A road trip in the Rockies, the Icefields Parkway between Banff and Jasper, a turquoise lake every twenty kilometers, and further on, the skyline of Toronto or Vancouver. Canada is experienced on a grand scale, often behind the wheel, and this is exactly where the question of connectivity becomes real (because between two mountain passes, your GPS and playlist matter as much as a full tank of gas).
Good news: we’ve dug deep into the subject for you, operator by operator, from the city to the valleys where nothing connects, to save you both an unnecessary roaming bill and network outages at the worst moments.
We will therefore review the three main options for having internet in Canada, give you the real prices, honestly tell you where it connects and where it struggles (because between downtown Montreal and a trail parking lot in the Rockies, it’s night and day), and show you the clever trick if your trip combines the United States and Canada.
Why you need a real internet solution in Canada
Let’s be clear for a second: yes, you can rely on hotel and café WiFi. But on a road trip, as soon as you hit the road, data quickly becomes essential. GPS to navigate from Banff to Lake Louise and the Icefields Parkway, booking a camping spot or a slot for a highly sought-after national park, mountain weather that changes in an hour, translation in Quebec when the accent confuses you, and of course the photo of Moraine Lake to post immediately.
Three options are available to you: use your UK plan while roaming, buy a local SIM card on-site from Telus, Bell, or Rogers, or get a Holafly Canada eSIM from home before you leave. We’ll go through them all, and you’ll see, for Canada, the first option is cheaper than you’d expect on the right network.
Solution 1: will your UK plan work in Canada?
Let’s be blunt: Canada isn’t Europe, so free EU roaming doesn’t apply. The good news is that Canada is bundled with the USA in the big networks’ Rest-of-World passes, so it’s not the worst zone. Here’s the operator-by-operator reality:
O2. The O2 Travel Bolt On covers Canada at £4.99/day (unlimited data, 120 minutes, 120 texts), the cheapest of the Big Four. Pay monthly only.
EE. Free roaming in the US and Canada on EE Max plans (your plan allowance, up to 50 GB). On cheaper plans the add-on is around £4.80/day but capped at 500 MB, a real gotcha for road-trippers.
Vodafone. Around £6/day, charged only on the days you actually use it, free on Unlimited Max and Red Entertainment plans.
Three. The Go Roam pass covers the US and Canada at around £5/day on your plan allowance.
Budget MVNOs (Giffgaff, Tesco, Voxi, Lebara). Canada coverage is patchy or absent: Tesco doesn’t include Canada in its free zone, Voxi and Lebara are weak outside the EU, and Giffgaff’s Canada inclusion is unconfirmed. Check in-app, or just plan for an eSIM.
The takeaway: O2 (£4.99) and EE Max (free) are the only genuinely competitive UK-roaming routes. Otherwise a £6/day charge over a two-week Rockies trip is around £84, which the eSIM section easily undercuts.
You’ll find the UK networks and their Canada coverage just below, so you can see at a glance how yours stacks up.
Canada: does my plan work there?
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇨🇦 Canada |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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 | ✓ Yes |
| EU Roaming Daily Pass | 50 GB | 1 day | €3.10 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Zone 1 Daily Pass | 50 GB | 1 day | €5.97 | 4G | ✓ Yes |
| Zone 2 Daily Pass | 50 GB | 1 day | €8.96 | 4G | ✗ No |
| 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 | ✗ No |
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇨🇦 Canada |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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 | 🇨🇦 Canada |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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 | ✓ Yes |
| Global Roam Daily (Zone D) | 25 GB | 1 day | €9.56 | 4G | ✗ No |
| 15-Day Europe Pass | 25 GB | 15 days | €25.10 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇨🇦 Canada |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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 | ✓ Yes |
| 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 | ✗ No |
Last verified: 11 July 2026
Conclusion on the UK plan option: cheapest on O2 (£4.99/day) or free on EE Max, pricier on Three or Vodafone, and always a daily charge. For everyone else, let’s move on to the two real solutions below.
Telus, Bell, Rogers: the landscape of local operators
Three major networks share the country, and the choice really changes your experience, especially if your itinerary takes you outside the big cities.
Telus is the safest choice for a road trip. It’s the operator with the widest coverage in the country, the only one that truly follows you outside the big cities: Rockies, Icefields Parkway, Prairies, Northern Canada. If you plan to stray from the Trans-Canada Highway, it’s with Telus that you’ll have the fewest unpleasant surprises. Its sub-brands Koodo and Public Mobile operate on the same network, cheaper but with a slightly slower activation.
Bell is the good outsider, very close to Telus (the two share part of the rural infrastructure). Excellent in the city and on major routes, solid in the Rockies. It’s also one of the two networks on which the Holafly Canada eSIM operates. Its sub-brands Lucky Mobile and Virgin Plus help lower the bill.
Rogers is the third major player, excellent in the city and on corridors (Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver), a bit weaker in very remote areas. It’s often the cheapest per gigabyte through its prepaid sub-brand Chatr, which regularly offers large promotional volumes. A good choice if you mostly stay in the city.
That’s the overview. Now, the details of the pros and cons.
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
Pros and cons of SIM cards for Canada
| 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 Canada in July 2026
We’ll give you the ballpark figures because prices fluctuate and tourist plans change names regularly (but the ranges remain quite stable).
A physical SIM card costs around ten Canadian dollars (about £7). It’s the data plan on it that counts. And here’s the first surprising truth: Canada is one of the countries where mobile data is the most expensive in the world. Expect around 35 to 50 Canadian dollars (£24 to £34) for a prepaid plan of 4 to 20 GB over a month, unlimited calls within Canada included. The big promotional volumes mainly come through sub-brands like Chatr or Public Mobile.
Second detail that stings: on a local prepaid SIM, the credit and data expire after one month, whether consumed or not. And you need a passport to activate the card at the counter.
Here’s an up-to-date numerical overview of the local SIM cards you can buy on-site from Telus, Bell, or Rogers, along with their current plans and prices:
Canada: local SIM cards available for your stay
The safest bet for a road trip: Telus has the widest coverage in the country, the only one that really holds up outside the big cities (Rockies, Icefields Parkway, Prairies, the North). If your route leaves the Trans-Canada, this is the network to pick. Unlimited Canada-wide calls included. Its Koodo and Public Mobile flanker brands run on the same network, cheaper but slower to activate.
Very good nationwide coverage, close to Telus (the two share part of the rural infrastructure), excellent in cities and on the main corridors, solid in the Rockies. It's one of the two networks the Holafly Canada eSIM runs on. Its low-cost Lucky Mobile and Virgin Plus brands let you cut the bill while staying on Bell's network.
The third major network, excellent in cities and on the corridors (Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver), a bit thinner in very remote areas. Often the cheapest per gigabyte through its Chatr prepaid brand (big promo data) and Fido. A good pick if you stay mostly in cities or want the best data price, less so if you're heading deep into the Rockies valleys.
| Carrier | Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Bell
|
Bell Prepaid 4 Go | — | 30 days |
€24.00 (35 CAD) |
4G,5G | Boutiques Bell, aeroports, ... |
|
Telus
|
Telus Prepaid 2,5 Go | — | 30 days |
€27.00 (40 CAD) |
4G,5G | Boutiques Telus, aeroports,... |
|
Rogers
|
Rogers Prepaid 2,5 Go | — | 30 days |
€27.00 (40 CAD) |
4G,5G | Boutiques Rogers, aeroports... |
|
Telus
|
Telus Prepaid 4,5 Go Reco | — | 30 days |
€30.00 (45 CAD) |
4G,5G | Boutiques Telus, aeroports,... |
|
Rogers
|
Chatr (Rogers) 60 Go | — | 30 days |
€30.00 (45 CAD) |
4G,5G | Boutiques Chatr et depanneu... |
|
Bell
|
Bell Prepaid 20 Go | — | 30 days |
€34.00 (50 CAD) |
4G,5G | Boutiques Bell, aeroports, ... |
Last verified: 11 July 2026
Buy your SIM card on-site or in advance from the UK?
Three main ways to get mobile internet in Canada. We’ve scrutinized them all, here’s our honest feedback on each.
No counter at the airport, no passport to present. You download the eSIM via the email or QR code received after purchase, and you’re connected as soon as you land in Montreal, Toronto, or Vancouver. The Holafly eSIM Canada runs on the Bell and Telus networks, which provide the best coverage in the country. Compatible with almost all smartphones since 2018 (iPhone XS+, Galaxy S20+, Pixel 3+).
Cost: £16 to £75 depending on the duration, unlimited. Code LAPLANETEDECARO for -5% discount.
To consider if: you’re not on O2 Travel or EE Max, you’re leaving for less than a month, you want to arrive connected and keep your UK number.
Interesting for a long stay, and you get a real Canadian number, essential if you’re going on a working holiday, to study or work (an employer or a bank often requires this). But Canadian data remains expensive, the credit expires after one month, and you need a passport to activate the card.
Cost: the card around £6, the data plan from £21 to £30 depending on the volume.
To consider if: you’re staying long, you need a Canadian number, you’re comfortable with the procedures.
A somewhat old-school solution that still has its followers, especially in families or groups: you connect your phone, tablet, and laptop to the same hotspot. Convenient for sharing on a road trip, but it’s one more device to carry, charge, and not lose. And the battery rarely lasts a full day of heavy use.
Cost: £4 to £9 per day for rental.
To 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 Canada: why it’s our recommendation
Let’s be honest for a second. If you’re with Free or RED, your plan already covers Canada and you probably don’t need anything else for a short stay. But for everyone else, especially if you’re chaining several weeks of road trips, the Holafly eSIM solves the issue of expensive data and paperwork in one go.
With Holafly:
- you buy from your couch in the UK before you leave
- you activate in two clicks just before boarding
- you arrive in Canada already connected, without going through a counter
- you run on the Bell and Telus networks, the best coverage in the country
- you keep your UK number active in parallel (two profiles on the same eSIM chip)
- you return to the UK, the eSIM expires automatically, end of story
One limit to know, and we prefer to be transparent: tethering (hotspot) is capped at 1GB per day on the Holafly eSIM. If you plan to connect your laptop constantly or share for the whole family in a van, aim for a local SIM or a pocket Wi-Fi instead. For typical smartphone use, it’s a non-issue.
And if your trip combines the United States and Canada, remember one word: there’s a North America option that covers both countries (and Mexico) on a single data plan, without changing cards at the border. We’ll talk about it right after.
You just click below to activate your discount and go directly to the Holafly Canada eSIM plans, with up-to-date durations and prices.
Network coverage in Canada: where it works, where it struggles
A little field overview, because between an avenue in Toronto and a trail parking lot in the Rockies, the network experience is nothing alike.
It works well
- Toronto, Montreal, Vancouver, Calgary: 4G everywhere, 5G in the centers and recent neighborhoods.
- The Trans-Canada Highway and major routes: continuous coverage with Telus and Bell.
- Banff, Jasper, the gateway towns to the parks: decent 4G in the main towns and campgrounds.
- Niagara, the Quebec-Windsor corridor: dense network, frequent 5G.
It struggles
- The Icefields Parkway: long stretches with no signal at all between Lake Louise and Jasper.
- Valley bottoms and hiking trails: the signal drops as soon as you leave the main road.
- Northern Canada, isolated Prairies, certain parks: frequent dead zones, Telus or nothing.
- Low-cost sub-brands in remote areas: Chatr and company lose signal faster than the parent networks.
Combo USA + Canada and local number: what other guides forget
Here are the two very North American situations that most guides gloss over, and which can change your trip depending on your profile.
The cross-border road trip between the United States and Canada. Many trips combine the two countries: Niagara then New York, or Vancouver then Seattle and the American West. The reflex to avoid is juggling two local SIMs and reconfiguring everything at the border. The right solution is summed up in one word: the North America option. Holafly (like other regional eSIMs) offers a plan that covers the United States, Canada, and Mexico on a single data plan, with automatic switching to the best network in each country. You cross the border without doing anything, without a second roaming. And if you’re on EE Max, good news, US and Canada roaming is already included in your allowance.
The real Canadian number (working holiday, expat, student). This is the point that eSIM comparisons systematically overlook: the Holafly eSIM is data-only, it does not provide a Canadian number. However, if you are going on a Working Holiday Permit, to study, or to settle down, an employer, a bank, or a landlord will often require a local number (a foreign number inspires less trust on a Canadian CV). The clever trick: keep your UK number on a chip or eSIM, and get a prepaid local SIM from an economical sub-brand (Public Mobile, Koodo, Fido, Fizz, Lucky Mobile) for your Canadian number. An unlocked phone compatible with dual SIM, and you have the best of both worlds.
In summary: the Holafly eSIM brilliantly covers the classic traveler and the road tripper, the North America option addresses the combo with the United States, and the local SIM still makes sense for those settling down and needing a Canadian number.
SIM card and eSIM in Canada: your questions
Will my UK plan work in Canada?
Canada is outside free EU roaming, in the Rest-of-World zone, but it's bundled with the USA in the big passes. O2 covers it at £4.99/day, EE Max includes US and Canada roaming in your allowance (free), Vodafone is around £6/day and Three around £5/day. Budget MVNOs (Giffgaff, Tesco, Voxi, Lebara) are patchy or don't cover Canada at all, so check in-app. Over a long road trip, even £6/day adds up, which is where an eSIM wins.
What solution for a USA + Canada road trip?
The simplest: a North America regional eSIM (Holafly North America covers USA + Canada + Mexico on a single data plan). You cross the border without changing your card or paying for a second roaming. On the UK plan side, EE Max also covers both countries with unlimited data. Avoid the local dual SIM, which is cumbersome to manage at the border.
Which operator has the best coverage in the Rockies?
Telus has the widest coverage outside of cities, closely followed by Bell (the two share part of the rural network). Rogers and its sub-brand Chatr are excellent in the city but less reliable in remote areas. Honestly, in some valley bottoms and along the Icefields Parkway, no operator really gets a signal: download your maps offline before you go.
How much does a Holafly eSIM for Canada cost?
For unlimited data, expect around £19 for 3 days and up to around £90 for 30 days. The code LAPLANETEDECARO gives you a 5% discount. Note: tethering (hotspot) is limited to 1 GB per day. For a USA + Canada combo, the North America option is often more relevant.
Local SIM card or eSIM in Canada?
For a short tourist stay, the eSIM wins: you arrive connected, without a counter, keeping your UK number active. For a long stay, the local SIM from Telus or Bell (or a sub-brand like Public Mobile, Koodo, Fizz) becomes interesting in terms of price and gives you a real Canadian number.
How to get a Canadian number (Working Holiday, expat, student)?
The Holafly eSIM is data only: it does not provide a Canadian number. If you are going on a working holiday or to study and an employer, a bank, or a landlord requires a local number, get a local prepaid SIM (Public Mobile, Koodo, Fido, Fizz, Lucky Mobile). The clever trick: keep your UK number on eSIM or on the second chip, and the Canadian number on the local SIM (unlocked phone and dual SIM compatible).
Is data expensive in Canada?
Yes, Canada is one of the countries where mobile data is the most expensive in the world. This is precisely why unlimited eSIM or low-cost sub-brands (Chatr, Public Mobile) are interesting. Also, be careful: on a local prepaid SIM, the credit and data expire after one month, unlike in the UK.
Is my phone eSIM compatible for Canada?
Yes for most smartphones since 2018: iPhone XS and newer, Samsung Galaxy S20 and later, Google Pixel 3 and beyond. You can keep your UK SIM active (for your bank SMS) and activate the Canada eSIM for data, on the same phone.
To go further: our other SIM card guides by destination
If Canada is part of a larger tour of North America, 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 have covered the three solutions. If you want the summary in one sentence: start by checking your plan, because on EE Max US and Canada roaming is included in your allowance and O2 Travel is just £4.99/day, so for a short stay you may need nothing else.
If your plan does not cover Canada, or if you are chaining several weeks of road trips, get the Holafly eSIM with the code LAPLANETEDECARO, you save -5%, you activate it from home and you arrive connected to the best network in the country. For a combo with the United States, aim for the North America option. And if you’re on a working holiday (IEC), keep a local SIM for your Canadian number.
If you have a question we haven’t covered, ask it in the comments, we will take the time to respond. And if you know other good tips for staying connected in Canada, share them, it benefits the whole community.
Safe travels in Canada, and enjoy (the connection can wait five minutes when you watch Lake Moraine turn turquoise at sunrise).
PS: if you ever find yourself on the Icefields Parkway towards Jasper and your phone shows “No service” for two hours, don’t panic, it’s normal and it’s even a bit the point. You will have downloaded your maps offline before leaving, your playlist will be local, and you will enjoy the scenery with peace of mind, like the traveler who has anticipated everything.
