iPad eSIM for Travel: Using Data on a Tablet Abroad
How to use eSIM on an iPad for travel. Which iPads support eSIM, setup steps, sharing data between iPhone and iPad, and best use cases for tablet connectivity abroad.
Quick Answer
Every cellular iPad since the iPad Pro (2018) supports eSIM. You can install a travel eSIM on your iPad the same way you do on an iPhone — scan a QR code, activate at your destination, and you have standalone data without tethering to your phone. Plans start at $4.99 for 1 GB.
Check if your iPad model is supported at /compatible-devices/.
Which iPads Support eSIM?
All iPads with cellular capability released from late 2018 onward have eSIM support. WiFi-only iPads do not — there’s no way to add cellular to a WiFi-only model.
| iPad Model | eSIM Support | Physical SIM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| iPad Pro 12.9” (3rd gen, 2018+) | Yes | Yes (nano-SIM) | First iPad with eSIM |
| iPad Pro 11” (1st gen, 2018+) | Yes | Yes (nano-SIM) | — |
| iPad Pro M4 (2024) | Yes | No (eSIM only) | No SIM tray |
| iPad Air (3rd gen, 2019+) | Yes | Yes (nano-SIM) | — |
| iPad Air M2/M3 (2024+) | Yes | No (eSIM only) | No SIM tray |
| iPad mini (5th gen, 2019+) | Yes | Yes (nano-SIM) | — |
| iPad mini A17 Pro (2024) | Yes | No (eSIM only) | No SIM tray |
| iPad (7th gen, 2019+) | Yes | Yes (nano-SIM) | Budget line |
| iPad (10th gen, 2022+) | Yes | No (eSIM only) | No SIM tray |
| iPad Pro 2018 or older | Depends | Yes | Only 2018 Pro has eSIM |
| Any WiFi-only iPad | No | No | Cannot add cellular |
Important: When buying a used or refurbished iPad, make sure you get the “WiFi + Cellular” model. The model number ending in the cellular variant (e.g., A2377 vs A2316) is the one with eSIM. WiFi-only models look identical physically but have no SIM capability at all.
How to Set Up eSIM on an iPad for Travel
The process is slightly different from iPhone because iPads handle cellular settings differently.
Step-by-Step Setup
-
Confirm your iPad is cellular-capable — Go to Settings > General > About. If you see “Cellular Data Number” or a blank IMEI field, it’s a cellular model.
-
Buy a travel eSIM plan — Visit e-sim.onl/destinations and choose your destination. You’ll receive a QR code via email.
-
Install the eSIM:
- Open Settings > Cellular Data
- Tap Add a New Plan (or Set Up Cellular)
- Choose Use QR Code
- Scan the QR code from your email or purchase confirmation
- Wait for the “Cellular Plan Ready” confirmation
-
Label your plan — Name it something like “UK Travel” or “Japan eSIM” so you can identify it later.
-
Keep it off until you arrive — Toggle off “Turn On This Line” to prevent the validity period from starting early.
-
Activate at your destination:
- Go to Settings > Cellular Data
- Select your travel eSIM plan
- Toggle on “Turn On This Line”
- Wait 30-60 seconds for network registration
Your iPad should connect automatically. If it doesn’t, toggle Airplane Mode on and off.
Can I Use the Same eSIM Plan on My iPhone and iPad?
No. Each eSIM plan is tied to a single device. You cannot share one QR code across your iPhone and iPad. Each device needs its own plan.
However, you have alternatives for sharing data between devices:
Option 1: Personal Hotspot from iPhone
Use your iPhone’s eSIM data plan and tether your iPad via Personal Hotspot.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| Only one plan to buy | Drains iPhone battery fast |
| Simple setup | Adds latency (30-50ms) |
| No extra cost | iPad depends entirely on iPhone |
| — | Hotspot can disconnect when iPhone sleeps |
Option 2: Separate eSIM on Each Device
Buy a standalone plan for each device.
| Pros | Cons |
|---|---|
| iPad works independently | Two plans to purchase |
| Better battery life on both devices | Slightly higher total cost |
| No tethering latency | — |
| iPad works even if iPhone is off | — |
Option 3: Family Data Sharing (Limited Availability)
A few providers offer multi-device plans where one data pool is shared across devices. This is rare for travel eSIMs — most providers don’t support it yet.
Recommendation: If you use your iPad heavily for maps, research, or work, buy a separate plan. If the iPad is just for occasional browsing at a cafe, tether from your iPhone and save the money.
How Much Does an iPad eSIM Plan Cost for Travel?
The pricing is identical to phone eSIM plans — there’s no iPad-specific markup. Your iPad uses the same eSIM infrastructure.
| Destination | 1 GB / 7 days | 5 GB / 30 days | 10 GB / 30 days |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | $4.99 | $14.99 | $19.99 |
| Europe (regional) | $5.99 | $16.99 | $24.99 |
| Japan | $4.99 | $9.99 | $16.99 |
| Thailand | $4.99 | $9.99 | $14.99 |
| UK | $4.99 | $14.99 | $19.99 |
Prices from e-sim.onl, current as of March 2026.
For iPad-only travel data, 1-3 GB for a week is enough for most people. Tablets tend to use more data than phones because of larger screen sizes loading full-resolution images and videos.
What Are the Best Use Cases for iPad eSIM While Traveling?
Navigation and Maps
An iPad with a cellular connection makes an excellent travel navigator. The larger screen is easier to read than a phone, especially for:
- Walking directions in unfamiliar cities
- Offline maps with live traffic overlay
- Transit planning with real-time updates
Remote Work
If you work from cafes, co-working spaces, or hotel lobbies, an iPad with its own eSIM gives you a reliable backup connection. Hotel WiFi is often slow or requires captive portal logins. Your eSIM bypasses all of that.
Entertainment on Long Flights and Trains
Download content before your flight, then use the eSIM during layovers and ground transport. Apps like Netflix, YouTube, and Kindle all benefit from the larger iPad screen.
Photography Workflow
For photographers, an iPad with cellular data lets you:
- Upload photos to cloud storage immediately
- Share images with clients or social media without finding WiFi
- Use GPS-tagged cellular data to geotag photos in post-processing
Reading and Research
Browsing guidebooks, restaurant reviews, and attraction tickets on a tablet-sized screen is significantly more comfortable than squinting at a phone. A low-data plan (1-3 GB) is enough for text-heavy browsing.
Do iPad eSIMs Support Phone Calls and SMS?
No. iPad eSIM plans are data-only. iPads don’t have a phone dialer or native SMS capability over cellular.
However, with data you can:
- Make calls via FaceTime, WhatsApp, Zoom, or Skype
- Send messages via iMessage (over data), WhatsApp, Telegram, etc.
- Receive calls forwarded from your iPhone via Continuity (requires both devices on the same Apple ID and nearby, or on the same WiFi network)
For most travelers, data-only is all you need on a tablet.
iPad eSIM vs Mobile Hotspot Device: Which Is Better?
Some travelers carry a dedicated mobile hotspot (MiFi device) instead. Here’s how that compares:
| Factor | iPad eSIM | Mobile Hotspot Device |
|---|---|---|
| Extra device to carry | No | Yes |
| Battery | Uses iPad battery | Separate battery (4-8 hrs) |
| Shareable | Via iPad hotspot (limited) | Designed for sharing (5-10 devices) |
| Screen | Full iPad functionality | No screen / small status display |
| Cost | eSIM plan only | Device ($50-150) + plan |
| Setup | 5 minutes | Physical SIM swap or eSIM + config |
Verdict: If you already have a cellular iPad, there’s no reason to carry a separate hotspot device unless you need to connect 5+ devices simultaneously.
Troubleshooting iPad eSIM Issues
”No Service” After Installation
- Go to Settings > Cellular Data > select the eSIM plan > toggle “Turn On This Line” off and on
- Toggle Airplane Mode on and off
- Restart the iPad
- Check that “Data Roaming” is enabled under the eSIM plan settings
QR Code Won’t Scan
- Ensure you’re connected to WiFi (eSIM download requires internet)
- Try entering the activation details manually — your provider should supply an SM-DP+ address and activation code
- Check that the QR code isn’t expired (some have a 30-day install window)
Slow Data Speeds
- Check if you’ve exceeded your plan’s data allowance
- Move to an area with better signal (check coverage maps)
- Some plans throttle after a certain threshold — check your plan details
Can’t Find “Add eSIM” Option
- Your iPad may be WiFi-only. Check Settings > General > About for a “Cellular” section
- iPadOS must be 12.1 or later (update if needed)
Tips for Using iPad eSIM Abroad
Install before you leave home. Do the QR code scanning and eSIM download while on your home WiFi. You can leave it inactive and turn it on when you land.
Monitor data usage. Go to Settings > Cellular Data to see real-time usage per plan. iPads can burn through data quickly with background app refresh, iCloud sync, and automatic downloads. Disable these under Settings > General > Background App Refresh.
Use low data mode. Enable Settings > Cellular Data > select eSIM > Low Data Mode. This reduces background data usage significantly.
Download offline content before your trip. Netflix, Spotify, Apple Maps, and Google Maps all support offline downloads. Save your eSIM data for things that need live connectivity.
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