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Totally untrue? So one country in Europe works therefore all the other countries do as well?

I would welcome more countries adding a plan like the one you described. But so far that's the only one I've seen.

By comparison the Verizon plan supports over 200 countries. You just go (after enabling Global Roaming, of course) and your phone recognizes the new towers automatically. You don't have to buy a new SIM card, hope this country's carrier has some kind of non-outrageous data plan, and so on.

I think SIM switching is works best for people who move to one place for reasonably long periods of time and know a decent number of local people they want to call/text. For example I know a few people who are from Taiwan who go back for a few months at a time to visit family. Getting a local SIM for those few months is really nice. But getting a SIM for France for a week then another SIM for Spain for three days and another SIM for Italy for a week. That's just a pain in the ass.



Yes totally untrue. Every country I've been to in europe has this kind of plans and in the last year I've used them in Spain, France, Bulgaria and uk.

In Spain all providers have prepaid SIM's and you can use the credit on data. The best option right now for a short stay is to get a SIM card at the supermarket from carrefour (which is also a mobile operator) and pay 1 euro per day for unlimited data (there's a minimum of 3e per month).

You pay 10 euros for the SIM preloaded with 10 euros so you can connect a whole week cheaply at 100mb/day (after that speed is reduced to 128k)


Same for Poland, Netherlands, Belgium, Germany - prepaids with data are really cheap these days.


Thanks for the info on this - I'm looking to travel around Europe and need mobile data for work. Was pondering the best solution.


Yup - standard fare for Europe for a long time now... a totally foreign concept in north america.

It'e sasier for operators to not have to deal with contracts and billing and just deal with self-service through supermarkets and hole-in-the-wall cellular shops selling phones, sims, and refill cards than it is to deal with contracts and billing...


He is actually correct. You don't need to SIM switch within Europe. EU implemented laws a couple of years ago limiting roaming prices, so it is actually pretty reasonable to roam within the EU.

Check this wiki, it has a list of prepaid SIM cards that have internet packages for all European countries and more: http://prepaid-wireless-internet-access.wetpaint.com/




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