Too many plan tiers, not enough time to compare. This guide narrows the catalog to the one plan that fits your trip — based on five quick decisions about length, countries, data needs, and tethering.
Match plan duration to trip length, then go one tier longer just in case (e.g. for a 6-day trip, buy a 7-day plan, not a 1-day plan times six). Plan tiers: 1 day (daily unlimited-style), 7 days (most popular for short trips), 15 days, 30 days, 90 days, 180 days.
Use the matrix below. Columns are usage levels: Light (maps, messaging, occasional Instagram), Average (the above + photo uploads + light streaming), Heavy (video calls, regular streaming, hotspot for laptop work).
| Trip length | Light user | Average | Heavy user |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1–3 days | 500 MB / 1 day | 1 GB / 7 days | 3 GB / 7 days |
| 4–7 days | 1 GB / 7 days | 3 GB / 7 days | 5 GB / 7 days |
| 8–15 days | 3 GB / 15 days | 5 GB / 15 days | 10 GB / 15 days |
| 16–30 days | 5 GB / 30 days | 10 GB / 30 days | 20 GB / 30 days |
| 31–90 days | 20 GB / 30 days | 50 GB / 90 days | Multiple 30-day plans |
| 90+ days | 50 GB / 90 days | 100 GB / 180 days | Multi-plan stack |
If you're going to tether a laptop or another phone for work calls, photo backup, or media streaming, double the data column you picked in Question 3. A laptop on Wi-Fi via your phone hotspot burns through data 3-5× faster than the phone alone, because all the desktop apps run their background refresh and big screen content.
Some destinations have specific things to check on the country page before buying:
People consistently use 30–50% more data than they predicted. Solution: buy one tier above your estimate. The cost of a tier-up is $2-5; the cost of running out is a stressful hotel-lobby Wi-Fi top-up.
Going to Spain then Portugal on the same trip but buying a Spain-only plan. The Spain plan won't work in Portugal. Buy a Europe regional plan instead — usually only marginally more expensive and saves a second purchase.
The most expensive mistake. Even with a travel eSIM installed and set as data line, leaving "Data Roaming" ON for your home SIM can leak background data to your home carrier — at roaming rates. Always toggle home-SIM data roaming OFF on arrival.
For most travelers using maps, messaging, occasional social media, and a few photo uploads — around 100–300 MB per day. A two-week vacation with this profile finishes the trip having used 1.5–4 GB total. If you stream music on the metro or do regular video calls, plan for 500 MB – 1 GB per day. If you tether a laptop for remote work, 1–3 GB per day is realistic.
Yes — buying one tier above your estimate is the single best money-saving habit. The price gap between a 1 GB and 3 GB Europe plan is $1.60 → $4.10 (a $2.50 difference). The cost of running out of data 4 days into a 7-day trip is a stressful airport-Wi-Fi top-up at the wrong moment. Going one tier up is cheap insurance.
Depends on country count. A single-country Spain plan is cheaper than a Europe regional plan if you're only in Spain. But the moment your itinerary includes 2 countries (e.g. Spain → Portugal), the regional plan wins because you don't pay separate setup or face roaming if one country's plan doesn't cover the other. The break-even is usually right at 2 countries.
Fixed-bucket plans (e.g. 5 GB / 30 days) are cheaper per GB and rarely throttle. Daily-renewing plans (e.g. 5 GB / day) refresh the data allowance every 24 hours — predictable per-day allocation, but a higher per-GB cost overall. VoyaSIM offers both types on Europe and other regions, so most travelers can stay with us either way. Default to fixed-bucket unless you specifically want guaranteed per-day allowance for a short heavy-streaming trip; for marketed-as-unlimited daily plans with throttling, Holafly is the brand that focuses on that niche.
Every country page on VoyaSIM lists the partner carrier (e.g. "Movistar, Orange Spain, or Vodafone ES (varies by plan)") and notes about coverage edges (5G cities, dead zones, country-specific gotchas like Turkey's IMEI rule or UAE's VoIP block). Regional plan pages list every country included on each plan tier — usually 30–41 countries with their flags shown.
You can — but most travelers underestimate how often they need cellular data. Maps in a taxi from the airport, calling a hotel that misplaced your booking, ride-hailing in a city where Uber works, restaurant searches when Wi-Fi is too slow, two-factor codes from your bank, emergency contact. A 1 GB / 7 day plan at $1.60 is cheap insurance against all of these.
Yes — data tethered to other devices comes out of the same data bucket on your plan. If you plan to hotspot a laptop or a second phone, multiply your estimated usage by 2-3× and buy accordingly. A 30-day month of moderate laptop tethering is usually 10–20 GB.
No problem — plans are independent purchases. You can buy a small starter for the first leg of your trip, then top up or buy a different plan if you stay longer or visit different countries. Top-ups don't require re-installing the eSIM; new plans can run alongside existing eSIMs as separate profiles.
Browse plans for your destination — every page shows real prices for all durations and data sizes.
Questions? Contact our team.