The yellow cab dropping you at Times Square, the rental Mustang pulling onto a road that runs dead straight to the horizon, the “Welcome to Las Vegas” sign at the edge of the desert… and you, phone in hand, realising halfway across Death Valley that you have not got a single bar of signal. Welcome to the USA, the country that invented the word “unlimited” and, at the same time, hides some of the biggest dead zones you will ever drive through.
We dug into this for you, because the USA is not a connectivity destination like the others. First because “unlimited America” is a marketing half-truth we will spell out plainly. Second because between a story posted in New York and a hike in Yellowstone, your need for signal is completely different, and the wrong solution can leave you stranded at exactly the wrong moment.
On the menu: why your UK plan still costs more than you think post-Brexit, what AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon are really worth, the true meaning of “unlimited” over there, the price of tourist plans, and above all that map of the wide-open West where your eSIM can fail you if you do not know where you are driving.
Why you need a proper internet solution in the USA
In the USA, your phone never leaves your hand, let’s be honest. For navigation first: a Western road trip means hundreds of miles between stops, and GPS literally becomes your co-pilot. For booking too, a lodge near Bryce Canyon, a timed entry for Antelope Canyon, a table in New Orleans, it all goes through an app or an email.
Then there is everything else in American daily life that runs on a smartphone. Contactless payment everywhere, QR-code menus, Uber and Lyft to get around town, digital tickets for New York museums or the Disney parks in Florida. Without data you cut yourself off from half the experience, and you quickly get stuck at an automated car park that only takes its own app.
Three ways to stay connected: your UK plan roaming, a local American SIM (AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon or an MVNO) bought on arrival, or a Holafly USA eSIM activated from home before you fly. We go through them all, and we dwell on the unlimited myth and on coverage across the wide-open spaces, because that is where it all plays out.
Solution 1: will your UK plan actually work in the USA?
First things first, and it goes against most of what you read: in the USA your UK plan can do the job, but post-Brexit it is never in your free allowance.
The USA sits firmly outside the EU/EEA, so the “roam like at home” rule that lets you browse free from Spain to Greece does not apply. Every UK network puts the USA in its priciest zone, with a daily charge. Here is where the four big networks stand for the USA:
- EE is around £5 a day, or a £25 weekly Roam Abroad pass; the USA sits in its long-haul Zone 1, included free only on the top Full Works plans.
- Three charges £5 a day via Go Roam Around the World (the USA is included), rising to £8 a day from April 2026 for anyone who joined or upgraded after December 2025.
- Vodafone UK is about £7.86 a day on Global Roam, with a fair-use data cap around 25 GB.
- O2 is £7 a day with the Travel bolt-on, rising to £8 a day for customers who joined or upgraded after 18 December 2025.
Do the maths: over a two-week Florida or road-trip holiday, that is £70 to £112 just to use the plan you already pay for. A Holafly unlimited eSIM over the same trip is closer to £40. That gap is the whole argument. Just below, the live roaming detail by operator.
United States: does my plan work there?
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇺🇸 United States |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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 | 🇺🇸 United States |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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 | ✓ Yes |
| Go Roam Around the World Extra | 12 GB | 1 day | €9.56 | 4G | ✗ No |
| Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | 🇺🇸 United States |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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 | 🇺🇸 United States |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 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: 23 June 2026
So your UK plan can work, but at £5 to £8 a day in the priciest zone, and without solving the unlimited misunderstanding below. Time for the local SIM and the eSIM.
AT&T, T-Mobile, Verizon: the American operators (and the unlimited myth)
The American market is built around three big networks, plus a swarm of MVNOs renting their masts. The choice mostly depends on your itinerary.
Verizon is the king of rural areas and the wide-open West. If your trip takes you far from the cities, into the parks and along the Western highways, it catches signal best. Historically the priciest, but its MVNO Visible gives access to the Verizon network at a rock-bottom, all-digital price.
T-Mobile US is the best pick for international tourists: the most compatible network with European phones, excellent city coverage, and a very well-made eSIM app for activating without a shop visit. Its weak spot is exactly the countryside, where it drops off fast.
AT&T offers very good coverage, including in plenty of National Parks and rural areas, just behind Verizon. One warning: AT&T enforces a fairly strict phone compatibility list, worth checking before you buy a physical SIM. On the MVNO side, Mint Mobile (T-Mobile network) slashes prices but usually wants a three-month minimum, and Ultra Mobile is one of the few to sell a physical “Tourist” SIM at some resellers in New York or Miami.
Now the uncomfortable bit no brochure owns up to: “unlimited” does not mean what you think. American unlimited plans give you high speed up to a threshold (often around 50 GB a month), then slow your connection whenever the network is busy. And the hotspot allowance is capped lower still. Unlimited in volume, yes. Unlimited in speed, no. Before you choose, 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 the USA
| 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 USA SIM card cost in June 2026?
Let’s get concrete, because it is one of the most searched questions: the price.
The SIM itself is almost free; it all comes down to the data pack on top. The T-Mobile U.S. Pass, the eSIM built for tourists, runs about 35 dollars for 14 days and 50 dollars for 30 days, with a big high-speed allowance and tethering included. AT&T prepaid monthly plans go up to 100 GB for around 90 dollars, handy for a long rental or a place to kit out. MVNOs like Mint Mobile show very low prices (around 15 dollars a month) but tie you to a three-month commitment.
The price trap here is the airport and the last-minute buy: counters always charge more than buying online before you fly, and some physical SIMs require your phone to be on a compatibility list, or they simply will not work. The “I’ll grab a SIM on arrival” reflex is rarely the smart one.
Here is an up-to-date snapshot of the SIM and eSIM plans available for the USA, with current packages and prices:
United States: local SIM cards available for your stay
100% digital carrier owned by Verizon. Offers access to the Verizon network (most extensive) for a rock-bottom price. Everything is done via the app. Requires a recent iPhone or highly compatible Android.
The best choice for international tourists. Most compatible network with European/Asian phones. Very well-made eSIM app for immediate activation without visiting a store.
Best coverage in rural areas and National Parks (Grand Canyon, Yellowstone). Warning: You MUST check if your phone is on their PDF 'Whitelist' before buying.
International calling specialist. One of the few brands with a physical 'Tourist' SIM card sold at some resellers in New York or Miami.
Very popular MVNO (T-Mobile network) known for low prices. Usually requires 3-month minimum purchase, but total price is often lower than 1 month at major carriers.
| Carrier | Plan | Data | Duration | Price | Network | Buy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Visible (by Verizon)
|
Visible Plan (Unlimited) Reco | Unlimited | 30 days |
€23.25 (25 USD) |
5G,4G LTE | En ligne (App uniquement) |
|
AT&T
|
AT&T Prepaid 5GB | 5 GB | 30 days |
€27.90 (30 USD) |
5G | Boutiques AT&T, Target, Wal... |
|
Ultra Mobile
|
Ultra Tourist Plan | 3 GB | 21 days |
€27.90 (30 USD) |
5G | Revendeurs aéroports (rare)... |
|
T-Mobile US
|
Connect by T-Mobile 12GB | 12 GB | 30 days |
€32.55 (35 USD) |
5G | Boutiques T-Mobile, Best Bu... |
|
Mint Mobile
|
3-Month Intro Plan (5GB/mo) | 5 GB | 90 days |
€41.85 (45 USD) |
5G | En ligne (App), Best Buy, T... |
|
T-Mobile US
|
Prepaid Unlimited Reco | Unlimited | 30 days |
€46.50 (50 USD) |
5G | App T-Mobile eSIM, Boutique... |
|
AT&T
|
AT&T Prepaid Unlimited | Unlimited | 30 days |
€60.45 (65 USD) |
5G | Boutiques AT&T, Walmart |
Last verified: 23 June 2026
Buy your SIM on arrival or in advance from the UK?
Three ways to sort your data for the USA, each with its own logic. Our straight-talking comparison.
No shop, no compatibility list to fear, no number to change. You receive the eSIM by email or QR code after purchase, install it, and you are connected the moment you land. Compatible with virtually every smartphone since 2018 (iPhone XS and newer, Galaxy S20+, Pixel 3+). It roams on AT&T and T-Mobile, plenty for cities and the main viewpoints.
Cost: around £40 for 15 days of unlimited data, £59 for 30 days. Code LAPLANETEDECARO for -5% off. For a USA + Canada + Mexico combo, go for the North America eSIM.
Worth it if: you are on a city break, a Florida holiday or a classic Western road trip, and you want to leave the airport without queuing.
The cheapest per GB if you are a heavy user, and the best choice if you want Verizon’s network in rural areas (via Visible). But more friction: a compatibility list to check with AT&T, payment in dollars, and sometimes a multi-month commitment with the MVNOs.
Cost: T-Mobile U.S. Pass around 35 dollars (14 days), AT&T prepaid up to 100 GB for 90 dollars, Mint Mobile from 15 dollars a month (3-month minimum).
Worth it if: you stay a long time, burn through data, or seriously target the remote West.
The slightly old-school option that still has fans: connect phone, tablet and laptop to one hotspot. Handy for a Florida family or a road-trip group. But it is another gadget to carry, charge and not leave behind at the hotel, and battery rarely lasts a full day. And it depends on the same network as the rest: just as silent as your phone in a dead zone.
Worth it if: you travel as a group and need a stable shared connection in town.
Holafly USA: our honest recommendation
Let’s be direct. For the most common profile, the traveller spending one to three weeks between New York, Florida or a classic Western road trip, our pick is the Holafly eSIM. Not because it is cheapest per GB (the local SIM wins that round), but because it spares you the counter, the compatibility list and the paperwork, while keeping your UK number.
With Holafly:
- you buy from your sofa in the UK before you leave
- you activate just before boarding, in two taps
- you arrive in the USA already connected, no queue at the counter
- no compatibility list to fear, no card to insert
- you keep your UK number active alongside so you stay reachable
- for a cross-border road trip, the North America eSIM adds Canada and Mexico
In the interest of honesty, we will say it too: Holafly’s unlimited data is comfortable but can be throttled beyond heavy daily use, tethering is limited, and it roams on AT&T and T-Mobile, not Verizon. So for cities and the main park viewpoints it is perfect; for serious backcountry in the West, read the next section carefully. For anyone who just wants to be online without fuss, it remains the best convenience trade-off.
Tap just below to activate your discount and land straight on the available USA eSIM plans.
Network coverage in the USA: where it works, where it struggles
The USA is vast, and coverage jumps without warning from perfect 5G to total radio silence. It is the most brutal contrast of any of our destinations.
Strong signal
- New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago: 5G everywhere, excellent network, all operators.
- Florida (Miami, Orlando, Disney parks): very good coverage across the coast and tourist areas.
- Las Vegas and the main interstates: stable signal along the major highways.
- Main park viewpoints: often covered (Grand Canyon South Rim, Furnace Creek, Yellowstone villages).
Where it struggles
- Death Valley: only Furnace Creek has signal (Verizon), nothing at Mesquite Flat Dunes.
- Yellowstone (Lamar and Hayden Valley): over half the park has no signal.
- Grand Canyon North Rim, Monument Valley: near-zero coverage off the roads.
- Western deserts and back-road Route 66: long silent stretches, all networks alike.
The wide-open-space trap: why your eSIM can fail you out West
Here we are, and this is the section that makes this guide different from all the others. The eSIM comparison sites push Holafly or Airalo’s unlimited data without ever telling you which network they run on. Yet for a Western road trip, that detail changes everything.
The fact nobody writes down. Most travel eSIMs (Holafly, Airalo, even the T-Mobile U.S. Pass) roam on AT&T and T-Mobile. Excellent in town and along the main routes. But in the National Parks and deserts, the most reliable network by far is Verizon. Concretely, at Death Valley only Furnace Creek has signal, and it is Verizon; AT&T shows “No Service” there. At Yellowstone, over half the park has no network on any operator. At the Grand Canyon North Rim, it is near-total silence.
What it means for your choice. If you are doing New York, Florida or a road trip that strings together cities and the main viewpoints, a Holafly eSIM on AT&T/T-Mobile is plenty. But if you seriously target the backcountry, nights out in the wild, remote tracks, long desert stretches, then two reflexes are essential: first, download offline maps (non-negotiable, it is also a safety issue); second, consider a local SIM on the Verizon network (via Visible) to maximise your chances of catching signal far from anywhere.
The honest truth. No solution will give you signal everywhere in the USA, it is physically impossible given the sheer size of the country. The mistake is not picking this eSIM or that one, it is setting off believing “unlimited” means “works everywhere”. Prepare your offline maps, know where the dead zones are, and choose your network depending on whether you stay in the cities or genuinely head into the middle of nowhere. That is what travelling connected in the USA with eyes open really means.
USA SIM card and eSIM: your questions
Will my UK phone plan work in the USA?
Yes, but never for free. The USA sits outside the EU/EEA, so it falls into each UK network's most expensive roaming zone, not the Europe inclusive zone. Expect a daily roaming charge: EE is around £5 a day (or a £25 weekly pass), Three is £5 a day rising to £8 a day from April 2026 for newer contracts, Vodafone UK is about £7.86 a day, and O2 is £7 a day with the Travel bolt-on, going to £8 for anyone who joined after 18 December 2025. Over a two-week Florida holiday that is £70 to £112, versus roughly £40 for a Holafly eSIM. Always check your own plan's small print before you assume the USA is included.
Is American 'unlimited' data really unlimited?
This is the big myth to bust. In the USA, 'unlimited' does not mean 'no speed limit'. Prepaid AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon plans give you high speed up to a threshold (often around 50 GB a month), then your connection is deprioritised: still unlimited in volume, but slowed whenever the network is busy. Worse, the hotspot/tethering allowance (to share with a laptop or the kids' tablet) is capped far lower, sometimes 10 to 30 GB, then drops to a near-useless speed. Even travel eSIMs like Holafly apply a fair-use policy beyond a few GB a day. Unlimited, yes. Unlimited fast, no. Keep that in mind if you plan to work remotely or tether.
Which network has the best coverage in the National Parks?
On the ground, Verizon is widely rated the best network in rural areas and the wide-open West, with AT&T close behind; T-Mobile is the weakest off the beaten track. But be honest about it: in the remote parts of the parks (Death Valley beyond Furnace Creek, the Grand Canyon North Rim, Yellowstone's Lamar Valley, the deep deserts), no network really works. The golden rule for a Western road trip: download offline maps before you go and never rely on signal for safety. Travel eSIMs (Holafly, Airalo) mostly roam on AT&T and T-Mobile, which is fine for cities and the main viewpoints, but thinner deep in the canyons.
How much does a tourist SIM card cost in the USA?
The local SIM itself is almost free; it all comes down to the data pack. The T-Mobile U.S. Pass (an eSIM aimed at tourists) runs about 35 dollars for 14 days and 50 dollars for 30 days, with a large high-speed allowance. AT&T offers monthly prepaid plans (up to 100 GB for around 90 dollars). MVNOs like Mint Mobile undercut everyone but usually require a three-month minimum purchase. Watch out: airport counters always charge more than buying online beforehand, and some carriers require your phone to be on a compatibility list. That is exactly where a travel eSIM keeps things simple.
Does Holafly cover the USA?
Yes. The Holafly USA eSIM runs on local networks (AT&T and T-Mobile) with unlimited data. Budget around £40 for 15 days and £59 for 30 days. You buy and install it from home before you leave, it activates on landing, and your UK number stays active alongside it so you remain reachable. Handy for cross-border road trips: Holafly also sells a North America eSIM covering the USA, Canada and Mexico on one plan. Use code LAPLANETEDECARO for your discount.
eSIM or local SIM for a USA road trip?
For a New York city break, a Florida holiday or a classic Western road trip (the big parks and their main viewpoints), we recommend the Holafly eSIM: buy it from the sofa, activate before boarding, keep your UK number, and enjoy AT&T/T-Mobile coverage that is more than enough. If your route seriously targets the backcountry (boondocking, remote tracks, long desert stretches), a local SIM on the Verizon network (via Visible) catches signal better in rural areas, at the cost of the shop counter. Either way: download offline maps. Code LAPLANETEDECARO.
Going further: our other SIM card guides by destination
If the USA is part of a bigger trip, or you are already planning your next destination, we have written detailed guides with the same method and the same rigour on prices and coverage.
Conclusion: what we honestly recommend
If we had to sum it up in one line: for a one to three week trip to the USA, get the Holafly eSIM with code LAPLANETEDECARO, you save -5%, you activate from home and land connected, with no counter and no compatibility list to fear.
If you are happy to use your UK plan, fine, but budget £5 to £8 a day in the priciest zone (EE £5, Three £5 rising to £8 in April 2026, Vodafone £7.86, O2 £7 rising to £8), and remember it is never in your free allowance.
And keep a cool head on two things: “unlimited” means unlimited in volume, not in speed, and no network catches signal everywhere across the wide-open West. If you head far from the cities, offline maps are a must, and a Verizon network (via Visible) if you want to give yourself the best odds.
If there is a question we have not covered, drop it in the comments, we take the time to reply. And if you come back from the USA with a good connectivity tip, share it, everyone benefits.
Safe travels in the USA (and save a bit of battery for sunset over Monument Valley, it is worth every data plan in the world).
PS: the little rule we apply everywhere, and which counts double for an American road trip: buy and install your eSIM BEFORE you board, keep data roaming off until it is active, and download your offline maps before you hit the parks. Three reflexes, zero nasty surprises. Less glamorous than a road trip with the windows down, but your bank balance will thank you as much as your GPS.
