The eSIM was a bit confusing to install at first, and I had to search for the manual code. While it worked fine in cities like Bergen, I experienced some slow speeds when I went further out.
OP
Olivia P.
Austin, US · May 2026
Perfect for Exploring Norway
The eSIM worked flawlessly throughout my trip in Norway. I installed it in under a minute by scanning the QR code at the airport. 5G speed made uploading photos a breeze while I was hiking in the fjords!
ET
Emma T.
Edinburgh, GB · May 2026
Seamless connection in Norway
The esima eSIM worked perfectly from the moment I arrived in Oslo. I scanned the QR code upon landing, and I was online in under a minute. The 5G speed was fantastic, allowing me to stream videos without any buffering while exploring the fjords. Highly recommend for anyone traveling to Norway!
WL
Wei L.
Singapore, SG · May 2026
Saved My Trip to Tromsø
Having the esima eSIM was a lifesaver in Tromsø! I was able to easily navigate and find the best sights. The installation was straightforward, and the connection was fast enough for video calls.
JL
Jessica L.
New York, US · May 2026
Fast and reliable in Norway
Esima delivered excellent service during my trip! I installed the eSIM with a QR scan, and I was online instantly. I was able to use Google Maps without any issues. The speed was impressive, and I had no problems streaming or browsing in Oslo and Flåm.
JL
Jessica L.
New York, US · May 2026
Saved me lots on roaming
I compared the costs, and going with esima was way cheaper than traditional roaming plans. The setup was quick; I just entered the manual code and had no issues during my stay in Bergen!
DH
David H.
Chicago, US · Apr 2026
Seamless Connectivity!
The esima eSIM made my Norway trip a breeze! I set it up in seconds at the airport, and the 4G connection was reliable throughout my travels. I could easily navigate maps and stay connected while exploring the stunning landscapes. Highly satisfied!
JA
Jordan A.
Johannesburg, ZA · Apr 2026
Easy setup and fast data
This eSIM made my trip so much easier! Setting it up took less than 30 seconds with the QR code at the airport, and I had reliable 5G connectivity during my entire stay. Highly recommend for anyone traveling to Norway!
eSIM vs roaming in Norway
Typical home-carrier roaming
$10–$18
per day
Esima eSIM
$2.57
Flat rate
Most international carriers charge a daily roaming fee for Norway, typically with a data cap that throttles after the first gigabyte or two. Hotspot and tethering are often blocked or metered separately, so sharing data with a laptop or a second device triggers an additional surcharge.
The eSIM gives you a flat data allowance at local-market pricing — you pay what a Norwegian prepaid customer pays, not what your home network charges for access to a Nordic tower. No throttling after an arbitrary threshold, no hotspot restrictions, no surprise invoice three weeks after you return.
The cost difference becomes stark on a week-long trip: roaming bundles from major networks add up quickly when you are using maps, transit apps, and ferry booking portals every day, while the eSIM holds a fixed price regardless of how much you move between cities or how often you refresh the Ruter app at an Oslo metro gate.
Real trips, real travelers
Built for travelers like you
Different trip, same eSIM — here is how it lands for the most common visitors to Norway.
You are driving the E6 from Oslo to Nordkapp, stopping in Lofoten and Tromsø. The eSIM keeps live navigation running on the Arctic Highway, lets you book ferries via app when you reach Lofoten, and handles AutoPASS toll payments so your rental car does not invoice you weeks later. Telenor coverage holds most of the route; offline maps cover the Finnmarksvidda gaps.
Fjord road-tripper
You are based in Tromsø for a week, taking evening tours to Lyngen and the Finnish border. The eSIM works in the city for Ruter tickets and restaurant reservations; you download offline maps before each tour because the Finnmarksvidda plateau has long LTE-only stretches. Aurora forecast apps refresh over 4G when you are back in town.
Northern Lights chaser
You are splitting a week between Oslo and Bergen, using trains and the Bergen Light Rail. The eSIM keeps the Ruter and Skyss apps live for QR ticket validation at metro gates and tram stops, handles Entur bookings for the Oslo–Bergen train, and lets you share hotspot data with your laptop at the hotel. 5G in both cities means fast speeds for video calls and cloud backups.
City-hopper
Apps you'll need data for in Norway
The apps locals and travelers actually use — the ones that need real cell data, not just hotel Wi-Fi.
Ruter
Oslo metro, tram, and bus tickets with live QR validation at gates
Skyss
Bergen city buses and light rail tickets with mobile validation
Entur
National journey planner and ticket app for trains and long-distance buses
A
AutoPASS
Toll road payment app to avoid rental-car invoice surcharges
Yr
Norwegian weather forecast app, essential for fjord and mountain planning
Vipps
Mobile payment app widely used in Norway for restaurants, shops, and parking
How much data you'll burn per day
WhatsApp
~40 MB/day for text and voice messages, ~120 MB/day if you make regular voice calls over 4G in fjord areas.
Maps
~100–150 MB/day for live navigation in cities; ~200–300 MB/day if driving long routes like the E6 or E10 with continuous GPS.
Rideshare
~30–50 MB/day for Ruter or Skyss ticket fetches and real-time transit updates in Oslo or Bergen.
When you're travelling matters
Winter (November–March) brings Northern Lights season to Tromsø and Finnmark, which drives heavy demand for aurora forecast apps and live weather data — budget an extra 500 MB–1 GB per week if you are refreshing Yr and aurora apps multiple times a night.
Summer (June–August) sees midnight sun and peak fjord tourism; ferry booking portals and trail-condition apps see heavy use, and the E10 through Lofoten gets congested, so live traffic data becomes more valuable.
Ski season (December–April) in the mountains around Oslo, Lillehammer, and Trysil means skiers rely on lift-status apps and avalanche warnings, both of which need live data. Coverage in ski resorts is generally strong with Telenor 4G, but backcountry areas have dead zones.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Does the eSIM work in Lofoten?
Yes. Telenor has reliable 4G in Svolvær, Leknes, and most of the larger villages. The E10 coastal road between Å and Reine has known dead zones on every carrier — download offline maps before you leave Leknes. Telia coverage is spottier outside the main towns.
Does the eSIM work on the Flåm Railway?
Intermittently. The valley between Flåm and Myrdal drops to 3G or no signal on all carriers. Download maps and any tickets in Flåm village before departure. The Nærøyfjord ferry route has the same issue — connectivity is patchy until you reach Gudvangen.
Does the eSIM work in Tromsø for Northern Lights tours?
Yes in the city and along the harbor. Tours that drive to Lyngen or the Finnish border often leave Telenor 4G range within 30–40 minutes. Ask your tour operator where they stop and download offline maps if you are self-driving to remote viewing spots on the Finnmarksvidda plateau.
Does the eSIM work on the Bergen Light Rail?
Yes. Telenor and Telia both cover the entire Bybanen route from the city center to the airport. The Skyss app requires live data to generate the QR ticket code, so keep the eSIM active when you board.
How much data do I need for a week in Norway using Ruter and Skyss apps?
Budget 3–5 GB. The Ruter and Skyss apps are lightweight — each ticket fetch is under 1 MB — but live navigation, ferry booking confirmations, and AutoPASS toll-road app use add up quickly. If you are streaming music or using video calls, add another 2–3 GB per week.
Can I make WhatsApp calls on this eSIM in Norway?
Yes. WhatsApp voice and video calls work over the cellular data connection. Expect clear audio in Oslo, Bergen, and Tromsø on 4G or 5G. Quality drops in fjord valleys and on the E10 coastal road where coverage thins to 3G or LTE.
Does the AutoPASS toll app work on this eSIM?
Yes. The AutoPASS app needs live data when you cross a toll point to register the transaction and avoid rental-car invoice surcharges. Keep the eSIM active when driving the E6, E18, or any toll road around Oslo and Bergen.
Telenor vs Telia coverage in Bergen?
Both deliver 4G across Bergen city center, Bryggen, and Fløyen. Telenor has stronger coverage on the E16 toward Voss and in the western fjords. Telia matches Telenor in the city but thins out faster on rural routes. The eSIM hands off automatically, so you get whichever is stronger at each location.
Telenor vs Telia on the Arctic Highway to Nordkapp?
Telenor has the widest 4G footprint on the E6 Arctic Highway, covering most of the route to Nordkapp with LTE. Telia has gaps in Finnmark and on the Finnmarksvidda plateau. If you are driving north of Tromsø, Telenor is the safer bet — the eSIM will prioritize it automatically.
Does the Entur app work on this eSIM?
Yes. Entur is the national journey planner and ticket app for trains and long-distance buses. It needs live data to fetch schedules and generate mobile tickets. Works on all three carriers in cities; download your ticket before boarding if you are traveling through rural areas with patchy coverage.
eSIM vs buying a SIM at Oslo airport?
The airport kiosks sell Telenor and Telia prepaid SIMs for roughly the same data allowance as the eSIM, but you wait in line, hand over your passport, and pay a higher per-GB rate because it is a tourist product. The eSIM activates the moment you land, skips the queue, and costs less because it is priced at the local prepaid market rate, not the airport markup.
Does the eSIM work on Hurtigruten coastal ferries?
Yes along the coast, intermittently in fjords. Telenor has the best coverage on the Hurtigruten route from Bergen to Kirkenes, with 4G at most port stops. Expect dead zones in narrow fjords and between ports in Finnmark. Download maps and entertainment before departure if you are spending days onboard.
Can I use this eSIM in Svalbard?
No. Svalbard has its own telecom infrastructure (Telenor Svalbard) that is not part of mainland Norway's network. You will need a separate Svalbard SIM or rely on Wi-Fi in Longyearbyen. The eSIM will not roam there.
Does the eSIM work for two-factor SMS codes from Norwegian banks or services?
Yes. The eSIM receives SMS to its Norwegian number, so two-factor codes from local services work. If a service sends codes to your home number, make sure your home SIM is still active on the primary line — most dual-SIM phones keep both lines live for SMS.
How much data does live navigation use driving the E6 from Oslo to Trondheim?
Budget 150–250 MB for the full 500 km route if you keep Google Maps or Apple Maps running continuously. Offline maps cut that to under 50 MB but you lose live traffic and rerouting. Coverage is solid on the E6 with Telenor; Telia has a few gaps north of Lillehammer.
Need broader coverage?
Going further than Norway? These plans include Norway plus everywhere in between.
Norway runs on apps — Ruter for Oslo metro QR tickets, Skyss for Bergen trams, AutoPASS for toll roads, and ferry booking portals that expect live data when you board.
A Norway eSIM drops you onto Telenor or Telia's network the moment you land in Oslo, so you skip the Gardermoen airport SIM queue and the roaming invoice your home carrier will send three weeks later. One QR code, one install, you are online from Bygdøy to the Lofoten coast.
Choose your plan
8 options
Balanced use — social, navigation & light streaming
Choose number of eSIMs
How many travelers?
1 eSIM
Total$7.93
Secure payment
30-day guarantee
ICE Norway5G
Features
Data-only plan, no contract
Works on 5G / 4G LTE networks
Choose when your plan activates
Connects to top local carriers
No physical SIM swap needed
24/7 customer support
Description
Landing in Oslo with this eSIM means your phone locks onto Telenor or Telia within seconds of clearing the jetway — no kiosk, no passport photocopy, no prepaid voucher. Installation happens before you fly: scan the QR code esima emails you, label the line 'Norway' or 'Travel', leave it inactive until you board.
The eSIM activates when your phone sees a Norwegian tower, and from that point it behaves like a local SIM — apps see a Norwegian IP, SMS works for two-factor codes, and hotspot shares data with your laptop or a second device.
The difference between this and a physical Telenor SIM bought at a 7-Eleven is purely mechanical: the eSIM cannot be moved to a non-eSIM phone, but it also cannot be lost, and you keep your home number active on the primary line for incoming calls over Wi-Fi.
Norway's geography makes carrier choice matter more than in flat countries. Telenor's investment in rural 4G means reliable service on the Lofoten E10, the Arctic Highway, and the Hardangervidda plateau.
Telia matches that in the south and west but has gaps in Finnmark. Ice.net is cheaper but city-only — fine for an Oslo-Bergen itinerary, risky if you are driving to Nordkapp.
The eSIM hands off automatically, so you get whichever network is strongest at each location. One practical note: Norway's toll roads use AutoPASS, which can be paid via app to avoid rental-car invoice surcharges.
Keep the eSIM active when you cross a toll point so the app can register the transaction in real time.
Technical specs
Network
ICE Norway5G
Coverage
Norway
Delivery
Immediate, by email
Plan type
Data only
Phone number
No
SMS / calls
VoIP apps only
Activation
QR code or manual SM-DP+
Why travelers choose Esima
Three reasons travelers pick esima for Norway. First: pricing mirrors the local prepaid market, not the roaming surcharge your home network applies to a Nordic tower.
Second: the eSIM hands off between Telenor and Telia automatically, so you get the strongest signal in Bergen's tunnels or Tromsø's harbor rather than a single carrier's blind spot.
Third: hotspot and tethering are enabled by default — critical if you are traveling with a laptop, a tablet, or a partner whose device does not support eSIM. No throttling on the first 5 GB like some Norwegian carrier prepaid deals impose.
Instant delivery
Your QR code lands in your inbox minutes after purchase.
No roaming bills
Pay one upfront price — no surprise charges abroad.
Keep your number
Your physical SIM stays active for calls and texts.
Fast 4G/5G
Connect to top-rated local networks at full speed.
24/7 support
Real humans ready to help, any time zone, any day.
Easy install
Scan once and you're online — no app, no SIM swap.
Coverage in Norway
Our Norway eSIMs run on Telenor, Telia Norway, and Ice.net. Telenor has the widest 4G footprint, covering remote fjord valleys, the Lofoten islands, and the E6 Arctic Highway all the way to Nordkapp.
Telia matches Telenor in Oslo, Bergen, and Stavanger but thins out faster in Finnmark and the western fjords. Ice.net is city-focused — strong in Oslo and Bergen, patchy beyond the main highways.
All three carriers deliver 5G in Oslo, Bergen, and Tromsø city centers; expect LTE on the E10 coastal road through Lofoten and the Finnmarksvidda plateau. The Flåm Railway and Nærøyfjord ferry routes drop to intermittent 3G in the valleys — download maps in Flåm village before departure. The E10 between Å and Reine has known dead zones on every carrier.
Network
ICE Norway5G
Good to know
Download offline maps in Flåm village before the Flåm Railway or Nærøyfjord ferry — both routes have intermittent 3G in the valleys.
Ruter and Skyss apps generate live QR codes for ticket validation; keep the eSIM active when you board metro, tram, or bus.
AutoPASS toll roads can be paid via app to avoid rental-car invoice surcharges — connectivity is required at the toll point.
The E10 coastal road through Lofoten has dead zones between Å and Reine on every carrier; Svolvær and Leknes have reliable 4G.
Ferry booking portals often lack card readers on smaller routes — book via app beforehand and show the confirmation QR code when you board.
Telenor has the widest 4G coverage on the E6 Arctic Highway to Nordkapp and across the Lofoten islands.
Coverage in Norway — top cities
Oslo
Oslo has saturated 5G from all three carriers in the city center, Aker Brygge, and Grünerløkka. The Ruter app is mandatory for metro, tram, and bus tickets — it generates a live QR code that validators scan at gates, so you need connectivity the moment you board. Telenor and Telia both work underground on the metro platforms; signal drops in the tunnels between stops.
Bergen
Bergen's Skyss app handles city buses and the Bergen Light Rail with mobile ticket validation that requires live data. Telenor and Telia both deliver 4G across the city center, Bryggen, and Fløyen. Coverage thins in the tunnels on the E16 toward Voss — expect intermittent LTE and download offline maps before you leave the city.
Tromsø
Tromsø and the northern coast have consistent Telenor 4G in the city, at the Arctic Cathedral, and along the harbor. Telia matches that within city limits but drops faster on the road to Lyngen. The Finnmarksvidda plateau east of Tromsø is LTE-only with long gaps — plan offline navigation if you are driving to Nordkapp or the Finnish border.
How to set up your eSIM
1
Check compatibility
Make sure your phone supports eSIM — most recent models do.
2
Buy your eSIM
Pick a plan and pay securely. Your QR code arrives by email in minutes.
3
Scan & connect
Scan the QR code, enable data roaming on arrival, and you're online.