigation for the 230 km stretch between the two parks.
Yes — OpenTable, Resy and other restaurant reservation apps work over the eSIM's data connection with no restrictions. You will get real-time availability, confirmation emails and reservation reminders just like at home. Hotspot is enabled, so your travel partner can book on their device using your connection.
Going further than Canada? These plans include Canada plus everywhere in between.

A Canada trip runs on apps — Parks Canada reservations, OpenTable for that Montreal bistro, Uber from Pearson, the Via Rail ticket you bought last-minute.
A Canada travel eSIM drops you onto Rogers, Bell Mobility or Telus the moment you land, so you skip the airport kiosk, the $15-per-day roaming add-on, and the hunt for Wi-Fi at baggage claim. One QR code, one tap, you are online from Toronto to Vancouver.
Balanced use — social, navigation & light streaming
How many travelers?
Your Canada eSIM activates the moment you scan the QR code — typically in the departure lounge or on the plane before descent. By the time you clear customs at Pearson, YVR or Trudeau, your phone has already registered on one of the three domestic networks (Rogers, Bell Mobility or Telus) and you are online.
No physical SIM swap, no airport queue, no fumbling with a paperclip at baggage claim. The eSIM behaves like a local Canadian prepaid plan: you get a Canadian data allocation, hotspot works without extra fees, and your phone treats the connection as domestic rather than roaming.
In practice, this means apps like Uber, OpenTable and Parks Canada reservation portals load at full speed, not throttled behind a roaming cap. Coverage inside Canada varies sharply by terrain.
The urban corridor from Windsor through Toronto to Montreal to Quebec City is blanketed in LTE and 5G. Vancouver, Calgary and Edmonton have strong metro coverage on all three carriers.
Rural coverage thins in the Prairies, the Canadian Shield and the Rockies — Rogers and Telus share towers outside cities, so their footprints overlap almost perfectly in these zones, while Bell Mobility sometimes has a slight edge in eastern provinces.
Subway systems in Toronto and Montreal are largely dead zones: Toronto's TTC has no carrier signal on most lines except the newer Line 1 extension to Vaughan, which has partial LTE in stations. Montreal's STM metro is entirely underground with no carrier coverage except at a few downtown stations on the central east-west line.
If you are road-tripping, expect long signal gaps on the Trans-Canada Highway through Northern Ontario, the Prairies and the Rockies. Whistler village has congested LTE in winter — all three carriers struggle with capacity during peak ski season weekends.
Three reasons travellers pick esima for Canada. First: pricing mirrors local prepaid rates, not the roaming premium your home network charges for Canadian towers.
Second: the eSIM hands you off between Rogers, Bell Mobility and Telus automatically, so you get the strongest signal in your hotel lobby rather than a single carrier's weak spot.
Third: hotspot is enabled by default — useful if you are travelling with a laptop, a tablet, or a companion whose device does not support eSIM. No throttling on the first 5 GB like some Canadian carrier prepaid deals.
Your QR code lands in your inbox minutes after purchase.
Pay one upfront price — no surprise charges abroad.
Your physical SIM stays active for calls and texts.
Connect to top-rated local networks at full speed.
Real humans ready to help, any time zone, any day.
Scan once and you're online — no app, no SIM swap.
Our Canada eSIMs run on the Rogers, Bell Mobility and Telus networks. Bell Mobility has the strongest 5G rollout in Montreal and Toronto, while Telus leads in Vancouver and Calgary.
Rogers and Telus share tower infrastructure in rural areas, giving near-identical coverage outside major cities. All three carriers offer LTE in Banff and Jasper townsites, but backcountry trails and the Icefields Parkway drop to zero signal within minutes of leaving town.
The Trans-Canada Highway between Calgary and Vancouver crosses the Rockies with long stretches of no signal — expect dead zones for 50+ km segments. VIA Rail's Corridor service (Toronto-Montreal-Ottawa) has patchy LTE; the Canadian (Toronto-Vancouver) crosses days of dead zones in Northern Ontario and the Prairies. Download Parks Canada trail maps offline before entering mountain parks.
Network
Make sure your phone supports eSIM — most recent models do.
Pick a plan and pay securely. Your QR code arrives by email in minutes.
Scan the QR code, enable data roaming on arrival, and you're online.