Tested 7 eSIM providers for China travel — here's which one actually works, what speeds to expect, and how to set it up before you fly.
China in 2026 runs on apps. You need mobile data to pay (Alipay/WeChat Pay), navigate (Amap), call a ride (Didi), translate menus, and message your people back home. Airport WiFi requires a Chinese phone number to log in. Hotel WiFi is slow and blocks VPNs. Without data, you're functionally offline the moment you step off the plane.
An eSIM solves this in 5 minutes. No physical SIM card to swap. No airport kiosk. No passport registration (for data-only plans). Just scan a QR code, activate, and you have 4G/5G data the second you land.
| Option | Cost (14 days) | Setup | Speed | Chinese Number | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Travel eSIM | $8-35 | 5 min before trip | 4G/5G | ❌ (data only) | ⭐ Best overall |
| Carrier Roaming | $140-210 | Automatic | Varies | ✅ | 💰 Expensive |
| Airport SIM | $15-30 | 30 min + passport | 4G/5G | ✅ | 🕐 Time cost |
| Pocket WiFi | $70-112 | Rent + return | 4G | ❌ | 📦 Extra device |
| Provider | 1GB / 7d | 5GB / 15d | 10GB / 30d | Unlimited | Networks | 5G | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Nomad | $5 | $14 | $24 | — | China Mobile + Unicom | ✅ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Airalo | $6.50 | $18 | $32 | — | China Mobile | ✅ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Trip.com | $2.50 (3d) | $8 (8d) | $18 (15d) | — | China Mobile | ✅ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| Holafly | — | $27 | $44 | $54/30d | Multi-carrier | ✅ | ⭐⭐⭐⭐ |
| MobiMatter | $4.99 | $13.99 | $23.99 | — | China Unicom | ✅ | ⭐⭐⭐½ |
| SimOptions | — | $17.90 | $29.90 | — | China Mobile | ✅ | ⭐⭐⭐ |
| Yesim | $6 | $17 | $29 | $49/30d | China Unicom | ✅ | ⭐⭐⭐ |
Prices checked June 2026. Subject to change. Check provider websites for current rates.
Best for: Most travelers — balanced price, speed, and reliability. Nomad uses both China Mobile and China Unicom networks, automatically switching to the stronger signal. This dual-carrier setup means you get coverage even on high-speed trains through tunnels and in rural areas where single-carrier eSIMs drop out.
Best for: Long stays (15-30 days) with larger data packs. Airalo's China eSIM runs on China Mobile — the largest carrier with the best rural coverage. Slightly more expensive than Nomad for short trips, but their 30-day packs are competitive.
Best for: Budget travelers and short trips. Trip.com (Ctrip) is China's biggest travel platform, and their eSIM offerings are shockingly cheap — as low as $2.50 for 1GB. Runs on China Mobile. The catch: shorter validity periods and less polished app experience for eSIM management.
Best for: Heavy data users — streamers, video callers, digital nomads working from China. Holafly is the only major provider offering truly unlimited data for China (no throttling after a cap). Multi-carrier switching means better uptime. The premium price is worth it if you burn through data.
Decent alternatives — they work, but don't outperform the top picks on price or features. MobiMatter is a marketplace aggregator (you buy from 3rd-party operators, not directly — support can be slow). SimOptions is a reputable European platform with solid China plans. Yesim offers pay-as-you-go flexibility but higher per-GB costs.
Most phones from 2019+ support eSIM: iPhone XS/XR and newer, Google Pixel 4+, Samsung Galaxy S20+, recent Huawei and Xiaomi flagships. Go to Settings → About and look for "EID" or "Digital SIM." If you see it, you're good. China-market phones (Huawei, Xiaomi, Oppo sold in China) often disable eSIM — check before assuming.
Download the provider's app (Nomad, Airalo, etc.), select "China" as your destination, pick a data plan, and pay. You'll receive a QR code via email and in-app. Do this at home with stable WiFi — don't wait until you're at the airport.
iPhone: Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM → Scan QR code.
Android: Settings → Network & Internet → SIMs → Add eSIM → Scan QR code.
Some providers now support one-tap installation through their app — even easier.
Label the eSIM "China Travel." Turn OFF data roaming on your primary SIM (to avoid accidental roaming charges). Set the China eSIM as your data line. Do NOT activate data roaming on the eSIM until you land — some plans start the countdown immediately.
When you land in China, turn ON the China eSIM line and enable data roaming for it. Within 1-3 minutes, it should connect to China Mobile or China Unicom. Open a browser and test — if a Chinese site (baidu.com) loads, you're connected.
The fix is simple: Install a VPN on your phone before you leave home. Once you land in China, activate the VPN before opening any blocked apps. Without a VPN, your eSIM data is fast but filtered. For VPN recommendations, see our recommended tools guide.
| Your Situation | Best eSIM | Recommended Plan | Cost |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1-week tourist, moderate use | Nomad | 3GB / 7 days | $9 |
| 2-week trip, maps + messaging | Nomad | 5GB / 15 days | $14 |
| Budget backpacker, short stay | Trip.com | 5GB / 8 days | $8 |
| Digital nomad, heavy data use | Holafly | Unlimited / 30 days | $54 |
| 1-month stay, moderate use | Airalo | 10GB / 30 days | $32 |
| Need a Chinese phone number | Physical SIM | Airport China Unicom SIM | ~$15 |
| Multi-country Asia trip | Nomad Regional | Asia 10GB / 30 days | $27 |
Yes, mostly. China's high-speed rail network covers 37,000+ km and has 4G/5G coverage along most routes. Dual-carrier eSIMs (Nomad) perform best through tunnels. Single-carrier eSIMs (Airalo, Trip.com) may drop in long tunnels. Expect 10-20 Mbps on trains — enough for browsing and messaging, not streaming.
Yes — all providers listed above allow personal hotspot/tethering. Holafly is particularly good for this since it's unlimited. Just remember: hotspot drains your phone battery fast, and the connected device also needs a VPN to access blocked services.
Nomad, Airalo, and Holafly all support in-app top-ups. You can buy more data mid-trip without installing a new eSIM. Trip.com requires buying a new plan. Always top up before hitting zero — reconnecting without data can be painful in China.
Check carefully — most "China" eSIMs only cover mainland China. Hong Kong and Macau are separate regions. Nomad and Airalo offer "Asia Regional" plans that include all three, plus Japan, Korea, and Southeast Asia. If you're visiting HK+Macau+mainland, get a regional plan.
Yes. China has the world's largest 5G network — over 4 million base stations. All providers listed support 5G in major cities (Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Guangzhou, Chengdu, Hangzhou). Speed tests in Shanghai show 300-800 Mbps on 5G. But 5G coverage drops significantly outside tier-1 cities.