Customer reviews

64 verified reviews

4.6

Based on 64 reviews

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  • Ava M.

    Melbourne, AU · Jun 2026

    Perfect for Lagos Travel

    I used esima during my trip to Lagos and it worked flawlessly. I was able to navigate with Google Maps and stay connected with friends throughout my journey. The QR code installation took literally seconds!

  • Niamh F.

    Galway, IE · Jun 2026

    Good but could be better

    The eSIM worked well most of the time, but I wish I'd bought the bigger data plan for my heavy social media use. Customer support was helpful, though it took a couple of hours for them to respond.

  • Elena G.

    Madrid, ES · Jun 2026

    Data on the Go!

    Using esima in Nigeria was super easy! I relied on it for every aspect of my trip, from hotel bookings to local navigation. Definitely made my experience smoother!

  • Jessica L.

    New York, US · Jun 2026

    Good service overall

    I loved the eSIM during my stay in Nigeria. It made navigating the country so much easier. I wish I'd bought the bigger data plan though, as I ran out a bit too quickly.

  • Anna V.

    Amsterdam, NL · May 2026

    Great for Group Chats

    I used esima during my trip to Nigeria to keep in touch with friends. The connection was great for messaging and sharing photos. Wish I'd bought the bigger data plan, but overall a solid experience!

  • Olivia P.

    Austin, US · May 2026

    Reliable on My Journey

    I found the esima eSIM to be very reliable while traveling around Nigeria. I did have to wait a couple of minutes for the activation email, but once it arrived, everything worked smoothly.

  • Aoife N.

    Cork, IE · May 2026

    Seamless Nigeria Experience

    The eSIM worked perfectly as soon as I landed in Lagos. I was able to use Google Maps and communicate with my friends instantly. Highly recommend esima for Nigerian travels!

  • Noah K.

    Brisbane, AU · May 2026

    Seamless in Lagos

    The eSIM worked perfectly as soon as I landed in Lagos. I was able to use Google Maps and stay connected with friends without any hassle. Highly recommend!

eSIM vs roaming in Nigeria

Typical home-carrier roaming

$10$18

per day

Esima eSIM

$5.49

Flat rate

Most international carriers treat Nigeria as a high-cost roaming zone — you get a capped daily allowance (often 500 MB to 1 GB) before throttling kicks in, and hotspot is either blocked or burns through the allowance in under an hour.

The first gigabyte runs at LTE speeds; after that, you drop to 128 kbps, which is too slow for rideshare-app maps or a POS wallet transaction.

Roaming bundles from major networks also lock you to whichever local carrier they have a wholesale agreement with — usually MTN — so you miss Airtel's stronger southeast coverage in Port Harcourt and Enugu.

A flat-price eSIM gives you the full data allowance at local 4G speeds, with hotspot enabled, and automatic handoff between MTN and Airtel depending on which tower is stronger at your location. Cost stays predictable across a two-week trip; roaming charges compound daily and spike if you tether a laptop or exceed the soft cap.

Real trips, real travelers

Built for travelers like you

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

Your day is back-to-back meetings in VI, Ikoyi and the mainland, with two-hour Bolt rides between them. The eSIM keeps email, Opay wallet and WhatsApp running during traffic jams, and hotspot saves your Zoom call when the hotel Wi-Fi dies mid-pitch. MTN's 4G covers the commercial corridors; you never think about connectivity.

Lagos business traveler

You are spending a month in a Yaba or Lekki co-working space. Power outages kill the building Wi-Fi twice a day, so you enable hotspot on the eSIM and keep coding, pushing commits, and joining standups over MTN's 4G. The flat data allowance means cost stays predictable even when you tether eight hours a day.

Tech-hub remote worker

You are flying into Port Harcourt to visit family in Owerri and Enugu. Airtel dominates this region — stronger than MTN in the southeast corridor. The eSIM hands off automatically, so you get reliable 4G for maps, PalmPay transfers to relatives, and WhatsApp video calls. No need to buy a local SIM or hunt for a recharge vendor.

Southeast family visitor

Apps you'll need data for in Nigeria

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

  • Bolt app icon

    Bolt

    Rideshare — dominant in Lagos, Abuja, Port Harcourt. Needs SMS OTP at booking.

  • inDrive app icon

    inDrive

    Rideshare with negotiable fares. Popular in Lagos traffic.

  • Opay app icon

    Opay

    Mobile-money wallet. Accepted at POS terminals, bill payments, transfers.

  • PalmPay app icon

    PalmPay

    Mobile-money wallet. Works when bank PINs fail during NIBSS outages.

  • Moniepoint app icon

    Moniepoint

    Mobile-money wallet and POS agent network.

  • LagRide app icon

    LagRide

    Government-backed Lagos rideshare alternative. Needs SMS OTP.

  • Google Maps app icon

    Google Maps

    Live navigation. Essential in Lagos traffic; download offline tiles as backup.

How much data you'll burn per day

WhatsApp

~50 MB/day for chats and photo sharing, ~150 MB/day with frequent voice calls, ~300 MB/day if you make daily video calls.

Maps

~80–120 MB/day for live navigation in Lagos or Abuja traffic. Download offline maps to cut this to under 20 MB/day.

Rideshare

~30–50 MB/day for Bolt, inDrive or Uber — includes GPS tracking, SMS OTP and in-app messaging during rides.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Does the eSIM work in Lagos traffic jams?

Yes — MTN and Airtel both maintain 4G along the major corridors (Third Mainland Bridge, Lekki–Epe Expressway, Ikorodu Road). Signal can drop under heavy load during rush hour on the bridges, but you will stay connected for Bolt, inDrive and WhatsApp. Download offline maps as a backup.

Does this eSIM work in Abuja?

Yes — MTN has dense 4G and pockets of 5G across the Central Business District (Wuse, Maitama, Asokoro) and near Nnamdi Azikiwe Airport. Airtel covers the suburbs (Gwarinpa, Kubwa, Lugbe) reliably. Both carriers work inside most hotels and government buildings.

Can I use Opay and PalmPay on this eSIM?

Yes — Opay, PalmPay and Moniepoint all work over cellular data. You will need live connectivity to authorise POS transactions, top up your wallet, and receive SMS OTP codes. Hotel Wi-Fi often drops during power outages, so the eSIM keeps the apps functional when the grid fails.

How much data do I need for two weeks in Lagos and Abuja?

Budget 8–12 GB for moderate use: rideshare apps (Bolt, inDrive, Uber), WhatsApp chats and voice calls, live maps, mobile-money wallets (Opay, PalmPay), and occasional email. Add 3–5 GB if you plan to hotspot a laptop or stream video during hotel Wi-Fi outages. Heavy Zoom users should add another 5 GB.

Does the eSIM work in Yankari National Park?

Coverage in Yankari is weak to nonexistent — both MTN and Airtel thin out in rural Bauchi State. The park headquarters may have intermittent 3G, but expect long dead zones on game drives. Download offline maps and pre-book accommodation before you leave Bauchi or Jos.

MTN vs Airtel coverage in Port Harcourt?

Airtel is stronger in Port Harcourt and the wider southeast (Owerri, Enugu) — the network prioritised the oil-and-gas corridor. MTN works in the city centre (GRA, Trans Amadi) but thins in the suburbs and along the East–West Road. The eSIM hands off to whichever carrier has the better signal at your location.

Can I make WhatsApp calls on this eSIM?

Yes — WhatsApp voice and video calls work over 4G on both MTN and Airtel. Expect clear audio in Lagos, Abuja and Port Harcourt; quality drops in rural areas where the network falls back to 3G. Budget roughly 150 MB per day if you make frequent voice calls, 300–500 MB per day for video.

Does Bolt work on this eSIM in Lagos?

Yes — Bolt (and inDrive, Uber, LagRide) all work over cellular data. The apps need live connectivity and SMS OTP at booking and trip start. MTN and Airtel both cover the major routes (VI, Ikoyi, Lekki, mainland), so you will stay connected during the ride.

eSIM vs buying a SIM at Murtala Muhammed Airport?

The airport kiosks sell MTN, Airtel, Glo and 9mobile SIMs, but activation requires a passport photocopy, a registration form, and a 10–20 minute wait while the agent processes the line on a backend portal. The eSIM activates in under a minute via QR code, no paperwork, and you are online before baggage claim. Pricing is comparable; the eSIM saves time and your physical SIM slot.

Does the eSIM work on the Lagos–Ibadan Expressway?

Yes — MTN maintains 4G along the Lagos–Ibadan corridor, and coverage continues through Ibadan toward Kano. Airtel is thinner on this route. Expect solid signal in the major towns (Sagamu, Ibadan, Ogbomosho, Kaduna, Kano) and intermittent 3G or edge in the rural stretches between them.

Can I hotspot my laptop on this eSIM?

Yes — hotspot is enabled by default with no throttling on the first 5 GB. This matters in Nigeria because hotel and co-working Wi-Fi drops daily during power outages. A cellular backup keeps a Zoom call or a file upload running when the grid fails. Budget an extra 3–5 GB if you plan to tether regularly.

Does the eSIM work in Kano?

Yes — MTN has dense 4G across Kano metropole (Sabon Gari, Fagge, Nassarawa). Airtel is thinner but workable in the city centre. Coverage drops to 3G or edge in rural Kano State and the far north. The eSIM works reliably for rideshare, maps and mobile money within the city limits.

How does the eSIM handle power outages?

The eSIM itself is unaffected by power cuts — it runs on your phone's battery. The benefit is that when hotel or office Wi-Fi dies (which happens daily in Nigeria), you can enable hotspot and keep working over 4G. MTN and Airtel cell towers have backup generators, so cellular connectivity usually outlasts the grid.

Does this eSIM work in the Niger Delta?

Coverage is patchy — MTN and Airtel both have 4G in Port Harcourt, Warri and the major oil towns, but signal thins fast in the creeks and rural Delta, Bayelsa and Rivers State. Expect long dead zones on boat trips and in the mangrove areas. Download offline maps and pre-arrange transport before leaving the city.

Need broader coverage?

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