Esim Caribbean 20+ Plans
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Caribbean (20+ areas) 1GB 7Days
Esim Caribbean 20+· 4G LTE· Instant Activation
$71.00
Quantity
1
As Seen On
Features
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Use In:
Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Barbados, Bolivia, Brazil, Cayman Islands, Colombia, Dominica, Dominican Republic, French Guiana, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Jamaica, Montserrat, Netherlands Antilles, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Turks and Caicos Islands, Uruguay, Virgin Islands- British
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Top Up Available:
Yes
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Data Only:
Yes
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SMS:
No
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Calls:
No, only through apps (VOIP)
Technical Specs
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Plan Type:
Data Only
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Pre-Activation Days:
180 Days
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Data Exit Country:
Poland
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Hotspot:
Yes
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Speed Reduction:
No
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Coverage:
CB-25
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Networks:
AI - FLOW 4G; AG - FLOW 4G; AR - Movistar 4G; BB - FLOW 4G; BO - Tigo 4G; BR - TIM 5G; KY - FLOW 5G; CO - Claro 4G, Tigo 3G; DM - FLOW 4G; DO - Claro 4G, Altice 4G; GF - Digicel 4G; GD - FLOW 4G; GP - Dauphin 4G; JM - FLOW 4G; MS - FLOW 4G; AN - Chippie 4G; PY - Tigo 4G, Personal 4G; PE - Entel 5G, Movistar 4G, Claro 5G; PR - Claro 5G; KN - FLOW 4G; LC - FLOW 4G; VC - FLOW 4G; TC - FLOW 4G; UY - Antel 4G, Movistar 5G; VG - FLOW 4G
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Supported Countries:
Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Argentina, Barbados, Bolivia, Brazil, Cayman Islands, Colombia, Dominica, Dominican Republic, French Guiana, Grenada, Guadeloupe, Jamaica, Montserrat, Netherlands Antilles, Paraguay, Peru, Puerto Rico, Saint Kitts and Nevis, Saint Lucia, Saint Vincent and the Grenadines, Turks and Caicos Islands, Uruguay, Virgin Islands- British
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AVG RESPONSE
< 2 MIN
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DELIVERY TIME
< 30 SEC
High Speed 5G/4G Data
Access the fastest 5G/4G networks with reliable connectivity everywhere.
PEAK SPEED
100 Mbps+
Works in 170+ Countries
Travel freely with coverage in 170+ countries worldwide. No roaming fees!
COVERAGE
170+ COUNTRIES
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Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about eSIM
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Yes, a Caribbean 20+ eSIM is usually one of the most practical options if your trip includes several islands instead of just one destination. The main advantage is simplicity: you do not need to keep swapping SIM cards every time you land in a different territory, board another ferry, or take a short regional flight. That matters a lot in the Caribbean, where many itineraries combine beach stays, cruise stops, marina transfers, airport transits, and short hotel check-ins across different islands. A regional eSIM is especially useful if your route includes a mix of independent countries and overseas territories, because mobile rules and local operator habits can change from island to island. Instead of dealing with telecom shops in each place, you arrive already prepared. For travelers who want a smoother trip between resorts, ports, airports, and town centers, that convenience often makes a regional eSIM far more useful than trying to manage local SIM cards one by one.
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A Caribbean regional eSIM is particularly useful for trips that involve movement rather than staying in one resort for a week. It works very well for cruise passengers, travelers doing multi-island holidays, couples mixing luxury stays with local exploration, and business travelers moving between commercial hubs and resort destinations. It is also practical for people flying into one island and then continuing by ferry or regional flight to another. In the Caribbean, a lot of travel time happens around ports, airports, marinas, immigration points, rental car pickups, and hotel transfers, and those are exactly the moments when reliable data becomes important. You may need to call a driver, confirm a villa address, open a boarding email, check a ferry schedule, or message a property manager. A regional eSIM reduces friction in those transitions, which is why it fits the Caribbean better than people often expect.
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In most cases, yes. Across the Caribbean, mobile service is usually strongest where there is more infrastructure, more tourism, and more day-to-day economic activity. That generally means better performance around capitals, airport zones, cruise ports, established resort districts, and busier coastal towns. By contrast, service can become less predictable on quieter peninsulas, very small cays, inland hilly roads, nature reserves, or beaches far from the main settlement. Even on well-known islands, there can be a noticeable difference between the main town and a secluded villa area on the other side of the island. A regional eSIM is still very useful in those cases, but expectations should stay realistic. It is ideal for staying connected through the most active parts of the trip, while remote corners may still produce weaker speeds or temporary drops depending on terrain, weather exposure, and the nearest local network infrastructure.
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Yes, and this is one of the strongest use cases for it. Cruise itineraries often give you only a limited number of hours on each island, so there is no sense wasting that time trying to buy a local SIM card after disembarking. A Caribbean eSIM is especially helpful on port days because you can go online quickly to handle practical needs such as taxi coordination, beach club reservations, route planning, food spots, tour updates, and messaging with other people from your group. It is also useful if you visit several islands during the same cruise and want one setup that keeps working each time you come ashore. The key detail is that mobile data from the eSIM is most relevant when you are on land and connected to partner networks on the island. It gives you freedom during those short but busy shore visits, which is exactly when time-saving matters most.
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Yes, that is one of the reasons many travelers prefer a regional plan in this part of the world. Caribbean travel often involves short transitions that sound simple on paper but create a lot of small logistical moments in reality. You may land at one airport, continue by ferry, switch islands again by small aircraft, and then finish the trip with a marina pickup or hotel shuttle. During those transitions, you usually need maps, booking emails, WhatsApp messages, boarding details, and contact with a driver or host. A regional eSIM keeps those steps more manageable because your data setup remains consistent instead of resetting every time you move. That is particularly helpful in places where transport timing can shift slightly due to weather, marine conditions, or local scheduling. For a Caribbean itinerary with many moving parts, continuity is often more valuable than chasing a different local SIM on every island.
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No, and this is an important point. The Caribbean may look like one region on a map, but from a telecom perspective it is a patchwork of islands, territories, legal systems, and different local network realities. Some islands feel very smooth in tourist areas and major towns, while others can be more uneven once you move outside the main settlement or cross to a less developed side of the island. There can also be noticeable differences between French Caribbean, Dutch Caribbean, British-linked territories, and fully independent island states, simply because the operator landscape and infrastructure history are not identical. A regional eSIM solves the convenience problem, but it does not erase the real geographical and network differences between islands. The smart way to think about it is this: one plan can cover multiple stops, but the user experience may still change from island to island depending on local conditions.
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For most short or multi-stop trips, yes. Buying local SIM cards can make sense if you are staying for a long period on one specific island and want a local number or a very tailored local package. But for most travelers moving across the region, that approach quickly becomes inefficient. You lose time searching for stores, dealing with identification rules, comparing plans, and swapping cards repeatedly. In the Caribbean, where trips are often built around movement between airports, ports, resorts, and holiday rentals, convenience matters far more than many people expect. A regional eSIM is usually the better option because it lets you stay focused on the trip itself rather than on telecom tasks. If the itinerary includes more than one island, the value of not having to restart your setup again and again becomes very clear very quickly.
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Yes, especially if your travel is based around the region’s more active hubs, business districts, marina developments, and hotel zones. A Caribbean eSIM can be very useful for remote workers who split time between islands, for consultants attending meetings in more than one destination, or for property and hospitality professionals moving between sites. It gives you a stable mobile layer for video call backups, quick tethering, transport coordination, document access, and communication with clients or local contacts. That said, anyone planning serious remote work should still be realistic: a villa on a quiet hillside or a beach house far from the main town may not offer the same mobile experience as a central district near an airport or marina. The eSIM helps a lot, but for work that absolutely cannot fail, it is always sensible to pair it with known hotel or office Wi-Fi rather than relying on one connection source alone.
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Yes, that is exactly where a regional plan becomes most helpful. Many Caribbean itineraries mix obvious high-traffic destinations with quieter stops that feel very different in rhythm and infrastructure. You might spend part of the trip in a busy island with cruise activity, luxury shopping, and dense tourism services, then continue to a more relaxed destination with fewer transport links and a slower daily pace. A single Caribbean eSIM helps because it gives you continuity across those different environments. Even when the network feel changes, your setup does not. That makes life easier when you are navigating airport arrivals, ferry docks, rental pickups, beach stays, hillside villas, or small harbor towns. It is not just about coverage; it is about removing one more moving piece from a trip that already includes enough logistics, timing, and local variation on its own.
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Before departure, make sure your phone is eSIM-compatible and carrier-unlocked, then install the eSIM while you still have a stable internet connection. It is also smart to update your device, label the eSIM clearly, and select it for mobile data before the trip starts. For Caribbean travel specifically, preparation matters because itineraries often involve short flights, ferry connections, hotel transfers, and multiple arrivals in a short number of days. Save the activation instructions offline, download maps for the main islands you will visit, and keep addresses, booking confirmations, and driver contacts stored on the phone. That way you are not dependent on airport Wi-Fi or hotel reception just to get moving. A little preparation makes a regional eSIM much more effective, especially when your holiday is built around smooth transitions from one island to the next.









