You’re heading to Scotland and wondering about mobile connectivity on-site. We did a five-week road trip in the country in 2022 with Caroline, aboard Edouard (the campervan), from Edinburgh to the Harris Islands. Let’s just say we had time to test it all. The Free plan upon arrival, French SIM cards on Skye, a phone shop in Edinburgh, two parking apps that refused our cards, a lost drone in Loch Ness, and plenty of Scottish rain (the real stuff, not the myth).
To spare you the same learning curve, we’ve structured everything into three concrete solutions: an EU plan post-Brexit, the local UK SIM we bought in-store, and the Holafly eSIM we would probably choose today if we had to return for a week.
Why you need a real internet solution in Scotland
Let’s be clear for a second: you can do Scotland without data. Pubs still serve whisky even when your iPhone says “No service.” Edinburgh Castle won’t disappear. But in 2026, as soon as you need Maps to get out of Glasgow, the campsite wifi to download an episode, Booking to book a last-minute Caravan Park because the weather turned, or just Google Translate to decode the accent of a local from Ballater (we went there with Maria and Robert at the Italian restaurant, nice in itself, but we struggled for a good part of the evening), you’re going to want some network.
On paper, three options: your French plan roaming post-Brexit (complicated), a UK SIM from EE / Vodafone UK / Three UK / O2 (cheap but takes 30 minutes in-store), or a Holafly eSIM UK activated from France (expensive per gig, but zero effort). The right choice depends on your length of stay, that’s all.
If you’re visiting from continental Europe: the Brexit warning
Quick context for our EU readers crossing the border, because we got caught by this one ourselves. Before 2021, the UK was part of the EU roaming zone and your home plan (Free, Orange, Vodafone DE, Telekom DE, Movistar, whatever) just worked. Since Brexit, it’s every operator for themselves. Free Mobile is one of the rare ones that still keeps the UK in its Europe fair-use bundle (around 25 GB unlimited for the top 4G/5G plan). Most other EU operators charge daily roaming fees, day passes around £5 to £7, or out-of-bundle data at painful per-megabyte rates.
If you’re already on a UK mobile plan, skip the Brexit panic and jump to the next section; that’s where the real Scotland coverage comparison happens.
United Kingdom: does my plan work there?
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇬🇧 United Kingdom |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Série Spéciale 20Go | 20 GB | 30 days | €17.99 | 4G | ✓ Yes |
| Série Spéciale 120Go 5G | 50 GB | 30 days | €20.99 | 4G,5G | ✓ Yes |
| Forfait Voyage 180Go 5G+ | 40 GB | 30 days | €34.99 | 4G,5G | ✗ No |
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇬🇧 United Kingdom |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Série spéciale 20Go 5G | Unlimited | 30 days | €11.99 | 4G,5G | ✓ Yes |
| Série spéciale sans engagement 130Go 5G | Unlimited | 30 days | €14.99 | 4G,5G | ✓ Yes |
| Forfait Sans engagement 200Go 5G SIM Seule | Unlimited | 30 days | €29.99 | 4G,5G | ✗ No |
| Forfait Sans engagement 300Go 5G SIM Seule | Unlimited | 30 days | €54.99 | 5G | ✗ No |
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇬🇧 United Kingdom |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Série Free | Unlimited | 30 days | €8.99 | 4G,5G | ✗ No |
| Forfait Free 5G+ | Unlimited | 30 days | €19.99 | 4G,5G | ✓ Yes |
| Forfait Free Max | Unlimited | 30 days | €29.99 | 4G,5G | ✓ Yes |
Last verified: 26 May 2026
EE, Vodafone UK, Three UK, O2: the landscape of local operators
Four main operators in the UK, and they don’t all have the same profile (we really felt it while testing three SIMs in Caroline’s phone during the road trip).
EE holds the top spot for rural coverage. For a road trip in Scotland that goes through the Highlands, the Outer Hebrides, the Isle of Skye, or the North Coast 500, it’s the default choice. Slightly higher rates than the competition, but you get signal where others drop out.
Vodafone UK plays the urban premium. Solid coverage in major cities (Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen, Inverness), competitive plans. In the deep valleys of the northwest, the signal starts to weaken.
Three UK has long been the king of cheap unlimited data. Rural coverage weaker than EE, but aggressive plans in the city and good value for those sticking to Edinburgh-Glasgow.
O2 comes last on the Highlands side, but offers a public MVNO worth noting: GiffGaff. O2 network behind, no-contract plans starting at £20 for 30 GB per month. Excellent for a budget urban stay.
Use your UK plan abroad thanks to roaming agreements
Buy a local SIM card to benefit from local rates
Activate an eSIM before your departure, without changing your physical card
Advantages and disadvantages of SIM cards for Scotland
| Comparison of internet solutions while traveling | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| International plan | Local SIM card | eSIM | |
| Cost | High | Low | Moderate |
| Purchase | Online (operator option) | On-site, in-store | Online, before departure |
| SIM card change | No | Yes | No |
| Ease of use | Easy | Restrictive | Easy |
| Support in English | Yes | Rarely | Yes |
| Unlimited data | No (limited) | Yes | Yes (depending on offer) |
| Keep your UK number | Yes | No (replaced) | Yes (dual SIM) |
| Flexible stay durations | No (monthly) | Variable (commitment possible) | Yes (1 to 90 days) |
| Top up the plan | Operator customer area | In-store | Via the app |
| Risk of extra charges | Yes | Prepaid: no. Other: yes | No |
How much does a SIM card cost in the UK in 2026
UK plans fluctuate with seasonal promotions. Here are the stable price ranges for 2026, based on what we paid ourselves and the rates displayed in-store this year.
The SIM card itself costs between £5 and £15 with any UK operator. Symbolic, it barely counts.
What really costs is the Pay-as-you-Go plan you put on it.
For one to three weeks, a Pay-as-you-Go with 30 to 50 GB will cost you between £15 and £25 for the month. No commitment, no extra paperwork, just your passport at the time of purchase.
For a month or more, like we did in 2022, aim for a 100 GB SIM per month around £30. That’s what we found in a phone shop in Edinburgh, renewable monthly and cancellable anytime. For five weeks of road trip, it cost us three times less than an equivalent Holafly eSIM.
For very tight budgets, GiffGaff offers 30 GB for £20 per month. O2 network, so average rural coverage, but unbeatable for an urban stay.
The Holafly UK eSIM, in comparison, ranges from €19 for 5 days unlimited to about €60 for 30 days unlimited. More expensive per gig than a local UK SIM, but zero waiting time, zero searching for a shop.
Here’s the updated numerical overview of the British SIM plans available locally (they obviously work in Scotland, it’s the same country on the telecom side):
United Kingdom: local SIM cards available for your stay
Very popular MVNO using O2 network. No stores (all online), but SIM cards sold everywhere (Tesco, Sainsbury's, Poundland). Very flexible and contract-free.
Very solid number 2 in Scotland. Good penetration in small towns. Offers 'O2 Priority' perk (free coffee, discounts) even to prepaid customers.
The best network for rural Scotland (Highlands, Skye, NC500). If planning hiking or road-tripping far from cities, this is the #1 choice for safety and signal.
King of cheap unlimited data. Excellent in Edinburgh/Glasgow, but warning: coverage drops drastically once off main roads in the Highlands.
| Carrier | Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
giffgaff
|
Monthly Plan 20GB Reco | 20 GB | 30 days |
€12.00 (10 GBP) |
4G,5G | Supermarkets (SIM purchase)... |
|
Three UK
|
Data Pack 25GB | 25 GB | 30 days |
€12.00 (10 GBP) |
4G,5G | Supermarkets, Stores Three |
|
O2 UK
|
Big Bundle 40GB Reco | 40 GB | 30 days |
€18.00 (15 GBP) |
4G,5G | Stores O2, Supermarkets, Ai... |
|
EE
|
Pack 50GB Reco | 50 GB | 30 days |
€24.00 (20 GBP) |
4G,5G | Stores EE, Supermarkets, WH... |
|
EE
|
Pack 100GB | 100 GB | 30 days |
€36.00 (30 GBP) |
4G,5G | Stores EE |
|
O2 UK
|
Big Bundle 100GB | 100 GB | 30 days |
€36.00 (30 GBP) |
4G,5G | Stores O2 |
|
Three UK
|
Unlimited Data Pack | Unlimited | 30 days |
€42.00 (35 GBP) |
5G | Stores Three, Supermarkets,... |
Last verified: 26 May 2026
Buy your SIM card on-site or in advance from the UK?
Three main options for getting data in Scotland. Our field report after testing them all more or less thoroughly.
The QR code arrives by email right after the purchase. You scan it, save the eSIM in your phone’s profiles, and you can keep it deactivated until you board the plane. Once in Edinburgh, you switch to it with two clicks. Compatible with iPhone XS and newer, Samsung Galaxy S20 and newer, Pixel 3 and newer.
Cost: £19 to £80 depending on the duration. Code LAPLANETEDECARO for -5% discount.
The ideal traveler profile: short stay (less than two weeks), desire for zero friction upon arrival, need to keep your UK number active for banking SMS.
The cheapest option if you stay more than two weeks, without a doubt. We personally found a 100 GB per month plan for £30 with no commitment at a phone store in Edinburgh, which covered our five-week road trip for the price of two weeks of eSIM. Required documents: passport. EE, Vodafone UK, Three UK, and O2 stores are everywhere in the city center, as well as MVNOs like GiffGaff.
Cost: £15 to £30 per month depending on the chosen plan, with no commitment.
The ideal traveler profile: long stay (more than two weeks), comfortable with English in-store, ready to invest 30 minutes on the first day.
Intermediate solution for travelers who want to share a connection between phone, tablet, and laptop. Rental from the UK before departure, or purchase on-site. Battery rarely lasts more than one intensive day.
Cost: £5 to £10 per day for rental from the UK, £30 to £50 for purchase on-site + local SIM.
The ideal traveler profile: family or couple traveling while working remotely, needing a stable shared connection from Edouard.
Holafly UK: our honest opinion
To be transparent: our 2022 road trip in Scotland was done with a physical UK SIM for £30 for 100 GB per month, purchased in Edinburgh. Not with Holafly. For five weeks in a van, it was unbeatable budget-wise.
But today, if we had to return for two weeks with Caroline, we would not hesitate to go for the Holafly UK eSIM. Why this turnaround? Because for short stays, the £10 or £20 saved with a local SIM is not worth the half-day spent searching for a store on the first day. And the administrative friction of a physical SIM in an English-speaking territory is not negligible for those who are not comfortable with business English.
The concrete benefits of the Holafly eSIM for your stay:
- online purchase in five minutes from your couch, promo code immediately applied
- activation the day before departure, effective switch upon landing
- arriving in Edinburgh or Glasgow already connected, Maps functional as soon as you exit passport control
- keeping your UK number active on the second profile of the chip (useful for banking SMS and 2FA)
- end of eSIM upon expiration without any action required
Our honest recommendation: Holafly eSIM for 3 to 14 days, local UK SIM beyond that. If you’re hesitating, go read the pricing grid below and then make your choice.
Network coverage in Scotland: where it works, where it struggles
Five weeks on the Scottish roads taught us a few things about network quality by region.
Good 4G coverage
- Edinburgh, Glasgow, Inverness, Aberdeen, Dundee, Stirling: 4G everywhere, 5G in some newer neighborhoods.
- Motorways M8, M9, A9, A90: stable signal from north to south.
- East coast up to John o’Groats: decent 4G on the main road.
- Highland towns (Ullapool, Durness, Portree): 4G in the city center, 3G on the roads.
Random coverage
- Isle of Skye (outside Portree): very intermittent 4G, we tested our French SIMs upon arrival and none had signal, forcing us to sleep by the national road.
- Outer Hebrides (Harris, Lewis, Uist): signal drops depending on the valley. EE is the only one that holds up pretty much everywhere.
- NC500 west section (Durness, Lochinver, Ullapool): alternating 4G and 2G, dead zones of 20 to 30 km in places.
- Glens (Etive, Coe, Affric): you lose signal between two peaks, not a problem with offline maps.
Our experience: the £30 SIM from Edinburgh, the lost drone, and Skye without signal
We enter the part where we really tell the story.
The UK SIM 100 GB for £30. Arriving in Edinburgh in July 2022, we were looking for an internet solution for Edouard. Headed to the city center, tested two or three phone stores (the sellers were nice too). We ended up with a 100 GB per month SIM for £30, no commitment, renewable monthly, passport required. It became our best purchase of the trip: perfect coverage in the city, great speed on the roads, and we managed the five weeks without touching Caroline’s Free plan (which we kept as a backup for the UK number).
The parking app in Edinburgh that refuses the French card. A small administrative hiccup we didn’t see coming: we found an authorized camper parking in Edinburgh, not too expensive, except that the payment app on-site politely refused all our French cards. Stuck in the middle, we had to run to find a real ticket machine with a cone of coins. Keeping cash and a UK card if possible has become a firm rule for our trips to the UK since 2022 (and it’s also a discreet collateral effect of Brexit that no one mentions in the guides).
Skye and the blackout of French SIMs. After the central Highlands, we took the ferry to Skye from Mallaig. Upon arrival, we pulled out the phone to open Maps and find a sleeping spot. The two French SIMs we had kept active for safety: zero signal. No Booking, no Maps, no messages. Fortunately, the local UK SIM in Caroline’s phone was working, so we managed. Without it, we would have been sleeping by the main road with a paper guide (yes, we have one in Edouard, we’re old school like that).
The drone and the euro-pound rate. A story not really related to data but revealing of the UK cost context: we lost our drone in Loch Ness (the wind took it, it landed in the water, and we never recovered it). In Inverness, we went to buy a new one, and the seller explained that electronics in the UK were marked up by about 30 percent due to the euro-pound rate and Brexit. Budget blown. For your trip, don’t count on UK purchases to save money: come with your complete gear from Britain.
The midges of the Outer Hebrides. Bonus vanlife: in Little Lochroom and on the Isle of Harris, the midges (the tiny biting flies from the lochs and bogs) trapped us in Edouard. A time or two, we couldn’t even get out because there were so many outside. During those hours of captivity in the van, having data on the phone makes a difference. The EE coverage that holds on the islands is worth its price.
SIM card and eSIM in Scotland: your questions
How much does a SIM card cost in the UK in 2026?
Expect to pay £10 to £30 for a Pay-as-you-Go SIM at EE, Vodafone UK, Three UK, or O2. We personally found a UK SIM with 100GB per month for £30 with no contract in a shop in Edinburgh, renewable monthly, perfect for our campervan road trip. MVNOs like GiffGaff (which uses the O2 network) go down to £20 per month for 30GB. The Holafly eSIM UK ranges from €19 for unlimited use over 5 days to about €60 for 30 days, with promo code LAPLANETEDECARO for 5 percent off.
Does my EU plan (Free, Orange, Vodafone DE, Telekom DE, etc.) work in Scotland since Brexit?
Not like before. Before Brexit (2021), the UK was part of the Europe zone with roaming under EU conditions. Since then, each operator has its own policy: Free Mobile (FR) is one of the rare EU operators that keeps the UK in its Europe fair-use bundle (around 25 GB unlimited). Most other EU operators apply daily roaming fees or per-MB charges, but conditions may change. most other EU carriers (Orange FR, Vodafone DE, Telekom DE, Movistar) charge specific UK travel passes at £5-£10 per day or £10-£20 per week. Few EU operators include the UK in their standard EU bundle post-Brexitts standard plan. Check the pricing sheet before departure: what was valid yesterday may not necessarily be valid today.
EE, Vodafone UK, Three UK, O2: which operator has the best coverage in the Highlands?
EE has the best rural coverage in the UK, including the Highlands, the Isle of Skye, the Outer Hebrides, and the north coast of the NC500. It is the safest choice for a vanlife road trip that goes through remote areas. Vodafone UK and Three UK are solid in the city (Edinburgh, Glasgow, Inverness, Aberdeen) but drop out faster in the mountains. O2 is last in rural coverage. On Skye and some valleys in the Highlands, even EE loses signal in places, so plan for offline maps for GPS.
eSIM Holafly UK vs local physical SIM: which one to choose?
The Holafly eSIM is simpler: purchase from the UK, activation before boarding, no paperwork, no store, keeps your home number in parallel. But more expensive per gig (~£60 for 30 days unlimited). The physical UK SIM in store in Edinburgh or Inverness is cheaper over time: £30 for 100 GB per month with no commitment, we verified it on site. If you are going for less than 10 days, take the Holafly eSIM. If you are going for more than 2 weeks, go to the store upon arrival (it takes 30 minutes and you save £30-50).
Is there network coverage on the Isle of Skye, the Outer Hebrides, and the NC500?
Skye and Hebrides: very limited network, even with EE. On Skye, we tested our SIMs upon arrival (we were on French operators at the time), none were working. Local UK SIMs (EE, Vodafone UK) generally work on the main roads, lose signal as soon as you move away while hiking or at the beach. NC500 (North Coast 500): intermittent coverage, okay in the villages (Ullapool, Durness, John o'Groats), dead zones in the interior sections and the northwest coast. Plan to use Maps.me or Organic Maps offline, and download the Google Maps for each region the night before when in covered areas.
Has Brexit changed the roaming rules in the UK?
Yes. Since 2021, the UK is no longer in the EU zone for roaming. Each UK operator has its own policy: Some EU operators (like Free Mobile in France) keep the UK in their Europe fair-use bundle, but some operators charge pay-as-you-go beyond a monthly quota. For travelers frequently going to the UK: check the pricing conditions before each trip as operators regularly adjust. Conversely, UK travelers in France often have limits of £20 per GB beyond the included caps, the famous Brexit fair-use cap.
Is my phone eSIM compatible for the UK?
All iPhones since the XS (2018), Samsung Galaxy S20 and newer, Google Pixel 3 and newer are eSIM compatible. To check: dial *#06# on your phone, if you see an EID in addition to the IMEI, you have eSIM. Otherwise, your phone only supports the physical SIM and you will need to use a local UK SIM. The key is that the eSIM must be activatable without SIM unlocking, so if your iPhone is locked to a non-UK operator with carrier locking, the third-party eSIM may be rejected.
How many GB of data to plan for 1 week in Scotland?
For regular use (GPS Maps, WhatsApp, Instagram photos, restaurant searches, camping reservations), count on 8 to 15 GB for 7 days in Scotland. GPS consumes quite a bit in mountainous areas where maps often reload. If you plan to stream or work remotely from the van, go for at least 30 GB. The Holafly eSIM UK is unlimited so no calculations needed. With a local UK physical SIM from EE or Three UK, take 50 or 100 GB per month as a default, it's rarely more expensive than the 20 GB plans and you have complete peace of mind.
To go further: our other SIM card guides by destination
If your trip to Scotland is a stop on a larger European tour, here are the other countries where we tested our SIM cards in immersion. Same approach, same feedback without pretense.
Conclusion: what we honestly recommend
The executive summary to save time:
For a short trip (3 to 14 days), eSIM Holafly UK with code LAPLANETEDECARO. You activate it in five minutes from your couch, -5% discount, you arrive in Scotland already connected.
For a long road trip (two weeks or more), visit a UK operator store upon arrival in Edinburgh or Glasgow. Expect to pay £20 to £30 per month for 30 to 100 GB without commitment. Thirty minutes in-store on the first day, then you forget about it.
For Free Mobile subscribers on a short stay with moderate usage: your plan may hold up thanks to the UK remaining in Free’s Europe zone, check your pricing sheet before boarding.
And for those going in a van or camper: download your maps offline before you leave, because in the deep valleys and on Skye, your GPS will thank you (and so will Caroline, because the organizational rationality comes from her in our duo).
Do you have a question we haven’t covered in this article? Ask it in the comments, and we’ll reply as soon as we can. And if you return from a Scotland road trip with your own feedback on the operators, share it in the comments too, it’s valuable for anyone preparing for their departure.
Safe travels in Scotland (the sweater, hiking shoes, and midge repellent for the Outer Hebrides is the trinity we remember from the five weeks Caroline and I spent).
PS: if you find yourself in Edinburgh with an iPhone locked to a French SIM and zero data because your plan doesn’t cover the UK, rush to the nearest EE or Vodafone UK store in the center. Expect 20 to 30 minutes, and you’ll walk out with a Pay-as-you-Go 30 GB for £20. That’s what we did ourselves (with a bit more luxury on the 100 GB), and it’s what we would do again tomorrow faster thanks to Holafly.