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New York City has some of the best mobile coverage in the United States. T-Mobile and AT&T both run strong 4G LTE and 5G networks across Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, and beyond.
This guide compares the best eSIM providers for New York City travel, with full pricing for every plan tier, coverage notes across the boroughs, and a plain comparison of eSIM versus physical SIM versus roaming so you can make the right call before you land at JFK or Newark.
What is the best eSIM for New York travel?
An eSIM is a digital SIM card built into your phone. You install it by scanning a QR code. For New York visitors, a travel eSIM solves the single biggest connectivity problem: your home carrier's international roaming rates, which typically run $5–15 per day for a limited daily data allowance in the US.
A prepaid eSIM plan for New York costs a fraction of that. Yesim's 10 GB plan for 30 days runs $21.60. Airalo's equivalent is $26. Both give you more data than most tourists use in a week, at less than the cost of a single day of carrier roaming.
The best eSIM for New York depends on three things: how long you're staying, how much data you'll actually use, and whether you need unlimited data or a fixed GB plan. The sections below cover all of that with complete pricing.
eSIM for New York: how it works

When you buy an eSIM plan for the USA, your phone connects to US carrier networks through a wholesale roaming agreement managed by the eSIM provider. For New York City specifically, T-Mobile has the widest coverage and fastest average speeds, followed closely by AT&T. Most international eSIM providers route through one or both. Setting up an eSIM takes about five minutes:
- Check your device supports eSIM. Most iPhones from the XS (2018) onward and Android flagships from 2020 onward do. The full compatible devices list is on the Yesim site if you're unsure.
- Buy your plan at your chosen provider website before you travel.
- an the QR code from your confirmation email. iPhone: Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM. Android: Settings → Network & Internet → SIMs → Add eSIM.
- Install the eSIM profile (30–60 seconds). Set it as your data line – on dual-SIM phones, select the eSIM for mobile data and leave your home SIM active for calls and SMS.
- Enable data roaming in the eSIM's cellular settings. This is a device toggle that must be on for the eSIM to connect to US networks.
Do this at home before departure. The QR code is single-use, install it on the right device before you fly.
Read also: Top 12 Best eSIMs for United States
Best eSIM providers for New York
Five providers cover the New York City market well. Check how they compare at a glance before the detailed plans.
| Provider | Starting price | Unlimited data | Hotspot | Network (USA) | Best for |
| Yesim | $3.60/day | ✅ From $3.60/day | ✅ All plans | T-Mobile / AT&T | Best overall value — unlimited + hotspot |
| Jetpac | $1.00 | ✅ From $21.99 (7 days) | ✅ Yes | T-Mobile | Budget short trips, cheapest entry |
| Saily | $3.79 | ✅ From $34.19 (10 days) | ✅ Yes | T-Mobile / AT&T | Flexible mid-range plans |
| Airalo | $4.50 | ❌ No (USA plans) | ✅ Yes | T-Mobile / AT&T | Reliable mid-range, wide brand recognition |
| Holafly | $6.90/day | ✅ All plans | ⚠️ 500 MB/day cap | T-Mobile | Unlimited-only users, light hotspot needs |
Yesim
Yesim routes through T-Mobile and AT&T in the USA, both strong in New York City. Hotspot is included on every plan, which is the main differentiator versus Holafly for anyone sharing data with a laptop. The unlimited plans are the strongest value among all providers here at the day and week level.
| Plan type | Data | Duration | Price | Per unit |
| Unlimited | ∞ | 1 day | $3.60 | $3.60/day |
| Unlimited | ∞ | 7 days | $25.20 | $3.60/day |
| Unlimited | ∞ | 15 days | $54.00 | $3.60/day |
| Unlimited | ∞ | 30 days | $108.00 | $3.60/day |
| Prepaid | 500 MB | 1 day | — | $1.08/GB equiv. |
| Prepaid | 5 GB | 30 days | — | $2.16/GB |
| Prepaid | 10 GB | 30 days | $21.60 | $1.68/GB |
| Prepaid | 20 GB | 30 days | $43.20 | $1.02/GB |
| Prepaid | 30 GB | 30 days | $64.80 | $0.80/GB |
For a standard 7-day New York trip, the 7-day unlimited at $25.20 ($3.60/day) is the cleanest option. For travelers who prefer a fixed-data plan, 10 GB for $21.60 covers a week comfortably for most tourist usage patterns.
Saily
Saily offers some of the lowest per-GB pricing among prepaid plans, plus unlimited options from 10 days onward. Good choice for travelers who want multiple plan lengths without committing to 30 days.
| Data | Duration | Price |
| 1 GB | 7 days | $3.79 |
| 3 GB | 30 days | $8.54 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $13.29 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $21.84 |
| 20 GB | 30 days | $35.14 |
| Unlimited | 10 days | $34.19 |
| Unlimited | 15 days | $47.49 |
| Unlimited | 20 days | $56.99 |
| Unlimited | 30 days | $68.39 |
Airalo

Airalo is a widely used eSIM provider with a 1 GB / 1-day free offer for first-time users – a useful way to test the service before committing to a longer plan. No unlimited option on the USA plan; the 20 GB at $42 is competitive for longer stays.
| Data | Duration | Price |
| 1 GB | 1 day | Free (first-time users) |
| 1 GB | 7 days | $4.50 |
| 2 GB | 15 days | $8.00 |
| 3 GB | 30 days | $11.00 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $16.00 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $26.00 |
| 20 GB | 30 days | $42.00 |
Jetpac

Jetpac is good for budget travelers. The 30 GB plan at $20.50 is also the cheapest high-volume plan available.
| Data | Duration | Price |
| 1 GB | 4 days | $1.00 |
| 3 GB | 7 days | $5.00 |
| 5 GB | 30 days | $8.00 |
| 10 GB | 30 days | $11.50 |
| 15 GB | 30 days | $13.50 |
| 20 GB | 31 days | $21.00 |
| 30 GB | 30 days | $20.50 |
| 40 GB | 30 days | $46.00 |
| Unlimited | 7 days | $21.99 |
| Unlimited | 10 days | $26.99 |
Holafly

Holafly sells unlimited data plans only. Hotspot is capped at 500 MB/day, which restricts laptop use significantly. For a tourist who just wants unlimited data for maps, social media, and browsing without tracking consumption, Holafly works. For remote workers or anyone sharing data, the hotspot cap is a problem.
| Data | Duration | Price |
| Unlimited | 1 day | $6.90 |
| Unlimited | 7 days | $29.90 |
| Unlimited | 15 days | $50.90 |
| Unlimited | 30 days | $74.90 |
| Unlimited | 60 days | $106.90 |
| Unlimited | 90 days | $139.90 |
| 10 GB monthly | 30 days | $39.90/mo |
| 25 GB monthly | 30 days | $49.90/mo |
| Unlimited monthly | 30 days | $64.90/mo |
Prepaid eSIM New York plans and pricing
A prepaid eSIM means a fixed data amount, a fixed validity period, and no billing after purchase. You pay once, use the data, and the plan expires. There are no auto-renewals unless you explicitly choose a subscription model. By trip length, here are the plans that make the most sense:
- Weekend trip (2–3 days): Yesim 1-day unlimited at $3.60/day (buy two days separately if needed), or Jetpac 1 GB / 4 days at $1. A weekend in New York with moderate use runs 1–2 GB per day. A 3 GB buffer covers it.
- Short trip (4–7 days): Yesim 7-day unlimited at $25.20 is the cleanest option. Jetpac 3 GB / 7 days at $5 if you're on a strict budget and confident in low data use.
- Standard holiday (1–2 weeks): Yesim 10 GB prepaid at $21.60 or Saily 10 GB at $21.84. Both cover a 10–14 day trip for most tourists. If you stream regularly, go to 20 GB.
- Extended stay or digital nomad (30 days): Yesim 30-day unlimited at $108 or Yesim 30 GB prepaid at $64.80. For remote workers who need reliable laptop hotspot, the unlimited plan removes the stress of tracking data.
Read also: Mobile Internet in the USA
eSIM New York unlimited data: is it worth it?
Unlimited data plans for the USA exist from Yesim, Saily, Jetpac, and Holafly. Whether they're worth paying for depends on how you actually use your phone in New York.
- The case for unlimited: You're streaming music on the subway, using Google Maps constantly, posting Instagram stories, and video-calling home every evening. That combination can hit 3–5 GB/day without trying. An unlimited plan removes the mental overhead of monitoring usage. At $3.60/day from Yesim, a week of unlimited data costs $25.20, cheaper than a single day of most carrier roaming packages.
- The case against unlimited: Most tourists use less data than they think. Maps in offline mode (download the NYC map before you land) use almost no data. WhatsApp and messaging are minimal. A 10 GB plan comfortably covers 7–10 days of typical tourist use with room to spare, at a lower cost than unlimited.
What "unlimited" actually means: Yesim's unlimited plans deliver full-speed data with no soft cap on the device. Holafly's unlimited plans apply speed throttling after heavy streaming and cap hotspot at 500 MB/day. Saily and Jetpac's unlimited plans include hotspot. Read the specific plan terms before buying.
Coverage and internet speed in New York
New York City has two dominant networks for international eSIM providers: T-Mobile and AT&T. Both are strong in Manhattan and across the boroughs.
- Manhattan: Excellent 4G LTE and 5G coverage throughout. Download speeds in the 50–300 Mbps range on 5G-enabled devices in Midtown, downtown, and along the main avenues. International eSIMs typically deliver 4G speeds in the 20–60 Mbps range, sufficient for all travel use cases.
- Brooklyn, Queens, Bronx, Staten Island: Strong 4G coverage throughout the main residential and commercial areas. Coverage drops slightly in industrial zones and waterfront areas away from population density, but for tourist destinations it's consistently good.
- NYC Subway: T-Mobile and AT&T have both deployed coverage in underground stations and many tunnel sections on the major lines. Coverage underground is not universal, but signal in most Manhattan subway stations has improved significantly since 2022. Expect intermittent connectivity in longer tunnel sections between stations.
- Airports (JFK, Newark EWR, LaGuardia LGA): All three airports have strong 4G/5G coverage in terminals. Your eSIM will connect as soon as you land and turn off airplane mode.
- Indoor buildings: Dense urban environments mean signal penetration into older buildings can be inconsistent. Thick masonry in pre-war Manhattan buildings and underground hotel lobbies may give weaker signal than street level.
5G access through international eSIMs depends on the specific plan. Yesim supports 5G where available on qualifying plans. Check your plan terms if 5G speed is important for most tourist use, 4G is more than adequate.
eSIM vs SIM card vs roaming in New York
Three options cover mobile connectivity for international visitors to New York: using your home carrier's roaming, buying a US prepaid SIM card on arrival, or installing a travel eSIM before you fly.
Each works but the differences are cost, setup friction, and whether your home number stays reachable. For a trip longer than two days, roaming is the most expensive option by a meaningful margin.
A US prepaid SIM is the cheapest per-GB but replaces your home SIM entirely. A travel eSIM sits in between: competitive pricing, five-minute setup, and your home number stays active on the same device throughout the trip.
| Option | Cost (7 days, 10 GB equiv.) | Setup | Keeps home number | Hotspot | Risk of extra charges |
| International eSIM (Yesim) | $21.60–$25.20 | 5 min online before travel | Yes — home SIM stays active | ✅ Included | None — fixed cost |
| Home carrier roaming | $35–$105 (at $5–$15/day) | Enable in settings | Yes | Depends on plan | High — overage charges common |
| US prepaid SIM (T-Mobile tourist) | ~$30–$50 | Purchase at airport or store | No — home SIM replaced | ✅ Included | Low — fixed prepaid |
| US prepaid SIM (Mint Mobile, etc.) | ~$15–$25 | Order online, wait for delivery | No — home SIM replaced | ✅ Included | Low — fixed prepaid |
Tips for using eSIM in New York
Open your phone's Settings → Cellular (iPhone) or Settings → Network (Android) and look at your last 30 days of usage. Divide by the number of days in the billing period for a daily average. That number, multiplied by your New York trip length with a 30% buffer, is the plan size you need.
- Download offline maps before you land. Google Maps lets you download entire city maps for offline use. Download NYC before your flight. Navigation then consumes zero mobile data — your eSIM allocation goes entirely to other uses.
- Set photos and apps to Wi-Fi-only sync. iCloud Photos, Google Photos, and most backup apps can automatically upload in the background, consuming gigabytes without any visible action. Switch them to Wi-Fi only before you travel.
- Turn off data roaming on your home SIM. If your home carrier charges for data roaming in the US, make sure data roaming is off on the home SIM profile so it doesn't accidentally consume data while you're relying on the eSIM.
- Use the Yesim app to monitor usage. The Yesim app shows your real-time data balance and lets you top up without buying a new eSIM profile if you run low.
For the subway: Download the MTA map offline. The MYmta app works without data once the maps are cached. Cell signal in tunnels is improving but still unreliable on some lines. Hotel Wi-Fi for heavy downloads. Use hotel or coffee shop Wi-Fi for large downloads (streaming Netflix, video calls over an hour) to keep your eSIM data for when you're out.
The bottom line
For international visitors to New York, a travel eSIM beats carrier roaming on cost in almost every scenario, typically by $30–80 over a week.
The best pick depends on your usage and trip length. For a 7-day trip with standard tourist use, Yesim's 7-day unlimited at $25.20 or Yesim's 10 GB prepaid at $21.60 are the best value options, with T-Mobile/AT&T network access and hotspot included.
Budget travelers should look at Jetpac's plans, which have the lowest entry price in the market. Buy before you fly, install the eSIM at home, and you'll connect at JFK before you reach baggage claim.
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FAQ
Which eSIM works best in New York City?
Yesim and Jetpac are the strongest picks for New York. Yesim offers the best unlimited plan value at $3.60/day with hotspot included. Jetpac is the cheapest entry point at $1 for 1 GB/4 days and has competitive pricing at 10–30 GB. Both route through T-Mobile, which has the widest NYC coverage and fastest average speeds.
How much data do I need for a week in New York?
For typical tourist use — maps, social media, messaging, occasional streaming — 5–10 GB covers a 7-day trip. Add 3–5 GB per day if you're streaming video regularly or using your phone as a hotspot for a laptop. If you're uncertain, an unlimited plan removes the guesswork entirely.
Can I use an eSIM on both my iPhone and Android in New York?
An eSIM plan can only be installed on one device. If you have both an iPhone and an Android, you'd need separate plans for each. The QR code is single-use — once installed on one phone, it can't be used on another.
Does eSIM work in the New York subway?
Signal in NYC subway stations has improved significantly. Most Manhattan stations now have 4G coverage. Tunnel sections between stations are less consistent. Download your maps and any needed content above ground before heading underground for reliable navigation throughout the journey.
Can I top up my eSIM if I run out of data in New York?
Yes. Yesim, Airalo, Saily, and Jetpac all allow top-ups within the app or website. You add more data to your existing plan without installing a new eSIM profile. The additional data activates immediately.
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