Between the Pyramids of Giza, a cruise on the Nile, and a week by the Red Sea, Egypt is a dream destination. But once you’re there, the question of connectivity arises quickly, and it’s less obvious than it seems (because no, your UK plan won’t necessarily follow you, and the WiFi from the all-inclusive resort, we’ll talk about that).
Good news: we’ve thoroughly researched the subject for you, operator by operator, from Cairo to Aswan via Hurghada, to save you either a painful roaming bill or a half-hour queue at the SIM counter with your passport and IMEI number to provide.
We will review the three main options for having internet in Egypt, give you the real prices, honestly tell you where it works and where it struggles (because between downtown Cairo and a diving boat off Marsa Alam, it’s day and night), and help you save time and a few dozen euros along the way.
Why you need a real internet solution in Egypt
Let’s be clear for a second: yes, you can do Egypt relying on hotel WiFi. However, in practice, as soon as you step out of your room, data becomes quickly indispensable. GPS to avoid getting lost in Cairo’s crazy traffic, Uber or Bolt for a taxi without haggling over the price three times, Google Translate to decipher a menu in Arabic, booking a last-minute excursion to the Valley of the Kings, and of course, the photo of the sunrise over the Nile to post directly on Instagram.
You have three options: use your UK plan while roaming, buy a local SIM card on-site from Vodafone Egypt, Orange, or e&, or get a Holafly eSIM Egypt from home before you leave. We’ll go through them all, from the most tricky to the most practical (and you’ll see, the first option rarely brings good surprises here).
Solution 1: will your UK plan actually work in Egypt?
Let’s be blunt: Egypt is not Europe. It sits in every UK network’s pricey Rest-of-World zone, so it’s never part of your standard allowance. Whether you’re covered at a sane price depends entirely on your network and whether you’ve added a travel pass (exactly the nuance nobody explains before you board a five-hour flight to the Red Sea).
O2. The cleanest of the big four. Egypt is in the O2 Travel Inclusive Zone on many plans, and otherwise the O2 Travel bolt-on covers it at around £7 a day. A long weekend in Cairo stays reasonable.
EE. A Roam Abroad pass applies to Egypt at roughly £7.50 a day, or £37.50 for a week. New plans need the add-on, there’s no free inclusion, so budget for it before you fly.
Three. Egypt is a Go Roam Around the World destination. The day pass is around £8 a day for anyone who joined or upgraded on or after 18 December 2025 (older terms can be as low as £2 a day), with a 12GB fair-use cap. A Data Passport add-on (about £5 for 24h, unlimited) can work out cheaper on heavy days.
Vodafone. A Global Roaming day rate covers Egypt at roughly £7.86 a day (£6 on older pre-August 2021 plans). Go without a pass and you’re on pay-as-you-go at about £0.12 per MB, which is roughly £123 a gig.
The MVNO trap. Tesco Mobile has no Egypt pass and bills up to £5 per MB; Giffgaff charges 10p per MB unless you buy a travel add-on; Voxi’s inclusive roaming generally stops at Europe. If you’re on one of these, you’re the ideal eSIM customer.
Do the maths and it’s brutal: a daily pass at £7 to £8 across a two-week Red Sea holiday is £70 to £112, against roughly £8 for a local Vodafone Egypt SIM or £15 to £28 for an unlimited Holafly eSIM. Roaming can rescue a three-day city break; for a proper holiday, it loses every time.
You’ll find the breakdown of UK networks and their Egypt coverage just below, so you can see at a glance whether yours is sorted.
Egypt: does my plan work there?
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇪🇬 Egypt |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| EU Roaming 7-Day Pass Recommended | 50 GB | 7 days | €17.90 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Zone 1 Weekly Pass Recommended | 50 GB | 7 days | €29.85 | 4G | ✗ No |
| EU Roaming Daily Pass | 50 GB | 1 day | €3.10 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Zone 1 Daily Pass | 50 GB | 1 day | €5.97 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Zone 2 Daily Pass | 50 GB | 1 day | €8.96 | 4G | ✓ Yes |
| Zone 3 Daily Pass | 512 MB | 1 day | €8.96 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Zone 4 Daily Pass | 10 MB | 1 day | €17.92 | 4G | ✗ No |
| EU Roaming 12-Day Pass | 50 GB | 12 days | €25.70 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Zone 2 Weekly Pass | 50 GB | 7 days | €44.78 | 4G | ✓ Yes |
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇪🇬 Egypt |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Go Roam in Europe Recommended | 12 GB | 1 day | €3.29 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Go Roam Around the World | 12 GB | 1 day | €9.56 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Go Roam Around the World Extra | 12 GB | 1 day | €9.56 | 4G | ✓ Yes |
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇪🇬 Egypt |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 8-Day Europe Pass Recommended | 25 GB | 8 days | €19.12 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Euro Roam Daily | 25 GB | 1 day | €3.29 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Global Roam Daily (Zone C) | 25 GB | 1 day | €9.56 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Global Roam Daily (Zone D) | 25 GB | 1 day | €9.56 | 4G | ✓ Yes |
| 15-Day Europe Pass | 25 GB | 15 days | €25.10 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇪🇬 Egypt |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Europe Zone (included) Recommended | 25 GB | 30 days | €0.00 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Data Roaming Bolt-On Zone 1 (1 GB) | 1 GB | 30 days | €7.17 | 4G | ✗ No |
| O2 Travel Bolt On | Unlimited | 1 day | €8.37 | 4G | ✓ Yes |
| Data Roaming Bolt-On Zone 2 (1 GB) | 1 GB | 30 days | €10.76 | 4G | ✓ Yes |
Last verified: 26 June 2026
Bottom line on UK roaming: fine for a quick city break if your network has an Egypt pass, painful otherwise, and a non-starter on most MVNOs. For everyone else, the two real solutions are below.
Vodafone Egypt, Orange, e&, WE: the panorama of local operators
Four operators share the country, and the choice really changes your experience, especially if you plan to move between Cairo, the Red Sea, and Upper Egypt.
Vodafone Egypt is number one, and by far the safest choice for a trip. It’s the operator with the best coverage in the country: along the Nile Valley (essential for a Luxor-Aswan cruise), throughout the Red Sea coast, and even in more remote areas. It’s also the largest 5G network, although it remains limited to major cities. If your itinerary takes you out of the resort, it’s with Vodafone that you’ll have the fewest bad surprises.
Orange Egypt is the good outsider. Solid in the city and on tourist sites, often a bit cheaper than Vodafone, but slightly less consistent as you move away from urban areas. A useful detail: it’s the network on which the Holafly Egypt eSIM operates.
e& (formerly Etisalat) is the budget challenger. Its Hi Traveler plans are generous in call minutes and decent in tourist areas, but the signal weakens in isolated spots.
WE, the public operator, is the cheapest on the market but has the weakest coverage. To be avoided if you’re doing a Nile cruise or a tour; acceptable if you stay in Cairo.
That’s the overview. Now, the details of the advantages and disadvantages.
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 Egypt
| 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 Egypt in June 2026
We’ll give you the ballpark figures because prices fluctuate and tourist plans change names regularly (but the ranges remain quite stable).
The tourist SIM card itself is almost free: it’s the data plan that matters. And good news, Egypt is one of the cheapest countries for that.
At Vodafone Egypt, the flagship tourist plan is around 505 Egyptian pounds (about £9) for 30 GB plus call minutes, valid for one month. You can also find smaller plans (10 GB for about £5) or larger ones (39 GB for around £16). Orange, e& and WE offer comparable deals in the same range.
Honestly, for a long stay, it’s unbeatable in price. Except there’s a catch: the paperwork upon arrival, and that’s where Egypt has a particularity since 2026, we’ll get back to that shortly.
Here’s a current overview of local SIM cards you can buy on-site at Vodafone Egypt, Orange or e&, with their current plans and prices:
Egypt: local SIM cards available for your stay
Egypt's number one and the safest bet for a trip. Best nationwide coverage: along the Nile valley (Luxor-Aswan cruise), the Red Sea coast (Hurghada, Sharm el-Sheikh) and the desert. The largest 5G network, though still limited to big cities. If you move around, it's the most reliable choice.
Solid in cities and at tourist sites, often a bit cheaper than Vodafone, but less consistent outside urban areas. Worth noting: it's the partner network the Holafly Egypt eSIM runs on.
The budget challenger. Generous Hi Traveler call bundles, fine in cities, but weaker signal in remote areas. Best for trips that stay on the tourist trail.
| Carrier | Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Orange Egypt
|
Orange Holiday 5 Go | — | 30 days |
€2.80 (155 EGP) |
4G | Aeroports CAI/HRG/SSH, bout... |
|
Vodafone Egypt
|
Vodafone Tourist 10 Go | — | 30 days |
€4.70 (255 EGP) |
4G,5G | Aeroports CAI/HRG/SSH, bout... |
|
e& Egypt (Etisalat)
|
e& Hi Traveler 10 Go | — | 30 days |
€6.30 (350 EGP) |
4G | Aeroports CAI/HRG/SSH, bout... |
|
WE
|
WE Traveler 25 Go | — | 30 days |
€8.00 (450 EGP) |
4G | Boutiques WE, aeroports |
|
Orange Egypt
|
Orange Holiday 30 Go | — | 30 days |
€9.00 (505 EGP) |
4G | Aeroports CAI/HRG/SSH, bout... |
|
Vodafone Egypt
|
Vodafone Tourist 30 Go + appels Reco | — | 30 days |
€9.20 (505 EGP) |
4G,5G | Aeroports CAI/HRG/SSH, bout... |
|
e& Egypt (Etisalat)
|
e& Hi Traveler 20 Go | — | 90 days |
€9.50 (525 EGP) |
4G | Aeroports CAI/HRG/SSH, bout... |
|
Vodafone Egypt
|
Vodafone Tourist 39 Go | — | 30 days |
€15.70 (866 EGP) |
4G,5G | Aeroports CAI/HRG/SSH, bout... |
Last verified: 26 June 2026
Buy your SIM card on-site or in advance from the UK?
Three main ways to get mobile internet in Egypt. We’ve scrutinized them all, here’s our honest feedback on each.
No counter at the airport. No passport to present. No IMEI registration to endure after a five-hour flight. You download the eSIM via the email or QR code received after purchase, and you’re connected as soon as you land in Cairo, Hurghada, or Sharm el-Sheikh. Compatible with almost all smartphones since 2018 (iPhone XS+, Galaxy S20+, Pixel 3+).
Cost: £25 to £75 depending on the duration, unlimited. Code LAPLANETEDECARO for -5% discount.
Consider if: you’re leaving for less than two weeks, you don’t want to waste time upon arrival, you want to keep your French number active in parallel.
The cheapest over time, especially beyond two weeks. But behind that, you pay in procedures: passport required, and since 2026, IMEI registration of your phone (an anti-fraud check), which extends the wait at the counter. A significant advantage, however: you get a real Egyptian number, useful for calling a restaurant, a guide, or a driver.
Cost: the card is almost free, the data plan ranges from £5 to £16 depending on the volume.
Consider if: you’re leaving for more than two weeks, you’re comfortable with the procedures, or you need a local number.
An old-school solution that still has its followers, especially in families or groups: you connect your phone, tablet, and computer to the same hotspot. Convenient for sharing a connection, but it’s one more device to carry, charge, and not lose. And the battery rarely lasts a full day of heavy use.
Cost: £5 to £10 per day for rental.
Consider if: you’re traveling with several people, you need to share a stable connection, or you don’t want to mess with the settings of your main smartphone.
Holafly Egypt: why it’s our recommendation for a classic trip
Let’s be honest for a second. On paper, the local Vodafone SIM is cheaper per GB, we won’t deny that. But for a trip of one to two weeks, the financial gain (a few tens of pounds) doesn’t really compensate for the time and hassle upon arrival: finding the right counter, pulling out your passport, registering your IMEI, waiting behind other tired travelers from the same flight.
With Holafly:
- you buy from your couch in the UK before you leave
- you activate in two clicks just before boarding
- you arrive in Egypt already connected, without going through a counter or IMEI registration
- you keep your French number active in parallel (two profiles on the same eSIM chip)
- you return to the UK, the eSIM expires by itself, end of story
One limitation to know, and we prefer to be transparent: connection sharing (hotspot) is restricted, even capped, on the Holafly eSIM. If you plan to connect your computer continuously or share for the whole family, aim for a local SIM or a pocket Wi-Fi. For standard smartphone use, it’s a non-issue.
In short, it’s the solution we recommend to the vast majority of travelers heading to Egypt for one to two weeks. For very long stays or heavy data consumers, the local Vodafone SIM still makes sense.
You just click below to activate your discount and go directly to the Holafly Egypt eSIM plans, with current durations and prices.
Network coverage in Egypt: where it connects, where it struggles
A little field overview, because between a Cairo avenue and a diving boat offshore, the network experience is completely different.
It connects well
- Cairo, Giza, Alexandria: 4G everywhere, 5G in some recent neighborhoods and the New Capital.
- Hurghada, Sharm el-Sheikh, Marsa Alam (tourist areas): decent 4G in resorts and in town.
- Luxor, Aswan and along the Nile: Vodafone follows the river well for most of the journey.
- Major tourist sites (Valley of the Kings, Karnak, Giza): stable 4G.
It struggles
- Nile cruise, between Edfu and Kom Ombo: the signal drops in places, sometimes 3G or nothing for a few kilometers.
- Diving boats and cruises offshore (Red Sea): as soon as you leave the coast, no network at all.
- Desert (oasis, White Desert, road to Abu Simbel): frequent dead zones off the main routes.
- Wi-Fi in all-inclusive resorts: often limited to the lobby, slow, and crowded in the evening.
Nile cruise, resort WiFi, and diving: what to anticipate
Here are three very Egyptian situations that most guides overlook, which can make all the difference depending on your trip.
The Nile cruise (Luxor-Aswan). Good surprise: Vodafone follows the course of the river and works well for a large part of the journey. You can post your photos of the temples and stay reachable most of the time. However, the signal drops in places, particularly between Edfu and Kom Ombo, where you may find yourself on 3G or even with no signal for several kilometers. The WiFi on the boat is often slow, paid, and congested. Conclusion: a local Vodafone SIM or an eSIM is much more reliable than the onboard WiFi to keep in touch between two stops.
The WiFi of Red Sea resorts. This is THE point where you shouldn’t have any illusions. In many all-inclusive resorts in Hurghada and Sharm el-Sheikh, WiFi is limited to the reception or lobby, slow, and completely congested in the evening when everyone connects at the same time. If you plan to video call your family, do some remote work, or simply share your diving photos, don’t rely on it: an eSIM activated upon arrival saves you from frustration.
Diving and offshore excursions. Let’s be clear: as soon as your boat leaves the coast for diving sites (Brothers, Daedalus, offshore reefs), there is no network at all, eSIM or not. It’s physics, not a question of operator. So plan your data especially for the days on land (Hurghada, Marsa Alam, El Gouna), and inform your loved ones that you will be unreachable on diving cruise days. No one has ever regretted giving a heads-up before disappearing for three days on a liveaboard.
In summary: the Holafly eSIM brilliantly covers the classic traveler. The Nile cruise, the local number for long stays, and the need to share for an entire family are cases where a local Vodafone SIM is worth considering, either alone or as a complement.
SIM card and eSIM in Egypt: your questions
Will my UK plan work in Egypt?
It depends on your network and whether you add a travel pass. Egypt sits outside Europe, so it is never part of your free EU roaming. O2 is the cleanest, with Egypt in the O2 Travel Inclusive Zone on many plans (otherwise about 7 pounds a day); EE charges around 7.50 pounds a day, Three around 8 pounds a day (Egypt is a Go Roam Around the World destination), and Vodafone about 7.86 pounds a day. Without a pass, pay-as-you-go runs to roughly 120 pounds a gig on Vodafone, and most MVNOs (Tesco, Giffgaff, Voxi) have no Egypt pass at all. For anything past a couple of days, an unlimited eSIM with code LAPLANETEDECARO is cheaper and simpler.
How much does a local SIM card cost in Egypt?
The SIM card is almost free, it's the data plan that matters, and Egypt is very affordable. At Vodafone Egypt, the featured tourist plan is around 505 Egyptian pounds (about £9) for 30 GB plus call minutes, valid for one month. Orange, e& and WE offer similar deals ranging from £5 to £16. In comparison, the Holafly eSIM for Egypt ranges from about £25 for 5 days to £87 for 30 days, unlimited, with the code VANTOUR for a 5 percent discount.
Vodafone, Orange, e& or WE: which operator to choose?
Vodafone Egypt is the safest choice: best coverage in the country, the only truly reliable along the Nile (Luxor-Aswan cruise) and on the Red Sea coast. Orange Egypt is good in the city and a bit cheaper, and it's the network of the Holafly eSIM. e& (Etisalat) is the budget challenger, decent in tourist areas. WE is the cheapest but has the weakest coverage: avoid it if you're moving around. Simple rule: if your trip goes beyond the major cities, take Vodafone.
Do you need a passport to buy a SIM in Egypt?
Yes, the passport is mandatory at check-in. And since 2026, a new feature: the registration of your phone's IMEI has become mandatory (an anti-fraud check). Specifically, purchasing at the counter may take a little longer and require the address of your hotel. This is one of the strong arguments in favor of the Holafly eSIM, which can be purchased online before departure, without a passport or paperwork upon arrival.
eSIM or local SIM card for Egypt?
For a stay of one to two weeks, the eSIM wins on comfort: you activate it before boarding, you arrive in Cairo or Hurghada already connected, without queues or passport at the counter, and you keep your French number in parallel. The local Vodafone SIM takes the advantage for long stays or for heavy users, as it remains unbeatable on price and gives you a local Egyptian number (useful for calling a restaurant, a guide, or a driver).
Is there network coverage on a Nile cruise?
Overall yes, and it's even one of the pleasant surprises: Vodafone follows the course of the river and works well for a large part of the Luxor-Aswan route. But the signal drops in places, especially between Edfu and Kom Ombo, where you might find yourself on 3G or even without any signal for a few kilometers. The boat's WiFi is often slow, paid, and congested. A local Vodafone SIM or an eSIM remains more reliable than the onboard WiFi to stay reachable between two temples.
Does the WiFi in hotels and resorts in the Red Sea suffice?
Rarely. In many all-inclusive resorts in Hurghada and Sharm el-Sheikh, WiFi is limited to the reception or lobby, slow, and it completely saturates in the evening when everyone connects. If you plan to video call your family, do some work, or simply post your diving photos, don't rely on it: an eSIM or a local SIM activated upon arrival saves you from the frustration of resort WiFi.
How much data should you plan for a week in Egypt?
For typical traveler use (GPS, Maps, translation, social networks, a few video calls), expect around 500 MB to 1 GB per day, or 5 to 10 GB over a week. The Vodafone 30 GB plan easily covers two weeks, and the Holafly eSIM is unlimited, which eliminates the need to calculate if you're streaming or sharing a lot of photos from the beach.
To go further: our other SIM card guides by destination
If Egypt is part of a larger tour of the Mediterranean or the Middle East, we have also written detailed guides with the same method and rigor for other Holafly destinations. Same logic, same real prices, same honest comparison.
Conclusion: what we honestly recommend
There you go, we’ve covered the three solutions. If you want the summary in one sentence: for a classic one to two-week trip in Egypt, get the Holafly eSIM with the code LAPLANETEDECARO, you save -5%, you activate it from home, and you arrive in Cairo or Hurghada already connected, without going through the IMEI registration at the counter.
Before that, one reflex worth a minute: check whether your UK network has a travel pass that genuinely covers Egypt (O2 Travel is the cleanest), because for a two or three day stopover it can do the job. For a proper trip, the Holafly eSIM wins on price and on the airport queue and IMEI registration you skip entirely. And if you are going for a long time or want an Egyptian number, the local Vodafone SIM remains unbeatable in terms of price and reliable throughout the country, from the Nile to the Red Sea.
If you have a question we haven’t covered, ask it in the comments, we’ll take the time to respond. And if you know any other good tips for staying connected in Egypt, share them, it benefits the whole community.
Have a great trip to Egypt, and enjoy (the connection can wait five minutes when you watch the sunset over the Nile from the deck of a felucca).
PS: if you happen to land in Hurghada after a five-hour flight and see the queue at the SIM counter, with the seller asking for your passport and then the IMEI number of your phone, you’ll remember this paragraph. Next time (or this time if you read this in time), you’ll activate your eSIM quietly on the plane, and you’ll head straight to the resort shuttle, looking like a traveler who has anticipated everything.
