Esim Chile Plans
Select Your Plan
Choose the data plan that fits your trip perfectly
Features
•
Use In:
Chile
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Top Up Available:
Yes
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Data Only:
Yes
•
SMS:
No
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Calls:
No, only through apps (VOIP)
Technical Specs
•
Plan Type:
Data Only
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Pre-Activation Days:
180 Days
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Data Exit Country:
Unknown
•
Hotspot:
yes
•
Speed Reduction:
No
•
Coverage:
CL
•
Networks:
CL - movistar 5G
•
Supported Countries:
Chile
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Everything you need for seamless travel connectivity
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Real human support anytime you need it. We're here to help via live chat or email.
AVG RESPONSE
< 2 MIN
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DELIVERY TIME
< 30 SEC
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Access the fastest 5G/4G networks with reliable connectivity everywhere.
PEAK SPEED
100 Mbps+
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COVERAGE
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Frequently Asked Questions
Everything you need to know about eSIM
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EsimGlobe makes a lot of sense for Chile because this is one of those countries where distances reshape the trip very quickly. You may land in Santiago thinking of a simple city stay, then find yourself coordinating a domestic flight south, checking a rental car booking, sending messages to a hotel in Valparaíso or looking up a transfer for San Pedro de Atacama. Chile is long, varied and often logistically demanding, so connectivity is not a minor detail. Having data ready before you arrive saves time exactly when you need your phone most, which is usually in the first hour, not the third day.
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In Chile, the main names travellers usually come across are Entel, Movistar Chile, Claro Chile and WOM. What matters in practice, though, is less the logo and more the route you are actually doing. Coverage that feels perfectly normal in Santiago or along the busier central corridors may feel different once you move into desert roads, wine regions, lake districts or stretches of Patagonia. That is why a travel eSIM like EsimGlobe is useful: it is built for the reality of moving through the country, not for the idealized idea that every place in Chile behaves like a capital city business district.
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Yes, and in Chile that first moment really matters. If you land in Santiago, there is a good chance you will need your phone immediately for airport transport, hotel messages, route checks, apartment access details, restaurant bookings or a same-day connection onward. A lot of Chile itineraries start fast, with domestic flights, bus terminals, road transfers or packed city schedules. That is exactly why EsimGlobe is practical here. Instead of arriving tired and then spending time figuring out a local SIM purchase, you step into the trip with your data already working, which usually makes the whole first day feel more under control.
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In the main urban areas, the experience is usually the easiest and most predictable. That includes Santiago, Valparaíso, Viña del Mar, Concepción and other larger city environments where daily life, transport, hotels, restaurants and shopping all push you to use your phone constantly. In those places, EsimGlobe is especially convenient because it supports the natural pace of the trip: metro directions, booking confirmations, maps, local messages and the kind of practical searches people make all day without thinking twice. That said, even within cities, indoor settings, hill areas and older neighborhoods can make the experience feel a bit uneven at times, which is normal.
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Yes, and Chile is exactly the kind of country where that becomes important fast. A road trip there is rarely just one smooth highway and a few urban stops. It may involve long coastal stretches, wine country roads, mountain transitions, lake regions, desert routes or the far south, where your phone ends up doing far more than navigation. You use it to check fuel stops, weather, accommodation, restaurant hours, ferry timing and last-minute changes. EsimGlobe is useful because it stays with you across the whole route. The point is not that every kilometer will feel identical, but that you avoid treating each new region like a new telecom problem.
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You should expect the trip to remain connected where travel infrastructure is established, but you should also stay realistic. Chile includes some of the most dramatic landscapes in South America, and that means there are stretches where geography matters more than any marketing phrase about “coverage everywhere.” In places linked to San Pedro de Atacama, remote desert roads, Patagonian routes, national parks or sparse southern corridors, the experience can feel less uniform than in Santiago or along the central urban belt. EsimGlobe is still very useful in those itineraries because your phone remains ready whenever service is available, but the right expectation is practical continuity, not the fantasy that a remote desert or windswept southern road behaves like downtown Santiago.
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Yes, and this is one of the nicest examples of why a travel eSIM matters. Central Chile often looks simple on paper, but once the trip begins it becomes a moving sequence of city appointments, winery visits, coastal lunches, hotel check-ins and short drives that all depend on your phone more than expected. You may move between Santiago, Valparaíso, Viña del Mar and inland valleys in a short period, and in each segment the phone becomes your planner, map, translator, booking file and message hub. EsimGlobe works well in that kind of trip because it supports the flow of the journey naturally instead of forcing you to stop and think about connectivity at every change of setting.
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It makes sense for both, but it is particularly practical for business travel because Chile often compresses a lot into a short schedule. A work trip can include an airport arrival, a transfer into Santiago, meetings in different parts of the city, a domestic hop, documents to open on the move and constant messaging with colleagues or drivers. In that context, the value of EsimGlobe is not abstract. It is the simple fact that you land connected and stay operational. That matters more than people admit, because when a trip is full of timing, appointments and moving parts, even a small telecom delay can turn into wasted time across the whole day.
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In most cases, yes, and in Chile that can be more useful than it sounds. Between hotels, apartments, cafés, airports and regional stops, Wi-Fi quality can be fine in one place and disappointing in the next. If you carry a laptop, need to answer messages while moving, or want a backup connection for work, hotspot can make the trip much smoother. EsimGlobe is helpful here because it gives you that extra layer of flexibility instead of tying you to one building’s internet. The only practical warning is the obvious one: tethering eats data fast, especially with uploads, calls and cloud syncing, so choosing too small a plan is where people usually create problems for themselves.
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For Chile, it is usually smarter to choose a plan with some breathing room rather than trying to calculate the absolute minimum. This is not only because of streaming, but because the country encourages movement and the phone becomes the control center of the whole trip. You use it for directions, domestic travel changes, hotel messages, photos, bookings, weather, local research and sometimes hotspot backup. If the itinerary includes several regions, internal flights, road travel or work, usage rises faster than people expect. EsimGlobe works best when it lets you use your phone naturally without second-guessing every search or map refresh. In a country as long and varied as Chile, a moderate plan is usually the most practical choice.