Field Notes

Will my phone work with an eSIM? A 30-second check

If you’re considering a travel eSIM and the first question in your head is “will my phone even support it?” — good instinct. Here’s the 30-second answer.

The definitive check: find the EID

Every eSIM-capable phone has something called an EID — an Embedded Identity Document, basically a serial number for the eSIM chip inside. If your phone has one, it can use an eSIM. If it doesn’t, it can’t.

On iPhone

Settings → General → About → scroll down. Look for EID or Available SIM. If you see either, you’re good.

On Android

Settings → About phone → SIM status. (On some Samsungs: Settings → Connections → SIM manager.) Look for EID. If it’s there, you’re good.

That’s it. The EID is the only reliable test — if your phone has one, eSIMs work. If it doesn’t, your phone is physical-SIM-only.

If you’d rather check the model

Roughly: any phone sold by Apple, Google, Samsung, OnePlus, Oppo or Huawei since 2020 will support eSIM. The fast lookup:

  • iPhone: XS, XR, 11, SE 2020, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and later — all support eSIM. iPhones sold in the USA since the 14 are eSIM-only.
  • iPad: Most cellular iPads since 2018.
  • Google Pixel: Pixel 4 and newer.
  • Samsung Galaxy: S20 series and newer, plus all Note 20, Fold 2+, Flip 2+.
  • OnePlus: 11 5G and newer, depending on region.
  • Huawei: P40, P40 Pro, P50 Pro, Mate 40 Pro.

Or use the full compatibility list →

The one catch: carrier locks

An eSIM-capable phone can still be blocked from using non-carrier eSIMs if it’s locked to a specific network. This is mostly a thing in the US, UK and Australia for phones bought on contract.

Easiest way to check: call your home carrier and ask, “is my device network-locked?” Most carriers will unlock for free once the phone is paid off. If it’s still on a payment plan, they’ll usually unlock anyway with a request.

Phones bought outright (from Apple’s store, Google’s store, or a phone reseller) are always unlocked.

If your phone isn’t compatible

Sorry. Phones older than 2019 or budget phones often skip the eSIM chip. Your options are: borrow an eSIM-capable phone for the trip, get a physical SIM at your destination (clunky but works), or use roaming from your home carrier (expensive but easy).

If you’re actively phone-shopping, every reasonably modern flagship supports eSIM now — it’s a safe assumption to make on any 2023+ release.

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