A classic European trip rarely stays in one country. A week might take you from Vienna to Venice, or down through Germany and Austria into the Balkans, or across a handful of capitals by train. Each border used to mean a new SIM card and a new number. With a travel eSIM, it doesn't have to — but the right choice depends on where you're coming from and where your route actually goes.
Here's how to decide between EU roaming, a single Europe-wide plan, and country-by-country.
First: do you even need a travel eSIM?
If you already have an EU mobile plan, "roam like at home" means your data works across the whole EU and Schengen area at no extra cost. For a trip that stays inside that zone — say France, Italy and Austria — you may need nothing at all. (For exactly when that covers you and when it doesn't, see Roam like at home: when EU roaming is enough (and when it isn't).)
You'll want a travel eSIM if any of these apply:
- You're coming from outside the EU (the UK, Switzerland, the US, further afield), where EU roaming doesn't apply.
- Your home plan has a stingy roaming cap you'd blow through in a week.
- Your route mixes EU and non-EU countries — the most common trap, because the data goes free, then suddenly isn't.
That last case is the big one. A trip that dips into the Balkans, Switzerland or Turkey crosses out of the free-roaming zone partway through, and that's exactly where a regional plan earns its keep.
When a single Europe plan wins
The moment your itinerary touches three or more countries, the maths tips toward one regional plan:
- One purchase instead of three or four.
- One line to manage — no relabelling SIMs at each border.
- Coverage that follows you as your phone re-selects networks across the continent.
A Europe eSIM covers a wide span of countries on a single plan, so your data simply continues from one to the next. For a multi-stop trip, that's far less fiddly than a stack of country SIMs — and usually cheaper than a stack of roaming passes.
Tip: Add a little buffer to your data estimate for a multi-country trip. Re-scanning networks at borders, plus heavier map use on unfamiliar roads and in new cities, means you'll use a bit more than you would sitting still in one place.
When country-by-country still makes sense
If your whole trip is really one country, go local and save — a single-country plan is usually the cheapest option for a city break. For a long weekend in Vienna, for instance, an Austria eSIM is all you need; the full rundown is in A weekend in Vienna: staying online in Austria. The same goes for a focused trip to Italy, Greece, Germany or Switzerland.
Worked examples
- Germany → the Balkans by car: mostly EU, then out of the zone in Serbia and Kosovo. Covered in The Germany–Kosovo summer drive: data on the road.
- A Balkan loop: Albania, Kosovo, Montenegro and neighbours, all non-EU — one Balkans eSIM handles it, as set out in One eSIM across the Balkans: Albania, Kosovo & beyond.
- Italy to Albania by sea: EU on one shore, non-EU on the other — see Italy to Albania by ferry: data that works on both shores.
Plan the route, then match the plan to it: one Europe eSIM for a multi-country trip, or a single-country plan when you're staying put.