Esim Ireland Plans
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Choose the data plan that fits your trip perfectly
Features
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Use In:
Ireland
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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:
UK, Norway
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Hotspot:
yes
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Speed Reduction:
no
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Coverage:
IE
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Networks:
IE - Vodafone 5G, 3 5G
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Supported Countries:
Ireland
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Everything you need for seamless travel connectivity
24/7 Customer Support
Real human support anytime you need it. We're here to help via live chat or email.
AVG RESPONSE
< 2 MIN
Instant Delivery
Get your eSIM in seconds. No waiting, no hassle — just scan and go!
DELIVERY TIME
< 30 SEC
High Speed 5G/4G Data
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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Because Ireland trips often begin with immediate movement rather than spare time for telecom setup. You may land in Dublin, collect a rental car, catch a bus, head to a hotel, or continue straight toward Galway, Cork, or another part of the country. In those first hours, having data already active is genuinely useful for directions, accommodation details, transport timing, and local planning. EsimGlobe helps because it lets the trip begin without one more arrival task. That is especially valuable on short itineraries, late arrivals, or road trips where the first day already includes several moving parts and where losing time at the airport adds stress without adding much value.
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In practical terms, the easiest experience is usually in and around Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick, Waterford, and the main airport, hotel, and business corridors where travelers actually spend most of their time. These are the places where people use mobile data for navigation, hotel contact, restaurant searches, bookings, and everyday movement across the city. Ireland’s local mobile environment is commonly associated with Vodafone Ireland, Three, Eir, and Tesco Mobile. Exact indoor performance can still vary in older buildings, dense city blocks, or crowded stations, but for normal urban use EsimGlobe is generally very practical. It fits especially well with city breaks, business stays, and trips that begin or end in Dublin.
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Yes, and that is actually one of the strongest use cases. A lot of Ireland travel is built around driving: coastal roads, countryside stays, national park areas, small towns, and routes between counties rather than one fixed urban base. EsimGlobe is useful in that setting because it supports live routing, last-minute accommodation checks, restaurant lookups, timing changes, and practical communication during the day. The experience can still become more location-sensitive on quieter rural roads, cliff areas, or remote stretches along the west coast, so it is smart to keep backup details offline too. But for the everyday rhythm of an Irish road trip, EsimGlobe usually adds real value because it keeps the moving parts of the day easier to manage.
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Very useful, because Ireland is the kind of destination where plans often shift during the day. People may change routes because of weather, add a stop in a small town, move dinner later, or adjust a drive depending on timing and daylight. EsimGlobe helps in those situations because it keeps the practical layer of the trip working: directions, messages, confirmations, searches, and local information. That matters in cities, but often even more on scenic routes where you may be relying on the phone to decide the next stop. In that sense, EsimGlobe is not just about being online. It helps keep the day flexible in a country where many of the best moments come from moving spontaneously rather than following a rigid fixed plan.
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The operator names most relevant in Ireland are Vodafone Ireland, Three, Eir, and Tesco Mobile. These networks shape how mobile data feels in Dublin, across the main motorways, in smaller towns, and along common tourism routes. That still does not mean every road or village behaves the same way. One hotel, one country lane, or one coastal bend can feel different from another because local geography and building conditions still matter. EsimGlobe simplifies the user side by letting you arrive already connected, while the local network conditions still define the final feel of the connection in the exact place where you are driving, staying, or walking. Thinking in terms of route quality rather than one uniform national experience is usually the most realistic approach in Ireland.
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For most business trips, yes. If the schedule is centered on Dublin, Cork, Galway, office areas, hotels, conferences, and airport transfers, EsimGlobe is usually practical for email, cloud access, work chats, booking details, route planning, and everyday coordination. That matters because business travel in Ireland is often compact and time-sensitive, with a lot of value placed on smooth movement between airport, hotel, office, and dinner or event locations. If the trip also includes site visits or longer drives into more rural parts of the country, coverage can become more variable and it is wise to keep directions and key documents saved offline too. For ordinary city-based business use, though, EsimGlobe is generally a clean and efficient option.
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The most useful answer is that it generally feels practical in the places where most travelers actually spend their time. In cities, on airport routes, and along the stronger road and town corridors, data is usually more than workable for directions, live messages, booking access, browsing, and normal work tasks. Once you move into more remote parts of the west, smaller inland roads, or exposed coastal sections, the experience can become more location-sensitive. That is normal in Ireland and does not make EsimGlobe less useful overall. It simply means the connection fits the trip best when you think in realistic terms: strong everyday practicality in the main travel corridors, with some variability once the itinerary becomes more rural or scenic.
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Yes, and it can be very helpful on both work trips and longer self-drive itineraries. In stronger urban zones and many developed travel corridors, hotspot can support email, cloud access, browsing, short work sessions, and backup connectivity without too much difficulty. That is particularly useful if hotel WiFi is weaker than expected or if you need a second connection during a drive break, in a café, or at a rural stay. On quieter roads or more exposed areas, the experience may vary more depending on the exact location, so it is better treated as flexible support than as a perfect fixed-broadband substitute. In practice, though, EsimGlobe can be a very useful backup layer during a trip across Ireland.
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For many trips, no. If what you mainly need is navigation, hotel communication, booking access, messaging, browsing, and occasional hotspot use, EsimGlobe is usually enough on its own. A local SIM becomes more relevant only if you specifically need an Irish number for ordinary domestic calls or for a service linked to a local line. For most short visits, road trips, city breaks, and business stays, adding another SIM usually adds another step without changing much in practical terms. One of the strongest reasons to use EsimGlobe in Ireland is to keep arrival simple and let the trip begin immediately, especially when the day already includes transport, accommodation, and route decisions that deserve more attention than telecom setup.
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Use it most heavily where live mobile access has the biggest practical effect: airport arrival, car pickup, hotel transfer, route changes, weather-driven adjustments, restaurant planning, and any day that includes several stops across different towns or regions. That is where EsimGlobe tends to deliver the clearest value. Before longer scenic drives or more remote loops, it is wise to save offline anything that would be annoying to lose, such as hotel names, route notes, booking codes, and important contact numbers. Ireland works especially well when live connectivity and simple preparation are used together. EsimGlobe supports the live part of the trip smoothly, while a small amount of offline backup covers the quieter and more variable stretches of the route.