What is cheapest phone option for a short trip to Europe?

What is cheapest phone option for a short trip to Europe? - White and Orange Plastic Bottle Beside Blue and White Plastic Container

I'm leaving for Europe in a couple days. I'm spending a few days in England and then a few days in Hungary before returning to the US. Unfortunately, I have not given much thought to my phone/internet options until now.

Anticipated needs:

  • 5-10 phone calls total, all in-country, with no more than 60 minutes total talk time;

  • 30-50 text messages total, all in-country;

  • light Web browsing, with a conservative (high) estimate of 75MB/day for data use.

I have a Verizon iPhone 5 and am willing to take it to use with a different SIM or, if I must, to use as-is with Verizon's "Global Services" rates. For reference, the latter are the same for both England and Hungary: $1.29/minute for voice, $0.50/$0.05 to send/receive texts, and $0.25/MB for data.

What is my best option? Best means both cheap/convenient, but weighted mainly toward cheap.

Happy to elaborate if more info needed.



Best Answer

You haven't specified whether your calls will be inbound or outbound, but OneSimCard is a pre-paid service for international travelers and may be a very attractive option. For both the U.K. and Hungary are:

Receive a call: Free
Make a call: $0.29 / $0.39 ($0.59 for Hungary) per minute
Receive SMS: Free
Send SMS: $0.15 / $0.40 Internet Data: $0.20 / $0.65 per MB

See their Rates page for details on the various per-minute/per-text rates and when discounts apply.

You will not be able to use your Verizon phone with this service however, because Verizon (like Sprint) uses a CDMA network, while everyone else* in the world uses GSM. But you can buy a cheap GSM phone. I just purchased the Blu Jenny for roughly $30 on amazon. Or you can buy it from OneSimCard for about $50. (Although such a cheap phone will have pretty weak Internet capabilities)

*Almost everyone.




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Do prepaid phones work in Europe?

Yes. Most SIM cards bought in Europe offer Europe-wide connection. Can I purchase a prepaid phone in the US for use in Europe? You can buy the so-called "unlocked" phone that has the GSM network built-in and then when you get to Europe, buy the SIM card at the airport.

Is there a SIM card that works in all of Europe?

The Orange Prepaid SIM is one of the best roaming SIMs for Europe as the plan allows you to use your minutes allowance to call anywhere worldwide. It comes with 2 hours and 1000 texts that can be used to call any number in the world as well as 20GB of data that works across the UK and many European countries.

What cell phone carrier works in Europe?

AT&T and T-Mobile are the two most popular GSM carriers in the US. If you are currently with AT&T or T-Mobile, your phone will have no issues in Europe.

Which service provider is cheapest for international roaming?

RecapProviderBest forPriceT-MobileTraveling$70 /moAT&TDay Pass$65 /moMint MobileBudget$15 /moGoogle FiPrepaid$50 /mo



HOW TO USE YOUR PHONE IN EUROPE: cheap phone plans and SIM cards for your trip to the UK and EU




More answers regarding what is cheapest phone option for a short trip to Europe?

Answer 2

If you don't necessarily need to call with your mobile phone, I would recommend Skype for various reasons, especially if you bring your laptop or tablet. With SkypeOut calling is very cheap to most countries.

If you happen to have a FON account connecting home will be really convenient in the UK, due to the fact that British Telecom integrated the FON functionality in their routers. Having a FON router at home gives you access to the Internet in very close proximity from almost everywhere in the UK. (Except ofcourse the more secluded areas). If you don't have a FON router yet, it is worthwhile to buy one, since it is a one time investment to get global wifi access

If you still prefer using your mobile phone, I would recommend buying a local prepaid sim card. This would require your phone to use SIM. When arriving in the UK just look for any phoneshop and ask for your options. There are prepard cards from almost every expat community enabling cheap calls to home.

Answer 3

check whether your phone is SIMlocked or not before you invest in cards for other networks. Many (if not most) phones you get with plans are so locked and will only work with SIM cards from the network that provided the phone.
As to "best" options, that all depends on what you find most important. For me, keeping the same number is the most important, so I just use my existing card and plan and accept the roaming charges on inbound traffic.
For you, maybe you care more about cost of local calls, in which case a prepaid card for each country you visit might be the best option.
If you're looking into making a lot of international calls, most prepaid cards tend to get very expensive for those, and you again might be cheaper off using your existing plan, maybe with a temporary 'holiday extension' or however your network operator calls it added to it that reduces roaming charges for a period (but at a fee of course).

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