How to choose the best SIM and phone service
option for your phone when traveling internationally
Choose whichever of seven different types of SIM
card and its associated phone service works best for you on your travels and
simply swap it (them) in and out of your GSM phone as you travel from home to
other countries.
It is important to choose the right SIM and
service for your phone when traveling internationally. A wrong choice at best
may cost you a great deal more money for the calls you make and receive, and at
worst, may mean that you have limited or even no service at all while away from
your home country.
This information will help you understand the
issues offered by various different SIM providers and make the best choice for
your situation and circumstance.
Other articles in this series about
international cell phone service are also helpful.
Introduction - SIMs and Service
With a GSM type phone (see Step One below) your
phone itself has no 'identity' or associated phone number. All this is kept
within the user swappable SIM
card that you plug into the phone.
You change your SIM and this changes your phone's service provider and phone
number. Think of a SIM as a regular telephone line, and your
cell phone as a regular phone - a
regular phone can work on any telephone line, and assumes the number associated
with the phone line. The same concept applies (more or less) to GSM type cell
phones and the SIMs they connect through.
This flexibility works greatly to your advantage
when traveling outside your home wireless provider's network. No longer do you
need to suffer very high international phone call costs, instead you can mix and
match SIMs and their associated services and costs as you travel from country to
country so as to get the best value phone service.
Step One - Confirm your phone works internationally
Before you start to consider different SIM and
service options for traveling out of your home country, you first need to
confirm the phone you plan to use will work in the countries you plan to visit.
Most countries use GSM type phone service, and
there are four different frequency bands variously used by different countries.
Here is information about which countries use which GSM
frequency bands so you can make sure
your GSM phone has the necessary bands to work in the countries you visit.
In the US, the two main GSM based phone
companies are AT&T/Cingular and T-mobile.
Some phones use a different type of service such
as CDMA (this is used by Sprint and Verizon in the US, for example). Not many
other countries have CDMA based cell phone service,
and if you're traveling outside North America, you will need to buy an unlocked
GSM phone to use on your travels. We sell some ourselves,
and another reputable supplier of unlocked GSM phones is Telestial.
Step Two - Confirm your GSM phone is unlocked
If you acquired your phone when signing a
contract for phone service with your wirelessprovider, the chances are it is probably 'locked' and will only work with
the SIM your current wireless provider gave you.
If you want to use a different SIM in a locked
phone, the phone will need to be electronically unlocked before it will accept a
different SIM.
How to tell if your phone is locked or not
The easiest way to tell is to put a SIM from a
different wireless service in the phone. For example, if you have a Cingular
phone, try putting in an older AT&T SIM or a T-Mobile SIM (or of course any
other SIM from any other wireless company, anywhere in the world). Chances are
someone else at work has a phone with a different SIM that you could borrow for
the quick minute this takes.
If the phone is locked, it will display an error
message of some type when you turn it on with the other SIM installed (typical
messages include 'Contact Service Provider' or 'Enter Subsidy Code' or 'Invalid
SIM').
If the phone is unlocked, it will either start
up normally, or perhaps will start up and then say 'Unregistered SIM' or 'No
Service' (if using a foreign or old SIM).
How to unlock a locked GSM phone
The first thing to do is to ask your current
wireless provider if they'll unlock your phone for you, for free. T-mobile will
generally do this if your account is in good standing and you've been a
subscriber for more than three months. AT&T/Cingular is unpredictable -
sometimes they'll unlock your phone, but often they won't. Their current (Nov
07) policy seems to be that they'll unlock your phone once your one or two year
contract has been completed.
If your cell phone company refuses to unlock
your phone, don't panic. Many companies offer unlocking services, including,
ahem, ourselves.
Step Three - International Charger or Adapter
Now that you have a phone that you've confirmed
will work in the countries you're visiting, and unlocked to accept whatever SIMs
you choose to use, there's one more thing just to quickly confirm before moving
on to the issue of which SIM or SIMs you should get.
Is your charger multi-voltage?
Just make sure your phone charger is
multi-voltage so that it will work with the voltage of the countries you are
visiting. North America uses 110V, most other countries use somewhere between
220V and 250V. Most - but not all - phone chargers these days are
multi-voltage, but quickly read the label to confirm it says something like
100V-250V or maybe 110V/220V to indicate it is multi-voltage.
If the charger is not multi-voltage and you're
going to a country with different voltage to your home country, you'll need to
either get a multi-voltage charger or a transformer to change the voltage you
feed into the charger. The better choice is just to get a second multi-voltage
charger - they are not very expensive and are very convenient.
Plug adapters
If you're traveling to a country with different
voltage (and even if you're not), the chances are that it might use a different
type of plug to fit into the wall sockets. Get a set of plug adapters from a
local electronics store (such as Radio Shack in the US). These are lightweight
and inexpensive.
Bad News : There's No Such Thing as a Single
Best Solution for International Phone Service
If there was a single best solution for
everyone's needs while they travel internationally, this article would be very
much shorter and simpler!
But this is not the case, and so you need to
balance the different factors that make up how you'll be using your phone
internationally to find which of the many different approaches is the best
compromise between cost and convenience.
A person who travels very regularly and uses
their phone extensively would probably end up choosing to buy individual prepaid
SIMs for each country they regularly visit; a person who makes only occasional
journeys and expects to use their phone very seldom would probably choose a
Mobal SIM or to simply use international roaming with their home service
provider.
If you fall somewhere between these two
extremes, or if you have special needs, then read on, and review the summary
table and the explanatory notes that follow.
Traveling with a cell phone is getting easier
and more affordable. No longer do you need to pay many dollars a minute to send
and receive calls - the latest international SIMs and their associated calling
plans will often give you unlimited free incoming calls, and outbound calls for
between 50ยข and $1 per minute.
Use the two tables above to match your own
travel and phone usage patterns to the best SIM and service option.