Customer reviews

137 verified reviews

4.8

Based on 137 reviews

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  • Lucas O.

    São Paulo, BR · Jun 2026

    Decent but could improve

    While the eSIM was easy to set up in Hamburg, I experienced slow speeds in more rural areas. It was fine for basic browsing, but I struggled with streaming. Overall, it served its purpose, but I expected better performance.

  • James K.

    Manchester, GB · Jun 2026

    Fast and Reliable in Cities

    I used the eSIM while traveling through Stuttgart and Frankfurt. Installation was quick via QR scan, and the connection was stable for video calls. Just a bit slower in the countryside, but still a great choice!

  • Megan H.

    Cape Town, ZA · Jun 2026

    Perfect for My Trip

    The esima eSIM was perfect for my trip to Germany. The installation took less than a minute, and I had no issues using maps and social media all over the country. Customer service was helpful when I had a quick question.

  • Elena G.

    Madrid, ES · May 2026

    A must-have for travelers!

    Using esima in Düsseldorf was a game changer. I could easily stay connected with friends and family. The QR code installation was instant, and I never experienced any lag, even while uploading photos!

  • Hugo P.

    Paris, FR · May 2026

    Solid service in Frankfurt

    Used esima during my stay in Frankfurt and was impressed. 4G speeds were reliable, and I loved that I could avoid roaming fees. Only downside was a slight hiccup when trying to connect at the airport, but everything worked out in the end.

  • Megan H.

    Cape Town, ZA · May 2026

    Perfect for Berlin!

    I activated my esima eSIM the moment I landed in Berlin. The QR code scan took less than a minute, and I was connected to 5G instantly. Streaming Netflix and navigating around the city was seamless. Highly recommend!

  • Arjun K.

    Bangalore, IN · May 2026

    Reliable in every city

    From Berlin to Munich, this eSIM provided consistent coverage. Installation was quick with the QR code, and I enjoyed seamless video calls. It totally outperformed traditional roaming options!

  • Aoife N.

    Cork, IE · May 2026

    Easy installation and reliable

    Esima made staying connected in Germany so easy! The installation process was only 30 seconds, and I had 4G coverage across all the cities I visited. I loved being able to share my travels on social media without any hiccups!

eSIM vs roaming in Germany

Typical home-carrier roaming

$10$18

per day

Esima eSIM

$2.57

Flat rate

Most international carriers charge per-day roaming fees for Germany, typically with a data cap after the first gigabyte or two — speeds throttle to near-unusable levels once you cross that threshold. Hotspot and tethering are often blocked or incur separate surcharges, so you cannot share connectivity with a laptop or a travel companion.

Roaming bundles reset daily at midnight in your home time zone, which means unpredictable costs if you stay longer than the initial pass window. An eSIM gives you a flat data pool with no daily reset, no throttling after the first few gigabytes, and hotspot enabled by default.

You pay one price for the entire trip rather than watching the meter tick each calendar day. Coverage quality is identical — the eSIM uses the same Deutsche Telekom, Vodafone Germany, and O2 towers that roaming agreements rely on — but the billing model keeps your total spend predictable.

Real trips, real travelers

Built for travelers like you

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

You take the ICE from Frankfurt to Berlin twice a week. DB Navigator pushes live platform changes to your phone; you hotspot your laptop for client calls between cities. The eSIM is faster than onboard Wi-Fi and does not throttle after the first gigabyte like your corporate roaming plan. You expense one flat data pool instead of daily roaming fees.

Business traveler on the ICE corridor

You are driving the Romantic Road from Würzburg to Füssen, then looping through the Black Forest. Google Maps navigation pulls live traffic data; you stream playlists on the Autobahn. The eSIM hands off to Deutsche Telekom in rural stretches where O2 drops. You share the connection with your passenger's tablet via hotspot.

Autobahn road-tripper

You spend three days each in Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg. The BVG, MVG, and HVV apps all need live data to validate QR-code transit tickets. You use WhatsApp video calls to coordinate hostel check-ins and upload photos to Instagram from beer gardens. The eSIM keeps you online across all three cities without hunting for Wi-Fi passwords.

City-hopping backpacker

Apps you'll need data for in Germany

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

  • DB Navigator app icon

    DB Navigator

    Real-time train schedules, platform changes, and ticket booking for Deutsche Bahn ICE, IC, and regional trains

  • BVG Fahrinfo app icon

    BVG Fahrinfo

    Berlin public transport tickets with QR-code validation for U-Bahn, S-Bahn, and buses

  • MVG app icon

    MVG

    Munich S-Bahn, U-Bahn, and tram tickets with live validation

  • Free Now app icon

    Free Now

    Rideshare and taxi booking across German cities (formerly MyTaxi)

  • HVV app icon

    HVV

    Hamburg public transport tickets and real-time schedules

  • RMV app icon

    RMV

    Frankfurt regional transport tickets and route planning

  • Google Maps app icon

    Google Maps

    Navigation, public transport directions, and live traffic on Autobahn routes

How much data you'll burn per day

WhatsApp

~40 MB per day for text and voice messages; ~120 MB per day if you make regular voice calls; video calls add 5–8 MB per minute.

Maps

Google Maps in navigation mode uses 100–150 MB per day of active driving or walking; less if you download offline city maps before your trip.

Rideshare

Free Now and Uber each use 5–10 MB per ride request, including driver tracking and route display; budget 50–80 MB per day if you take multiple rides.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Does the eSIM work in the Black Forest and rural Bavaria?

Yes, but expect LTE only — 5G is concentrated in Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg. Deutsche Telekom has the widest rural coverage; Vodafone and O2 have scattered dead zones in the deep forest and mountain valleys. Download offline maps before heading into the Schwarzwald or the Bavarian Alps.

Will the eSIM work on the ICE train from Frankfurt to Berlin?

Yes. The eSIM works on all ICE, IC, and regional trains. Onboard Wi-Fi is notoriously slow, so most travelers use cellular data for work or streaming. Coverage is continuous on major routes like Frankfurt–Cologne and Munich–Hamburg; expect brief drops in tunnels through the Thuringian hills.

How much data do I need for a week in Germany using DB Navigator and Google Maps daily?

Budget 3–5 GB for a week. DB Navigator pulls live train data constantly (platform changes, delays) and uses roughly 30–50 MB per day. Google Maps in navigation mode adds another 100–150 MB daily. If you are streaming music on the train or uploading photos, add 1–2 GB to that estimate.

Can I use WhatsApp calls and video on this eSIM?

Yes. WhatsApp voice calls use about 1 MB per minute; video calls use 5–8 MB per minute. The eSIM does not block VoIP, so you can call home over WhatsApp, Signal, or FaceTime without extra charges. 5G in Berlin, Munich, and Hamburg handles video calls smoothly; LTE in rural areas works fine for voice.

Does the BVG Fahrinfo app for Berlin public transport work on this eSIM?

Yes. The BVG app requires live data to generate QR-code tickets, which inspectors scan on the U-Bahn and S-Bahn. Offline screenshots are not accepted. The eSIM provides the connectivity you need to buy and validate tickets in real time. U-Bahn platforms have full LTE; tunnels between stations drop signal intermittently.

Deutsche Telekom vs Vodafone Germany coverage on the Autobahn — which is better?

Deutsche Telekom has better rural coverage, especially on Autobahn stretches through Brandenburg and Mecklenburg-Vorpommern where Vodafone and O2 have dead zones. The eSIM hands off automatically, so you will land on Telekom in those areas. On major routes like the A8 Munich–Stuttgart, all three carriers are equally strong.

Will the eSIM work in Cologne, Frankfurt, and the Rhine Valley?

Yes. Cologne and Frankfurt have full 5G in the city centers on all three carriers. The Rhine Valley between Koblenz and Mainz has continuous LTE; expect 5G only in the larger towns. Coverage is solid along the river and on the Autobahn; smaller wine villages in the hills may have brief O2 dead spots.

Can I hotspot my laptop on the ICE train using this eSIM?

Yes. Hotspot and tethering are enabled without throttling on the first 5 GB. ICE onboard Wi-Fi is slow and unreliable, so most business travelers use their phone as a router. Expect 20–50 Mbps on LTE between cities, enough for video calls or cloud document editing.

Does the eSIM work on the Romantic Road between Rothenburg and Füssen?

Yes, but coverage is patchy on O2. Deutsche Telekom is more reliable on this route. The eSIM will hand off to Telekom automatically in weak-signal areas. Expect LTE only — no 5G in the small towns along the Romantic Road. Download offline maps before the drive.

eSIM vs buying a SIM card at Frankfurt Airport — what is the difference?

An eSIM activates instantly with a QR code scan; no queue, no passport photocopy, no €10 deposit to reclaim later. Airport SIM kiosks sell the same Deutsche Telekom, Vodafone, or O2 networks, but you pay a markup and spend 15–20 minutes in line. The eSIM is cheaper, faster, and you can install it before you land.

Will the eSIM work in Hamburg's HafenCity and St. Pauli neighborhoods?

Yes. Both areas have full 5G on Deutsche Telekom, Vodafone Germany, and O2. The HVV app for public transport requires live data to buy and validate tickets. Coverage on the Elbe waterfront is solid; the Alster lakes area has occasional O2 weak spots, but the eSIM will switch to Telekom or Vodafone automatically.

How much data does streaming music on Spotify use on the train?

Spotify uses about 1–2 MB per minute on normal quality, roughly 60–120 MB per hour. If you are commuting daily on the S-Bahn or taking long ICE rides, budget an extra 500 MB to 1 GB per week for music. Download playlists on Wi-Fi to save data.

Can I use the eSIM for Uber and Free Now rideshare apps in Germany?

Yes. Both Uber and Free Now (the main rideshare app in Germany) require live data to request rides, track drivers, and process payments. The eSIM provides the connectivity you need. Expect the apps to work smoothly in Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, Frankfurt, and Cologne; smaller cities have limited rideshare availability regardless of connectivity.

Does the eSIM work in the Harz Mountains and Thuringian Forest?

Coverage is patchy. Deutsche Telekom has the best footprint in these regions; Vodafone and O2 have scattered dead zones in valleys and deep forest. Expect LTE only — no 5G outside the larger towns like Goslar or Eisenach. Download offline maps and trail guides before heading into the backcountry.

Need broader coverage?

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