Customer reviews

47 verified reviews

4.7

Based on 47 reviews

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  • Michael R.

    Los Angeles, US · Jun 2026

    Reliable connection in Oman

    Having a data connection while visiting the souks in Muscat was fantastic! The eSIM made it easy to check local reviews and recommendations on the go. Highly recommend to anyone traveling here!

  • Camila R.

    Mexico City, MX · May 2026

    Great choice for travelers

    Using esima was a solid choice for my trip. I loved being able to access maps and social media without any hassle. Just wished the activation email arrived a bit faster; it took a couple of minutes.

  • Olivia P.

    Austin, US · May 2026

    Fantastic for Exploring

    This eSIM made my trip to Oman so much easier! I used it for everything from browsing local attractions to video calls. The installation was straightforward, and I felt secure knowing I had data throughout my travels.

  • Olivia P.

    Austin, US · May 2026

    Slick and Convenient

    Using esima's eSIM in Oman was a game-changer. I loved that I could navigate without any hiccups. I did have to wait a bit for my account confirmation email, which felt long when I was anxious to get online right away.

  • Jordan A.

    Johannesburg, ZA · May 2026

    Effortless connectivity!

    I loved using esima during my recent trip to Oman. It was super easy to install via QR code, and I had great data coverage everywhere I went. I could easily share my travel updates without a hitch. Fantastic service!

  • Sven A.

    Stockholm, SE · Apr 2026

    Perfect for exploring Oman

    The eSIM worked flawlessly the entire time I was in Oman. I could easily use Google Maps to navigate Muscat and share photos instantly with friends. The QR code installation was a breeze!

  • Charlotte F.

    Montreal, CA · Apr 2026

    Seamless setup

    I was amazed at how fast esima activated. After scanning the QR code at the airport, I had data in seconds. Being able to stay connected while driving through the desert made my trip so much more enjoyable!

  • Lucas O.

    São Paulo, BR · Jan 2026

    Great for navigating Oman

    The eSIM was easy to set up and worked well throughout my time in Oman. I wish I’d bought the bigger data plan since I used it constantly for maps and sharing photos. Overall, a solid choice for travelers!

eSIM vs roaming in Oman

Typical home-carrier roaming

$10$18

per day

Esima eSIM

$2.49

Flat rate

Most international roaming bundles charge per day and throttle after the first gigabyte or two, which makes streaming a wadi hike to Instagram Stories expensive fast. Hotspot is often blocked or costs extra on roaming plans, so you cannot share the connection with a travel partner or tether a laptop at your hotel.

Roaming also locks you to whatever wholesale agreement your home carrier struck — if they only have a deal with one Omani network, you are stuck with that carrier's coverage gaps even when a stronger tower from another operator is right there.

An eSIM gives you a flat data allowance at local-market pricing, switches between Omantel, Ooredoo, and Vodafone Oman automatically, and enables hotspot from install. You know the total cost before you leave home, and there is no surprise bill when you land back at your origin airport.

Real trips, real travelers

Built for travelers like you

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

You drive from Muscat to Wadi Shab at sunrise, share your live location with your hotel before the trailhead signal dies, then hike two hours inland to the turquoise pools. The eSIM gives you LTE at the parking area to confirm your guide's WhatsApp instructions and cache the return route, so you are not guessing which fork to take on the way back.

Wadi hiker

You fly into Salalah in July for the monsoon greenery, and every hotel near the coast is nearly full. The eSIM connects you to 4G the moment you land, so you can open Booking.com, filter by last-minute availability, and reserve a room in Taqah before the taxi even leaves the airport lot. Otaxi needs live data to request the ride in the first place.

Khareef visitor

You rent a car in Muscat and drive the coastal highway to Sur, stopping at Bimmah Sinkhole and Fins Beach. Google Maps navigation pulls live traffic around Quriyat, and the eSIM hotspot lets your partner stream music from their phone through the car stereo. You upload sunset photos from Ras Al Jinz turtle reserve without hunting for café Wi-Fi.

Muscat–Sur road-tripper

Apps you'll need data for in Oman

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

  • Marhaba app icon

    Marhaba

    Muscat rideshare — book rides, track drivers, pay in-app

  • Otaxi app icon

    Otaxi

    Salalah taxi booking and live driver tracking

  • Google Maps app icon

    Google Maps

    Turn-by-turn navigation, wadi trailhead locations, offline map downloads

  • Talabat app icon

    Talabat

    Food delivery in Muscat and Salalah

  • WhatsApp app icon

    WhatsApp

    Coordinate with tour guides, hotel staff, and wadi hiking groups

  • Booking.com app icon

    Booking.com

    Last-minute hotel reservations during Khareef or long weekends

How much data you'll burn per day

WhatsApp

~40 MB/day for text and photo sharing, ~120 MB/day if you make voice calls to coordinate wadi hikes or hotel check-ins.

Maps

~80 MB/day for live turn-by-turn navigation on coastal highways; less if you download offline tiles in Muscat before mountain drives.

Rideshare

~15 MB/day for Marhaba or Otaxi — requesting rides, tracking drivers, and in-app payments in Muscat or Salalah.

When you're travelling matters

The Khareef monsoon (June–September) transforms Dhofar's hills around Salalah into lush green slopes, drawing a visitor surge that fills hotels and guesthouses fast.

Mobile data becomes critical during this window: last-minute booking apps like Booking.com or Airbnb need live connectivity to show real-time availability, and Otaxi rideshare demand spikes as tourists move between Salalah, Taqah, and the Frankincense Trail sites.

If you are visiting during Khareef, install the eSIM before you board — airport Wi-Fi at Salalah can be slow when flights bunch up, and you want to be online the moment you land to secure a room if you did not pre-book.

FAQ

Frequently asked questions

Does the eSIM work in Nizwa and the Jebel Akhdar mountain roads?

Nizwa town has solid 4G on Omantel and Ooredoo. The Jebel Akhdar and Jebel Shams roads lose signal on switchbacks — you will get intermittent LTE for the first 15 minutes of the climb, then long stretches of nothing. Download offline maps in Nizwa before you drive up.

Will I have signal at Wadi Shab or Wadi Bani Khalid?

Both wadi trailheads have LTE coverage for the first few hundred meters, enough to share your location or send a quick message. Once you hike inland toward the pools, signal drops to zero on all carriers. Cache your route and download any trail maps before you leave the parking area.

Does the eSIM work in Salalah during the Khareef monsoon season?

Yes. Salalah runs on 4G across Omantel, Ooredoo, and Vodafone Oman year-round, including June–September when the monsoon brings green hills and tourist crowds. Mobile data is critical during Khareef because hotels fill fast and last-minute bookings happen through apps like Booking.com or local sites.

Can I use Marhaba or Otaxi with this eSIM?

Yes. Marhaba (Muscat's main rideshare) and Otaxi (Salalah) both need live data to request rides and track drivers. They also send SMS OTP codes at sign-up, so keep your home SIM active for that two-factor message, then switch data to the eSIM once you are registered.

How much data do I need for a week driving Muscat to Salalah?

Budget 3–5 GB for a week if you are using Google Maps in navigation mode, streaming music on long stretches, and checking WhatsApp daily. Add another 1–2 GB if you plan to upload photos or video-call home. The inland Muscat–Salalah route has 200+ km dead zones, so offline maps save data and sanity.

Omantel vs Ooredoo coverage in Muscat — which is stronger?

Both Omantel and Ooredoo offer 5G across Muscat's main districts — Qurum, Al Khuwair, Muttrah. Omantel historically has denser coverage in older neighborhoods like Ruwi, while Ooredoo is faster in newer developments. The eSIM switches between them automatically, so you get whichever tower is stronger at your exact location.

Does Vodafone Oman have 5G outside Muscat?

No. Vodafone Oman launched in 2022 and offers 5G only in Muscat metro. Outside the capital — Salalah, Nizwa, Sohar, Sur — Vodafone falls back to 4G, and coverage is thinner than Omantel or Ooredoo. The eSIM will hand off to a stronger carrier in those regions automatically.

Can I make WhatsApp calls on this eSIM?

Yes. WhatsApp voice and video calls work over the data connection on all three Omani carriers. VoIP is not blocked in Oman, so you can also use FaceTime, Zoom, or Skype without restrictions.

eSIM vs buying a local SIM at Muscat airport — what is the difference?

Local SIM counters at Muscat International require an Omani residence card by law, not just a passport, so short-stay tourists cannot buy one. The eSIM bypasses that rule because it is provisioned outside Oman and roams onto the local networks. You scan the QR code before you board, and you are online the moment you land — no queue, no paperwork.

Will the eSIM work on the drive from Muscat to Sur along the coast?

Yes. The coastal highway from Muscat through Quriyat to Sur has consistent 4G coverage on Omantel and Ooredoo. You will lose signal briefly in tunnels and around rocky headlands, but it comes back within a minute or two. The inland mountain route via Ibra is patchier.

Does the eSIM cover the Empty Quarter if I am driving the inland Salalah route?

No. The Empty Quarter (Rub' al Khali) is a dead zone on every Omani carrier. If you take the inland Muscat–Salalah road through Thumrait, expect 200+ km stretches with zero signal. Download offline maps, carry extra water, and tell someone your route before you leave.

How much data does live navigation use on the Jebel Shams loop?

Google Maps in navigation mode uses roughly 5–10 MB per hour of active routing. The Jebel Shams loop is about 3–4 hours of driving, so budget 30–40 MB if you have signal the whole way. In reality, you will lose coverage on switchbacks, so download the offline map in Nizwa and save the data.

Can I hotspot this eSIM to share with a travel partner?

Yes. Hotspot is enabled from install on esima eSIMs. You can share the connection with a partner's phone, a tablet, or a laptop without extra cost. Useful if your travel companion's device does not support eSIM or if you need to tether at your hotel.

Does the eSIM work in Sohar's industrial port area?

Yes. Sohar has 4G coverage on Omantel and Ooredoo across the city center and the port zone. Vodafone Oman is present but thinner. If you are visiting the Sohar Fort or driving the Batinah coast highway, expect consistent signal the whole way.

Need broader coverage?

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