Home carrier roaming charges are still $10–15 per day in 2026. Here are the 5 alternatives that almost always cost less — ranked by what we'd actually recommend, with real prices and the tradeoffs that matter.
For ~95% of travelers in 2026, the cheapest and fastest alternative is a travel eSIM — $1.60–10 for a typical trip instead of $50–200 in roaming charges. Local SIMs win for 3+ month stays where you need a local number; pocket Wi-Fi suits families sharing one connection; free Wi-Fi works in Japan and Singapore but not much else.
To put the differences in concrete terms — here's what a typical 14-day Europe trip with moderate data use looks like across each alternative:
| Option | 14-day cost | vs. eSIM |
|---|---|---|
| VoyaSIM 3 GB / 15 days Europe | $4.10 | — |
| Local SIM at airport (€15 × 1 country) | ~$16 | 4× |
| Pocket Wi-Fi rental ($10/day) | $140 | 34× |
| AT&T International Day Pass | $168 | 41× |
| Verizon TravelPass | $140 | 34× |
| Free Wi-Fi only | $0 | — |
Roaming pass prices observed at the carrier's public pages in June 2026. Pocket Wi-Fi excludes deposit. Local SIM assumes one country (the trip is single-country).
Major US carriers: AT&T International Day Pass $12/day; T-Mobile Simple Global $5/day for high-speed up to 5 GB then throttled (or included in pricier plans); Verizon TravelPass $10/day per day used. UK carriers (EE, Vodafone, O2): roaming fees re-introduced after Brexit, typically £2–6/day per destination. Australian Telstra International Day Pass $10/day. Almost every carrier's daily pass is 5–20× the cost of an equivalent travel eSIM plan.
Yes — EU residents traveling within the EU+EEA still get "Roam Like At Home" (free EU-wide roaming on their domestic plan, with fair-use limits). Some US carrier plans (T-Mobile's pricier tiers, Google Fi) include international data at reduced speeds. Some prepaid roaming bundles from smaller MVNOs include free roaming as a marketing perk. Outside these specific cases, expect to pay daily roaming or use an eSIM.
For ~95% of travelers, a prepaid travel eSIM is the cheapest. A 3 GB / 15 days Europe eSIM is $4.10. The same trip on AT&T International Day Pass is $168. The same trip on Verizon TravelPass is $140. Even free hotel Wi-Fi isn't really "free" if you account for the inconvenience and missed rides; an eSIM at $4–10 for a typical trip is cheap insurance.
Rarely. The math: a family of 4 sharing one pocket Wi-Fi for 7 days at $10/day = $70 plus deposit. The same 7 days on 4 separate VoyaSIM eSIMs at $1.60 each = $6.40. The pocket Wi-Fi is 10× more expensive and has a single failure point. Where it makes sense: when some travelers have phones that don't support eSIM, or for a single rented mobile hotspot to power devices like a tablet and laptop on a busy work trip.
In some destinations, yes — Japan, South Korea, Estonia and Singapore have excellent public Wi-Fi coverage in cafés, public transport, and tourist areas. In most of Europe and the US, hotel and café Wi-Fi is reliable but you'll constantly hit moments where you need data (taxi, ride-hailing, restaurant search). For under $5 a week, an eSIM removes all of those friction points.
Apps run over data, not cellular voice/SMS, so they don't trigger traditional roaming charges. The catch: if you're using a roaming pass, every minute of WhatsApp video calling is still drawing from your roaming data allowance. On a travel eSIM, you pay once for the data and use whatever apps you want — much cleaner.
Yes — eSIMs are international-standard. A VoyaSIM Europe eSIM works on an unlocked US iPhone the same as it works on a European phone, because both phones speak GSMA RSP (Remote SIM Provisioning) protocol. If your iPhone is carrier-locked, an unrelated unlock from your home carrier is needed; this affects very few US iPhones from the last 5 years.
You don't cancel — you just turn off "Data Roaming" for your home SIM in Settings (per country). This prevents your home SIM from accidentally drawing roaming data while you use the eSIM for data. Your home SIM still receives calls and SMS at your home number with no roaming charges (calls and SMS only roam if you actively pick up or send).
A 3 GB / 15-day Europe eSIM costs $4.10 — about the same as a coffee. Browse plans for your destination.
Questions? Contact our team.