Overall, I had a positive experience with esima during my trip. Customer support was responsive, although they took a couple of hours to reply, which felt long when I was eager to connect. The eSIM worked well for my needs!
WL
Wei L.
Singapore, SG · May 2026
Good value for Tanzania
I appreciated the ease of setup with my eSIM during my trip to Tanzania. It would be nice to have more pricing options available, but overall I was satisfied with the service provided.
SM
Sarah M.
London, GB · May 2026
Best decision for safari
Using esima for my Tanzania trip was a game-changer! I shared countless photos in group chats and stayed connected while on safari. The coverage was fantastic!
NK
Noah K.
Brisbane, AU · May 2026
Good connection, responsive support
Had a couple of questions before my trip, and customer support replied after a few hours, which felt long when I was anxious. But once I got there, the eSIM worked great in Arusha!
CF
Charlotte F.
Montreal, CA · May 2026
Easy Setup in Dar Es Salaam
Setting up the eSIM in Dar Es Salaam took just seconds with a quick QR scan. I was able to navigate the city without any issues. A must-have for travelers!
AK
Arjun K.
Bangalore, IN · Apr 2026
Worry-free data plan!
Using esima in Zanzibar was a breeze. The data was reliable, and I could easily connect with friends without any hassle. Customer support was also quick to respond to my question about data limits.
HP
Hugo P.
Paris, FR · Apr 2026
Seamless in Serengeti
I used esima during my trip to Tanzania, and it was a breeze! Scanned the QR code upon landing in Kilimanjaro Airport, and I was online in seconds. Perfect for sharing wildlife photos with friends back home!
AN
Aoife N.
Cork, IE · Apr 2026
Great eSIM but a bit short
Overall, I loved my experience with esima in Tanzania. The only thing I wish was that I had opted for a larger data plan; I used it all up while navigating around Dar es Salaam. Still, customer support was helpful.
eSIM vs roaming in Tanzania
Typical home-carrier roaming
$10–$18
per day
Esima eSIM
$5.49
Flat rate
Most international carriers treat Tanzania as a premium roaming zone — you get a small daily data allowance, often throttled after the first gigabyte, and hotspot is either blocked or counts double against your cap.
Roaming bundles from major networks typically include Tanzania in their Africa or worldwide tiers, but the daily fee stacks up fast over a week-long safari itinerary, and overage charges hit hard if you stream a video or forget to disable background app refresh.
An esima eSIM gives you a flat data pool with no throttling, no hotspot restrictions, and no surprise billing when you cross from Dar to Zanzibar or Arusha. You pay once, use what you need, and the rate stays predictable whether you are online for three days or three weeks.
The eSIM also switches between Vodacom, Airtel, Tigo, and Halotel automatically, so you get the strongest available network rather than whichever single carrier your home operator has a wholesale agreement with.
Real trips, real travelers
Built for travelers like you
Different trip, same eSIM — here is how it lands for the most common visitors to Tanzania.
You coordinate lodge pickups in Arusha via WhatsApp, navigate the drive to Tarangire on live maps, and upload giraffe photos from your tent's 4G hotspot. Inside Serengeti you are offline; the eSIM reconnects when you reach the next gate, and Bolt gets you back to the airport in Dar.
Safari traveler
You check weather forecasts and trail conditions in Moshi, share summit-bid updates from Horombo Hut on the Marangu route, then go offline above Lava Tower. On descent, the eSIM picks up Vodacom LTE at Shira Plateau, and your photos sync before you reach the trailhead.
Kilimanjaro climber
You book Uber rides from Stone Town to Nungwi, top up M-Pesa to pay your guesthouse, and video-call home from the beach with uninterrupted 4G. The eSIM switches between Vodacom and Airtel as you move along the coast, so you stay online without manual carrier selection.
Zanzibar beach visitor
Apps you'll need data for in Tanzania
The apps locals and travelers actually use — the ones that need real cell data, not just hotel Wi-Fi.
Bolt
Rideshare in Dar es Salaam and Arusha
M-Pesa Tanzania
Vodacom mobile-money wallet for payments and transfers
Tigo Pesa
Tigo mobile-money wallet accepted by dala-dala and vendors
Uber
Rideshare in Dar and Stone Town
Maps.me
Offline maps for safari parks and rural routes
Google Maps
Live navigation in Dar, Arusha, and Zanzibar
How much data you'll burn per day
WhatsApp
~40 MB per day for text and photos; ~120 MB per day with voice calls to coordinate safari logistics.
Maps
~50–80 MB per day for live navigation in Dar or Arusha; download offline tiles for parks to drop usage to near zero.
Rideshare
~5–10 MB per ride for Bolt or Uber dispatch, route tracking, and driver contact.
When you're travelling matters
The long rains (March through May) and short rains (November) turn many dirt roads in the northern safari circuit to mud, slowing travel between Arusha, Serengeti, and Ngorongoro. Cellular coverage does not change, but journey times double, so budget extra data days if your itinerary spans the wet season.
The Great Migration peaks in the Serengeti from June through September, drawing the highest lodge occupancy and the heaviest satellite-Wi-Fi congestion — rely on your eSIM for uploads rather than shared lodge bandwidth during this window.
FAQ
Frequently asked questions
Does the eSIM work in Serengeti National Park?
Cellular coverage inside Serengeti is effectively zero except near lodge airstrips and ranger headquarters. Download offline maps, sync photos, and plan to be offline during game drives. Signal returns when you reach the main gate or your lodge's satellite-fed Wi-Fi.
Will I have signal on Mount Kilimanjaro?
Vodacom covers the lower huts — Mandara and Horombo on the Marangu route, up to Shira Plateau on Machame. Above Lava Tower you lose cellular until descent. Summit-attempt photos sync only when you are back below the alpine zone.
Does the eSIM work in Zanzibar?
Yes. Stone Town, Nungwi, and the Kendwa beach strip all have strong Vodacom and Airtel 4G. The eSIM works the same as on the mainland — rideshare apps, M-Pesa, and WhatsApp all function normally. Coverage thins in the Jozani Forest interior.
Can I use M-Pesa with this eSIM?
M-Pesa Tanzania runs on the Vodacom network, and the eSIM connects to Vodacom when it is the strongest available carrier. You can top up your M-Pesa wallet, send money, and pay at vendors that accept it. Registration requires a Tanzanian SIM in some cases, so check with your lodge or a local contact if you need help setting up the wallet.
How much data do I need for a week-long safari?
Most safari time is offline — Serengeti, Ngorongoro, and Nyerere have no in-park cellular. Budget one to two gigabytes for the days you are in Arusha, Dar, or Zanzibar: Bolt rides, WhatsApp coordination with guides, and evening photo uploads. Download maps and entertainment before you leave town.
Does Bolt work on this eSIM in Dar es Salaam?
Yes. Bolt operates in Dar and Arusha and needs live data plus SMS for driver dispatch and OTP verification. The eSIM provides both. In Stone Town, Uber or pre-booked drivers are more common, and both also require cellular data.
Vodacom vs Airtel coverage in Arusha?
Vodacom has slightly denser 4G around the Clock Tower and along the Moshi road; Airtel is competitive in town but thins faster on the climb toward Kilimanjaro. The eSIM switches between them automatically, so you get whichever is stronger at your location.
Can I make WhatsApp calls in Tanzania?
Yes. WhatsApp voice and video calls work over the eSIM's data connection in any area with 4G or LTE — Dar, Arusha, Zanzibar, and most towns. Call quality depends on network load; expect slower speeds during evening rush hours in Dar.
Does the eSIM work in Ngorongoro Conservation Area?
Cellular inside the crater is nonexistent. Signal returns at the crater-rim lodges and the main gate. Download offline maps and plan to be offline during your descent and game drive. Lodge Wi-Fi is satellite-fed and often metered.
What is the difference between this eSIM and buying a SIM at the airport?
A physical SIM from Vodacom or Airtel locks you to one carrier; the eSIM switches between Vodacom, Airtel, Tigo, and Halotel automatically. Installation is faster — scan the QR code, no passport photocopy or registration desk. Pricing is comparable to local prepaid, and you keep your phone's physical slot free.
Does Tigo Pesa work on this eSIM?
Tigo Pesa runs on the Tigo network, and the eSIM connects to Tigo when it offers the strongest signal. You can use the wallet for payments at dala-dala stops, street vendors, and some guesthouses. Registration may require a Tigo SIM; check with a local contact if you need setup help.
Will I have coverage on the ferry from Dar to Zanzibar?
Vodacom and Airtel maintain 4G for the first few kilometers out of Dar, then coverage drops mid-channel and returns as you approach Stone Town. The crossing takes roughly two hours; expect to be offline for about half that time.
How much data does Google Maps use per day in Tanzania?
Live navigation with traffic updates consumes roughly 5–10 MB per hour of active routing. A full day of city driving in Dar or Arusha uses 50–80 MB. Download offline map tiles for the northern circuit and Zanzibar before your trip to cut data use to near zero.
Need broader coverage?
Going further than Tanzania? These plans include Tanzania plus everywhere in between.
A Tanzania trip runs on your phone — Bolt to the ferry terminal in Dar es Salaam, M-Pesa for the dala-dala fare, WhatsApp to confirm your Serengeti lodge pickup, offline maps for the drive to Ngorongoro. A Tanzania travel eSIM connects you to Vodacom or Airtel's local network the moment you land, so you skip the airport SIM queue, the passport photocopy, and the roaming charges your home carrier stacks on every MB.
Choose your plan
7 options
Balanced use — social, navigation & light streaming
Choose number of eSIMs
How many travelers?
1 eSIM
Total$30.64
Secure payment
30-day guarantee
ZAIN/Celtel Tanzania5G
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
You scan the QR code in the esima app before your flight or in the arrivals hall at Julius Nyerere International; the profile installs in under a minute, and you are online before the taxi rank.
The eSIM registers on whichever of the four partner networks — Vodacom, Airtel, Tigo, or Halotel — offers the strongest tower at your location, then hands off automatically as you move between Dar, Arusha, and the coast.
In Dar es Salaam that means 4G speeds sufficient for Bolt ride-hailing, M-Pesa top-ups, and video calls; in Stone Town and along the Zanzibar beach strip you get the same.
Cellular thins fast outside urban centers — the drive from Arusha to the Serengeti gate drops to intermittent LTE, and inside the parks (Serengeti, Ngorongoro, Nyerere) you have no signal except near lodge clusters with their own satellite backhaul. Mount Kilimanjaro's lower huts hold Vodacom LTE; above Lava Tower you are offline until descent.
The difference between this eSIM and a physical Vodacom or Airtel SIM bought at the airport is carrier lock — the physical card ties you to one network, while the eSIM picks the best available.
Installation is faster, there is no passport photocopy requirement, and you keep your phone's physical slot free for a second SIM if needed. Data allowances and speeds mirror local prepaid plans, so you are not paying a foreigner premium.
Technical specs
Network
ZAIN/Celtel Tanzania5G
Coverage
Tanzania
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 Tanzania. First: pricing mirrors local prepaid rates, not international roaming tariffs — you pay what a Dar resident pays, not what your home network charges to rent a Tanzanian tower.
Second: the eSIM switches between Vodacom Tanzania, Airtel Tanzania, and Tigo automatically, so you get the strongest signal in Arusha rather than one carrier's gap. Third: hotspot is enabled without throttling — essential if you are traveling with a laptop, a tablet, or a partner whose device does not support eSIM.
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 Tanzania
Our Tanzania eSIMs run on Vodacom Tanzania, Airtel Tanzania, Tigo, and Halotel. Vodacom holds the densest 4G footprint across Dar es Salaam, Arusha, Mwanza, and Zanzibar — both Stone Town and the Nungwi/Kendwa beach strip.
Halotel and Tigo compete well in central Tanzania. Expect LTE in all major towns; 5G rollout remains limited to select Dar neighborhoods as of mid-2026.
Serengeti, Ngorongoro Conservation Area, and Nyerere National Park have effectively no in-park cellular — signal returns only at lodge airstrips and ranger headquarters. Mount Kilimanjaro has Vodacom coverage at the lower huts (Mandara and Horombo on Marangu; up to Shira Plateau on Machame) and nothing reliable above Lava Tower. Download offline maps and sync photos before any safari or summit attempt.
Network
ZAIN/Celtel Tanzania5G
Good to know
Download Maps.me or Google Maps offline tiles for Serengeti, Ngorongoro, and Nyerere before you leave Arusha — in-park cellular is nonexistent except at lodge airstrips.
M-Pesa Tanzania (Vodacom) and Tigo Pesa are accepted by dala-dala drivers, street-food stalls, and most Zanzibar guesthouses — top up your wallet in Dar before heading to smaller towns.
Mount Kilimanjaro has Vodacom signal at Mandara and Horombo huts on the Marangu route, and up to Shira Plateau on Machame; above Lava Tower you are offline until descent.
Bolt works in Dar es Salaam and Arusha; in Stone Town the dominant options are Uber or pre-arranged drivers — both need live data and SMS verification.
Sync all photos and cloud backups in your hotel before any safari departure — lodge Wi-Fi in the parks is satellite-fed, slow, and often metered.
Coverage in Tanzania — top cities
Dar es Salaam
Vodacom and Airtel blanket the city center, Masaki peninsula, and the Ubungo bus terminal with 4G. Bolt and Uber both need live data and SMS OTP; M-Pesa (Vodacom) and Tigo Pesa work at most street vendors and dala-dala stops. Expect congestion slowdowns during evening rush hour near Kivukoni and the ferry docks.
Arusha
Arusha town has full 4G on all four networks; Vodacom leads in the Clock Tower area and along the Moshi road. Bolt operates here for airport runs and safari-lodge transfers. Coverage drops sharply on the climb toward Kilimanjaro — the last reliable tower sits near Moshi, then you are on intermittent LTE until the trailhead.
Zanzibar (Stone Town)
Stone Town, Nungwi, and Kendwa all hold strong Vodacom 4G; Airtel is competitive along the coast. Uber and pre-booked drivers dominate island transport, both requiring live data for dispatch and OTP. Most guesthouses accept M-Pesa; foreign cards work only at higher-tier resorts. The Jozani Forest road has patchy LTE.
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.