Alternatives
Looking for a Airalo alternative?
If you've been using Airalo and you're starting to think there might be a better fit, you're not alone. Airalo built the category and runs a solid product — but it's not the only option, and for some travelers, a different design fits better.
Why people look for a Airalo alternative
- Reinstalling eSIMs every trip is annoying. Airalo's standard model is per-trip, per-eSIM. Frequent travelers feel this.
- Plan catalog is huge but undifferentiated. Hundreds of plans across many countries; analysis paralysis is real.
- Customer support is workable but not delightful. Standard human-staffed chat. Multilingual but English-first.
- No AI / smart plan picking. You browse a list and choose.
- Hotspot rules. Generally fine, but some specific plans cap.
What Airalo is great at
Before talking alternatives — fair credit:
- Country breadth — 200+ countries, broadest catalog in the category
- Maturity and brand recognition
- Reasonable pricing across destinations
The main alternatives
Four alternatives worth considering, depending on what you're looking for: eSimphony for install-once + AI, Holafly for unlimited, Saily for privacy/Nord ecosystem, Ubigi for tablets/IoT.
Bottom line
Airalo is the market leader. They earned it. They're a good fit for many travelers. But if you've been wondering whether something would fit your travel pattern better — install-once, AI-driven, flexible plans — eSimphony is built for that. Try eSimphony for one trip. If it's better, you'll know.
Frequently asked questions
Is Airalo bad?+
No. Airalo is a competent, mature travel eSIM provider trusted by millions. They built the category. "Alternative" doesn't mean "worse."
Why would I switch?+
Because a different design fits how you travel better. Frequent travelers tend to like lifetime-eSIM models. Heavy data users tend to like unlimited. Privacy-first users tend to like Nord-ecosystem.
Can I keep using Airalo and try alternatives?+
Yes. iPhones and most modern Androids support multiple eSIM profiles. Install eSimphony, try one trip, decide.
Should I just try multiple at once?+
If you travel frequently — yes. Have one as primary and one as backup. The backup saves your day when the primary has a carrier-side issue.
