Smiling traveller taking a selfie in a Japanese street

Which Unlimited SIM Card for Japan? (eSIM vs Pocket WiFi)

Xavier 9 min

-5% off your Holafly Japan eSIM

At the end of this guide you’ll find the promo code LAPLANETEDECARO for -5% off a Holafly eSIM for Japan. But first, the two questions every Japan traveller actually asks: eSIM or pocket WiFi, and will my JR Pass plus live train times even work without breaking the bank? We answer both, and explain why Japan is the one country where the pocket-WiFi debate is genuinely worth having.


Japan is a two-to-three-week trip, not a weekend, and it runs on data: live Shinkansen times, the maze of the Tokyo Metro, Google Translate’s camera on every menu, restaurant and ryokan bookings. Get connected properly and the country opens up; get it wrong and you’re squinting at a paper map outside Shinjuku station.

Here’s the headline: Japan is outside the EU, so your UK plan’s European roaming counts for nothing, and the rest-of-world rates are steep. The two real contenders are an eSIM and a pocket WiFi router, and which one wins depends on whether you’re travelling solo or as a group. Let’s sort it out.

Why you need data in Japan (and how much)

More than almost anywhere, Japan rewards a live connection. Offline maps don’t route trains, and Japan’s rail network is the whole point, so you need real data for NAVITIME or Google Maps transit. Add the camera-translation for menus and signage, plus booking apps, and you’re a fairly heavy user.

Budget around 500-700 MB a day, so roughly 10-20 GB for two weeks, or go unlimited if you tether. Three ways to get it: roam on your UK plan (pricey), rent a pocket WiFi, or use an eSIM/local data SIM. Here’s the honest comparison.

Solution 1: roaming in Japan on your UK plan (the expensive option)

Your phone connects fine, but Japan is a rest-of-world zone, so it’s dear:

  • EE: about £7.50/day, but capped at just 500 MB/day, which won’t cover maps plus translation.
  • Vodafone: roughly £7.86/day (or £6/day on older contracts).
  • Three: around £8/day on its worldwide pass (or a data passport at £7/day).
  • O2: roughly £7/day as a bolt-on.

Two weeks of that is £100+, and EE’s 500 MB cap makes it borderline useless for a country this map-heavy. Set against an eSIM from about £3/day, roaming just doesn’t add up here.

Japan: does my plan work there?

Plan Data Duration Price Network 🇯🇵 Japan
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 ✗ No
Zone 3 Daily Pass 512 MB 1 day €8.96 4G ✓ Yes
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 🇯🇵 Japan
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 🇯🇵 Japan
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 🇯🇵 Japan
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: 18 June 2026


The honest verdict: eSIM for most, pocket WiFi for groups

If you’re solo or a couple, an eSIM is the easy winner: nothing to collect or return, set up before you fly, online the second you land at Narita. If you’re a family or a group of three-plus (or you’ve got kids on tablets), a pocket WiFi router connects everyone off one device, often cheaper than three separate eSIMs, and it covers phones that aren’t eSIM-ready. We break the three down below.

b-mobile, IIJmio, Sakura, Mobal: Japan’s tourist SIMs (no ID needed)

A nice quirk of Japan: data-only tourist SIMs need no identity registration (that rule only applies to voice SIMs). So a data SIM or eSIM here is paperwork-free, the opposite of Morocco or Colombia.

b-mobile is the original tourist-SIM pioneer, on the excellent NTT Docomo network, reliable and one-shot (nothing to cancel).

IIJmio is a huge, established MVNO; its “Japan Travel SIM” is everywhere in electronics stores and some convenience stores.

Sakura Mobile is the easy English-support option, with airport pickup and quick setup (3 GB/8 days, 8 GB/15 days, 25 GB/30 days).

Mobal is the one to pick if you want an actual Japanese phone number with calls, again without the usual foreigner registration.

Roaming

Use your UK plan abroad thanks to roaming agreements

Local SIM card

Buy a local SIM card to benefit from local rates

eSIM

Activate an eSIM before your departure, without changing your physical card

Pros and cons of SIM cards for Japan

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 Japan SIM, eSIM or pocket WiFi cost in June 2026

Ballpark figures.

Data SIMs: roughly £25-50 for two weeks depending on data (Sakura 8 GB/15 days ~£31). Pocket WiFi: about $38-70 for a week of unlimited, but you must return it (airport counter, kiosk or prepaid envelope). eSIM: from about £3/day for unlimited.

The reference point worth knowing

For comparison, a Holafly Japan eSIM is unlimited data on the Docomo/KDDI networks, around £43 for two weeks, with a 500 MB/day hotspot. Pricier per gigabyte than a volume SIM, but no airport pickup, no return, no paperwork, and you land already online. If several of you need to share heavily, that’s where pocket WiFi can edge it.


Here’s an up-to-date snapshot of the local data SIM options in Japan:

Japan: local SIM cards available for your stay

b-mobile

Local SIM

The pioneer of tourist SIMs in Japan (Japan Communications Inc). Uses the NTT Docomo network (best in the country). Very reliable and easy to set up. Available online or at Yodobashi/Bic Camera.

Visitor SIM 7GB / 21 Days
7 GB 21 days 4G,5G
€18.50 (2 970 JPY)
Buy: Online, Yodobashi Camera, Bic Camera
Duration extension for medium stays. eSIM also available with customizable plans.

Rakuten Mobile

Local SIM

The country's 4th mobile operator. Unlike others, it offers an 'official' tourist plan that is easy to access via its Rakuten Travel branch. Own network + partial au roaming.

Telekom Deutschland

Local SIM

Germany's largest mobile operator (Deutsche Telekom). Best 4G/5G coverage in Germany. EU roaming included in all MagentaMobil plans plus Telekom extras: Switzerland and the United Kingdom are bundled in the EU zone at no extra cost. Since February 2026, every MagentaMobil plan also includes an annual data allowance for non-EU countries (Zone 2 + 3: USA, Turkey, Canada, etc.).

Travel & Surf 2-DayPass
1 GB 2 days 4G
€5.95 (6 EUR)
Buy: MeinMagenta app
48-hour pass for non-EU destinations (country group 3) not covered by your plan: 1 GB. The DayFlat International does not cover these countries. For a real trip, a Holafly eSIM is far better value.

Vodafone Deutschland

Local SIM

Germany's second-largest operator. EU roaming included in all GigaMobil plans (EU + EEA + United Kingdom). Fair-use cap from 25 to 123 GB depending on the plan. For non-EU: World-Zone passes billed daily or weekly.

ReisePaket Welt Daily
500 MB 1 day Calls SMS 4G
€9.99 (10 EUR)
Buy: MeinVodafone app
Daily World-Zone pass (non-EU): 500 MB, calls and SMS included in the visited country. Expensive past 1-2 days, prefer a Holafly eSIM.

1&1

Local SIM

Germany's fourth network operator (United Internet / Drillisch). Building its own 5G network since 2023, ~95% coverage in 2026. EU roaming included in all All-Net-Flat plans (EU + Iceland + Norway + Liechtenstein), with a 60 GB or 120 GB fair-use cap depending on the plan.

1&1 Internet Welt
5 MB 1 day 4G
€14.99 (15 EUR)
Buy: MeinVodafone app
24-hour non-EU pass: €14.99 for just 5 MB (unusable in practice); otherwise ~€0.99/50 KB. For these destinations, get a Holafly eSIM.

O2 Telefónica Deutschland

Local SIM

Germany's third-largest operator (Telefónica). EU roaming included in all O2 Mobile plans under "Roam Like at Home". For heavy EU users beyond fair-use: regulated €1.309/GB surcharge in 2026. Non-EU: 4 zones with daily passes.

Roaming Plus World
2 GB 30 days 4G
€14.99 (15 EUR)
Buy: Mein O2 app
Outside the EU (World Zone 4), O2 has no daily pass: you need the monthly Roaming Plus World add-on (2 GB, ~105 countries) or pay €1.49/MB. A Holafly eSIM is far simpler and cheaper.

IIJmio

Local SIM

One of the largest Japanese MVNOs, very established. Their 'Japan Travel SIM' is ubiquitous in electronics stores and some Lawsons (convenience stores). Docomo network.

Japan Travel SIM 3GB
3 GB 30 days 4G,5G
€15.50 (2 480 JPY)
Buy: Bic Camera, Yodobashi, Lawson
Classic starter pack. Card valid for 30 days regardless of data volume chosen (3GB to 55GB available).
Japan Travel SIM 6GB
6 GB 30 days 4G,5G
€18.60 (2 980 JPY)
Buy: Bic Camera, Yodobashi
Good intermediate option. Recharge possible via store coupon.
Carrier Plan Data Duration Price Network Buy
Telekom Deutschland
Travel & Surf 2-DayPass 1 GB 2 days €5.95
(6 EUR)
4G MeinMagenta app
Vodafone Deutschland
ReisePaket Welt Daily 500 MB 1 day €9.99
(10 EUR)
4G MeinVodafone app
b-mobile
Visitor SIM 5GB / 10 Days Reco 5 GB 10 days €12.40
(1 980 JPY)
4G,5G Online, Yodobashi Camera, B...
1&1
1&1 Internet Welt 5 MB 1 day €14.99
(15 EUR)
4G MeinVodafone app
O2 Telefónica Deutschland
Roaming Plus World 2 GB 30 days €14.99
(15 EUR)
4G Mein O2 app
IIJmio
Japan Travel SIM 3GB 3 GB 30 days €15.50
(2 480 JPY)
4G,5G Bic Camera, Yodobashi, Lawson
Rakuten Mobile
Japan Travel SIM (Unlimited Data 7 Days) Reco Unlimited 7 days €15.60
(2 500 JPY)
4G,5G Airports NRT/HND/KIX, Online
b-mobile
Visitor SIM 7GB / 21 Days 7 GB 21 days €18.50
(2 970 JPY)
4G,5G Online, Yodobashi Camera, B...
IIJmio
Japan Travel SIM 6GB 6 GB 30 days €18.60
(2 980 JPY)
4G,5G Bic Camera, Yodobashi

Last verified: 18 June 2026

eSIM, pocket WiFi, or local SIM?

Three approaches by traveller type. The honest call.

You buy from home and activate before boarding.

Unlimited data, nothing to collect or return, online the moment you land. Keep your UK number active alongside it. Best for solo travellers and couples.

Cost: from ~£3/day, ~£43 for two weeks. Use code LAPLANETEDECARO for -5% off.

Consider it if: you’re solo or a couple, you want zero faff, your phone supports eSIM (iPhone XS+, recent Samsung/Pixel).

Holafly Japan: who it’s really for

For groups sharing heavily, pocket WiFi can win on price. But for most travellers, the eSIM is the smoothest option:

  • you’re solo or a couple and want nothing to collect or return
  • you want to land at Narita or Haneda already online, no queue
  • you want your JR Pass and live train times working from minute one
  • you value a fixed price and zero paperwork

Holafly Japan promo code

Get -5% off your Holafly Japan eSIM with the code LAPLANETEDECARO. Enter it on the Holafly checkout before you pay. Tip: set the eSIM up on home Wi-Fi the night before, then toggle it on as you taxi to the gate at Narita.


Network coverage in Japan: where it’s strong, where it struggles

Honestly, Japan is one of the best-covered countries on earth.

Strong signal

  • Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto and all cities: dense 4G/5G everywhere.
  • The Shinkansen and metro: excellent, even underground and at speed.
  • Tourist regions and main rail lines: fully covered.
  • Airports (Narita, Haneda, Kansai): flawless.

Where it struggles

  • Deep mountains and remote hiking trails: occasional gaps.
  • Some rural valleys (e.g. parts of the Japanese Alps): thinner.
  • Far-flung islands: variable.
  • Inside some older buildings: minor wobble.


The transit tip

Don’t rely on offline maps for trains, they don’t route Japan’s rail network. Use NAVITIME or Google Maps transit with live data, and you’ll never miss a connection. This is exactly why a JR Pass plus an eSIM is the combo that makes Japan effortless.

JR Pass + eSIM: the combo that makes Japan effortless, and where to pick up at the airport

If you’re doing Japan by rail (and most visitors are), the JR Pass and a data eSIM are made for each other. Live train times, platform numbers, last-train warnings, transfers, all of it needs real-time data, and offline maps simply can’t do public-transport routing. An eSIM means you walk off the plane and straight into the network: open NAVITIME, find your train, go.

If you’d rather collect something physical, Sim Local has stands at UK airports before you even leave, and there are pickup desks at Narita, Haneda (Terminal 3) and Kansai. Pocket WiFi providers like Ninja WiFi and Mobal also do free pickup at Narita and Haneda. But the no-collection, no-return simplicity of an eSIM is hard to beat for a solo traveller or a couple, set it up at home, keep your UK number for WhatsApp, and never queue.

Japan SIM, eSIM & pocket WiFi: your questions answered

Is Japan included in my EE, Vodafone, Three or O2 inclusive roaming?

No. Japan is outside the EU, so it's not part of any UK network's inclusive European roaming. You'd pay a rest-of-world daily charge instead, around £7.50-8/day, and EE caps it at just 500 MB/day. For a two-week trip that's poor value next to an eSIM.

How much does it cost to use my UK phone in Japan without an eSIM?

On a pass: roughly £7.50/day (EE), £7.86/day (Vodafone), £8/day (Three), ~£7/day (O2). Over two weeks that's around £100+, and EE's 500 MB daily cap won't cover maps plus translation. Without a pass it's far worse. An eSIM from about £3/day is the sensible move.

eSIM or pocket WiFi for Japan, which is right for me?

Solo or as a couple: an eSIM, it's lighter, there's nothing to collect or return, and you set it up before you fly. Family or a group of three-plus, or with kids on tablets: a pocket WiFi router (about $50-70 for a week, unlimited) connects everyone and suits phones that aren't eSIM-compatible. The catch with pocket WiFi is you must return it; an eSIM you just keep.

How much data do I need for a two-week trip to Japan?

Budget around 500-700 MB a day with heavy map, transit and translation use, so roughly 10-20 GB for two weeks. If you tether or share a hotspot, go unlimited. A 10 GB volume eSIM suits a light user; an unlimited Holafly plan suits heavy users and groups.

Can I buy a Japanese tourist SIM without ID or registration?

Yes, data-only tourist SIMs (b-mobile, IIJmio, Sakura Mobile) are exempt from Japan's identity registration, which only applies to voice SIMs. So a data SIM or eSIM needs no paperwork. If you want an actual Japanese phone number, Mobal offers one without the usual foreigner registration.

Does my eSIM work on the Shinkansen and Tokyo Metro?

Yes, coverage on the Shinkansen and across the metro is excellent, which is exactly why a JR Pass plus an eSIM is such a good combo: you can check live train times and platforms on the move. Note that offline maps don't route public transport, so you really do need live data for Japan's rail network.

Further reading: our other SIM card guides by destination

If Japan is one stop on a bigger Asia trip, here are our other honest, field-tested guides.

Our honest take

In a sentence: for solo travellers and couples, get a Holafly Japan eSIM with code LAPLANETEDECARO (-5% off), land at Narita already online, JR Pass and live train times working from minute one. For a family or group sharing heavily, a rented pocket WiFi router can work out cheaper. Roaming on your UK plan is the one to skip, £7-8/day for a 500 MB cap is no way to see Japan.

Whatever you choose, remember offline maps don’t route trains, so you need live data for the rails.

Got a Japan connectivity question we didn’t cover? Drop it in the comments. いってらっしゃい, enjoy the trip (and put the phone down for the first bowl of real ramen).

PS: the classic Japan mistake is roaming on EE’s 500 MB daily cap, then running dry by lunchtime on day one outside Kyoto station with a train to catch. Sort the data before you fly and the whole country becomes the easiest place on earth to travel.