Last updated: 2026-06-19
Best eSIM for Tunisia (2026)
Tunisia has solid mobile infrastructure where travelers actually go — fast 4G across the coastal tourist belt, newly launched 5G in the cities, and three competitive operators. The catch is the south: coverage is excellent in Tunis, Sousse, Hammamet, Monastir and Djerba, but it collapses to nothing once you leave the highways heading into the Sahara. Choosing the right eSIM is less about price and more about matching your plan to your route.
Tunisia is francophone and Arabic-speaking. This guide is in English (the site auto-translates to French and Arabic), but if you're heading off the coast it helps to have a translation app and offline maps ready, since signage and staff outside the resort zones are mostly in French and Arabic.
Tunisia eSIM Prices vs Airalo (2026)
eSIM-Now's Tunisia data plans undercut Airalo at every size. These are 30-day, single-country plans:
| Data (30 days) | eSIM-Now | Airalo | You Save |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5GB | $9.34 | $12.00 | 22% |
| 10GB | $14.27 | $20.00 | 29% |
| 20GB | $22.98 | $31.50 | 27% |
Airalo's published USD prices for 30-day, single-country Tunisia plans (2026). Smaller bundles (1–3GB) and per-day options are on the Tunisia plans page, which always shows live rates. Prices may change — check before you buy.
Why eSIM-Now for Tunisia
Beyond undercutting Airalo on price, here's why an eSIM-Now plan is a good way to get online in Tunisia:
- Instant QR delivery — buy before you fly, receive your QR code by email in seconds, and install it at home on WiFi. You land connected.
- No local SIM registration — physical Tunisian SIMs require in-store passport registration. A travel eSIM skips that entirely.
- No passport handover — you never hand your ID to a kiosk or sign a local contract. See our guide to anonymous eSIMs with no KYC.
- Runs on Ooredoo, Tunisia's largest network — eSIM-Now connects to Ooredoo Tunisia on 5G (our current routing; partners can change without notice), so you're on the same towers powering the country's most widely recognized coverage.
- Data-only simplicity — no Tunisian phone number to manage; WhatsApp, maps, and calling apps all run over data.
- One eSIM, 140+ countries — the same account and app work across your next trips, not just Tunisia.
For current data bundles and durations, see Tunisia plans →.
How Much Data Do You Need in Tunisia?
Most resorts and hotels along the coast have WiFi, but it's often slow and unreliable, so mobile data is your real lifeline — especially for navigation and messaging. Typical daily use:
- Maps & navigation — Google Maps works fine; download offline areas for the south (~100MB/day)
- WhatsApp — the default messaging app for locals and most businesses (~50MB/day)
- Translation apps — handy outside the resort zones where French/Arabic dominate (~30MB/day)
- Social media & photos — sharing medina and desert shots (~200-500MB/day)
- Maps offline downloads — a one-time hit before any desert trip (~100-300MB once)
Our rule of thumb: - Long weekend on the coast (Tunis or Sousse): a small bundle covers maps and messaging - One to two weeks across the coastal belt: a mid-size bundle for daily browsing and navigation - Heavy use, tethering, or a desert excursion with downloads: a larger bundle so offline maps and backups don't drain it
Pick the size that fits your trip on the Tunisia plans page, which always shows live pricing.
Coverage in Tunisia
Tunisia's 4G reaches the large majority of the population — concentrated in the cities and the coastal belt where travelers actually go — and all three operators perform well there. Here's what to expect region by region:
| Area | Coverage | Speed |
|---|---|---|
| Tunis (Carthage, La Marsa, Sidi Bou Said) | Excellent | 5G/4G, ~20-60 Mbps |
| Sousse & Monastir (Sahel coast) | Excellent | 4G, some 5G |
| Hammamet & Nabeul (Cap Bon) | Strong | 4G |
| Djerba (Houmt Souk, Midoun, resort zone) | Good | 4G, moderate-good |
| Sfax & eastern coast | Good | 4G, moderate-good |
| Kairouan & interior towns | Town-centric | 4G in town, 3G/patchy on roads |
| Tozeur & Nefta (oases / Chott el-Jerid) | In-town only | 3G/4G in town, none on salt flats |
| Douz, Matmata, Tataouine (desert gateways) | Intermittent | Low; nothing off the highway |
| Deep Sahara (Ksar Ghilane, Grand Erg Oriental) | None | Fully offline |
| Mountains / northwest (Ain Draham, Tabarka) | OK on roads/towns | Moderate; valley dead spots |
| Rail (SNCFT coastal line; TGM Tunis-Marsa) | Good on coastal corridor | Variable while moving |
Sources: Internet Society Pulse (TN); Opensignal Mobile Network Experience Tunisia (Sept 2024 & Sept 2025); operator network-coverage pages; nPerf crowdsourced map. Coverage and 5G footprints expand continuously and may change without notice.
eSIM-Now connects to Ooredoo Tunisia on 5G — the country's largest operator (our current routing; partners can change without notice) — for strong practical coverage across the populated parts of the country. As with every consumer network, no eSIM covers the open desert.
Tunisia's Mobile Carriers Compared
Tunisia has three operators, and they're genuinely competitive — your choice barely matters on the coast but can matter at the edges of the network.
| Carrier | Strength | Speed (Opensignal, 2024) | 5G |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ooredoo Tunisia | Largest network; best all-around default for cities and the coast | Mid-range overall; ~20+ Mbps on 4G | Launched early 2025 (700 MHz + 3.5 GHz), city-focused |
| Tunisie Telecom | Fastest reported downloads; strongest claimed rural/remote 4G footprint | Fastest of the three; ~30 Mbps on 4G | Launched early 2025, city-focused |
| Orange Tunisia | Best reported reach into the deep south / desert fringe | Slightly behind on speed; ~20 Mbps on 4G | Launched early 2025, city-focused |
Sources: Opensignal Mobile Network Experience Tunisia (2024) for relative speed/experience rankings; operator 5G launch announcements (early 2025) via trade press such as Developing Telecoms / Connecting Africa. Speed figures are approximate and move quarter to quarter. Self-reported remote-coverage claims are carrier figures, not independently verified.
Ooredoo Tunisia is among the largest operators by subscribers and the network most travel eSIMs ride on by default. It rated strongly in Opensignal's Tunisia reporting for coverage and experience — the safe all-around pick for city and coastal travel.
Tunisie Telecom, the state-owned incumbent, posted some of the fastest download speeds in Opensignal's recent Tunisia reporting and claims the deepest rural footprint (its near-total-coverage figures are carrier claims that mean populated towns, not the open desert). Good for travelers heading into smaller interior towns.
Orange Tunisia sat slightly behind on Opensignal speed metrics but is the operator reported to hold marginal 3G furthest out toward the Saharan fringe. As part of the global Orange group, it's also a familiar brand for European travelers.
Which Network Do Travel eSIMs Use in Tunisia?
This is where it pays to check the fine print, because the underlying carrier shapes your coverage. Based on provider disclosures and independent testing as of 2026 (carriers may change without notice):
| Provider | Reported Network | Confidence |
|---|---|---|
| eSIM-Now | Ooredoo Tunisia (5G) | Confirmed |
| Airalo | Ooredoo Tunisia | Disclosed |
| Holafly | Tunisie Telecom | Disclosed |
| Ubigi | Orange Tunisia (3G/4G) | Disclosed |
| Nomad | Ooredoo + Orange (multi-network) | Reported |
| Saily | Not publicly disclosed — treat as unknown | Unknown |
Sources: provider product pages (Airalo, Holafly, Ubigi, Nomad, Saily) and esimdb, accessed 2026. Carrier-to-eSIM mappings change frequently; verify on the provider's own page or with support right before you buy.
Most travel eSIMs for Tunisia connect to one or more of the three major carriers above. Saily does not publish its Tunisia carrier, so we won't assert a specific mapping — third-party reviews only describe "a Tunisian carrier with solid 4G in Tunis/Sousse" without naming it. If the network matters for your route, confirm with the provider before purchase.
Tunisia-Specific Tips
Buy and install before you fly
Physical local SIMs require in-store passport registration in Tunisia. Travel eSIMs skip that step entirely — install your QR at home on WiFi and land connected. Remember your eSIM is data-only: no Tunisian phone number and no SMS, but WhatsApp and calling apps work over data.
Carry a passport, not just an ID card
From 1 January 2025, EU and European visitors can no longer enter Tunisia on a national ID card — you need a passport valid for at least three months. This is an entry rule, not a connectivity one, but it's commonly missed.
Download offline maps before any desert trip
Tozeur, Douz, Matmata, Chott el-Jerid and every desert track lose signal quickly. Download the whole south as an offline area in Google Maps (or use Organic Maps / Maps.me) before you leave the coast. Do not rely on any eSIM for navigation once you're past the highway towns.
Treat the deep desert as fully offline
For desert excursions, assume no coverage off the highway — no consumer network or travel eSIM reaches the open Sahara. Share your itinerary with someone before you go, and rely on your tour operator (many carry satellite phones) rather than your phone for emergencies.
Match your eSIM to your route
City and coast travelers are fine on any network — Ooredoo via Airalo is the common default. If you want the strongest reported remote/desert-edge coverage, an Orange-based plan (Ubigi) or a multi-network plan (Nomad) gives a fallback. In the shadowed valleys of the northwest, a multi-network eSIM also helps.
Don't buy expecting 5G everywhere
5G launched in February 2025 but is still concentrated in Tunis and the main cities, and it isn't guaranteed on travel eSIMs. Plan around solid 4G — which is what actually carries you across the coastal belt.
WhatsApp is the default
WhatsApp is how locals and most businesses communicate; FaceTime, Telegram, and Messenger also work over data. There's no current evidence of a nationwide VoIP or WhatsApp-call block in Tunisia — when a call fails in the south, it's coverage gaps, not censorship.
How to Set Up eSIM for Tunisia
- Purchase a Tunisia plan from eSIM-Now
- Receive your QR code by email instantly
- Install at home before departure (Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM → scan QR) — see iPhone setup
- Download essential apps and offline maps while on home WiFi: WhatsApp, a translation app, and offline map areas for the south
- Land at Tunis-Carthage, Enfidha-Hammamet, or Djerba-Zarzis — your eSIM connects automatically
Not sure your phone supports eSIM? Check the eSIM-compatible phones list. For a deeper, region-by-region breakdown, see our Tunisia network coverage guide.
Official Coverage Maps
Want to check coverage for your exact route before you buy? These official and crowdsourced maps are the most reliable sources:
- Ooredoo Tunisia — ooredoo.tn coverage map
- Orange Tunisia — orange.tn coverage map
- Tunisie Telecom — geo.tunisietelecom.tn coverage map and the mobile coverage page
- GSMA Network Coverage Maps — global map including Tunisia
- nPerf — crowdsourced 3G/4G/5G map for Tunisia (all operators)
Get Connected in Tunisia
Tunisia rewards a little planning: stay on the coast and any major eSIM keeps you online comfortably; head into the south and your most important tool isn't a faster plan but a fully downloaded offline map. An eSIM-Now Tunisia plan installs in minutes, needs no SIM registration or passport handover, and connects to Ooredoo Tunisia on 5G — the country's largest network (our current routing; partners can change without notice) — so you can step off the plane already online. Check current data bundles and durations on the Tunisia plans page, and for the full region-by-region picture see our Tunisia network coverage guide.
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