Both work. One is faster to set up, harder to lose, and gives you multi-country coverage on a single purchase. The other gives you a local phone number. Here's when each makes sense — and why most travelers in 2026 don't bother with physical SIMs anymore.
For 95% of trips, an eSIM is the right call. Faster setup, no airport queues, no passport-required paperwork, multi-country coverage on a single purchase. Physical SIMs still make sense for stays over 3 months where you genuinely need a local phone number, or for phones too old to support eSIM (pre-2018).
| Criterion | Travel eSIM | Physical SIM |
|---|---|---|
| Setup time | Under 2 minutes (QR scan) | 15–45 minutes (queue + paperwork at airport / kiosk) |
| Where to buy | Online, before you fly | Airport, convenience store, or carrier shop in destination |
| Identification required | Email address only | Passport required in most countries (legal requirement, e.g. Spain, Italy, Turkey, China) |
| Number of countries on one purchase | Up to 139 (Global plan) | 1 (the country it was bought in) |
| Risk of losing it | Stored in phone — can't fall out | Tiny SIM tray; can be lost when swapping |
| Risk of breaking it | None (no physical card) | SIM trays can bend; SIMs can crack |
| Top-up after running out | Buy another plan — installs alongside the first | Back to the kiosk, or app top-up (varies by carrier) |
| Phone number — keep your home one? | Yes — VoyaSIM eSIM runs alongside your home SIM | Yes if your phone is dual-SIM; otherwise you remove home SIM |
| Works between countries | Regional/Global plans yes; country plans no | Roaming only on most local SIMs (often expensive) |
| Receipt for expense report | Order confirmation email auto-sent | Whatever the kiosk hands you, in the local language |
| Need a physical slot | No | Yes — fewer modern phones include it (US iPhones from 14 onwards are eSIM-only) |
| Switch carrier on the same trip | Yes (install a second eSIM) | Yes but requires another SIM swap |
Yes — both deliver the same network speed because they connect to the same carrier infrastructure. A 4G/LTE eSIM in Germany delivers exactly the same speed as a physical Deutsche Telekom SIM, because both are connecting to the same network. eSIMs are not virtual or throttled; the only difference is how the SIM profile is provisioned to the phone.
Three situations. (1) Very long stays (3+ months) where you genuinely want a local phone number for verifications and deliveries. (2) Phones without eSIM support — typically pre-2018 devices. (3) Buying for a family member you'll see in person (a physical SIM is easier to hand over than re-issuing an eSIM from your account). For 95% of trips, eSIM wins.
Yes. Modern phones run dual-SIM: one physical SIM and one or more eSIMs simultaneously. You assign roles (data line, voice/SMS line) in Settings. Many travelers keep their home physical SIM in for calls and SMS, and use a VoyaSIM eSIM for data only. Best of both worlds.
Nothing — it stays exactly as it was. Adding an eSIM doesn't affect any other SIM in the phone. You can keep your home carrier SIM active, your phone number working, and just add the VoyaSIM eSIM as a second line that handles only the data you assign to it.
Yes, but it requires a re-issue. The QR code is single-use — once installed, it's burned. If you switch phones, contact VoyaSIM support; we'll re-issue a fresh QR for the same plan and your remaining data balance carries over. Apple devices have an "eSIM Transfer" flow for moving carrier eSIMs between iPhones; some travel eSIM providers support it, others don't — check before relying on it.
Both use the same GSMA security standards for authentication and encryption. eSIMs have one security advantage: they can't be physically swapped out by a thief who steals your phone unlocked. They have one disadvantage: a sophisticated remote attack on your provider account could in principle re-issue your eSIM to another device — which is why two-factor authentication on your travel eSIM account matters. For ordinary travelers the security difference is negligible.
No, but most modern ones do. iPhones from XS / XR (2018) onwards. Pixel 3 and newer. Samsung Galaxy S20 and newer flagships, Note 20+, Z Flip 3+, Z Fold 2+. Xiaomi 12T Pro / 13 / 14 flagships. OnePlus 11+. Most Apple Watch Cellular and Pixel Watch models too. Phones bought in mainland China are often eSIM-locked even if the global model of the same handset supports it.
No. The eSIM consumes no more battery than a physical SIM. Battery drain on dual-SIM phones (one of which is an eSIM) is marginally higher because the phone keeps two cellular radios paged simultaneously — but the difference is small (3-5% over a full day) and usually outweighed by the convenience of having both lines active.
Install a VoyaSIM eSIM the night before your flight. Land connected, walk straight to your taxi or train.
Questions? Contact our team.