Kornelijus
Abordable et fiable. J'ai voyagé aux États-Unis pour un voyage et utilisé blikst. C'était bien plus abordable que d'autres entreprises et très fiable.
Impossible de charger la disponibilité du service de retrait
Confirmez que votre téléphone intelligent ou appareil prend en charge notre fonctionnalité Blikst eSIM.
En savoir plusUtilisez le guide étape par étape fourni pour configurer et activer votre eSIM en quelques minutes. Ensuite, profitez de votre voyage.
En savoir plusAbordable et fiable. J'ai voyagé aux États-Unis pour un voyage et utilisé blikst. C'était bien plus abordable que d'autres entreprises et très fiable.
Fluide, simple, ça marche tout simplement. Utilisez-le à nouveau.
Activation rapide et connexion stable. Très pratique 🌟 Je l'ai utilisé lors de mon voyage à Madère.
Soutien charmant, j'ai obtenu une eSIM pour le Royaume-Uni. Aucun problème rencontré.
J'avais l'habitude d'avoir 3 téléphones portables, mais la connexion internet n'était pas la meilleure, c'est pourquoi j'ai commencé à utiliser Blikst et je le trouve très utile
It spans a big slice of the continent. The headline list includes Egypt, Kenya, Madagascar, Mauritius, Morocco, Nigeria, Reunion, South Africa, Tanzania, Tunisia, Uganda and Zambia, with the partner footprint also reaching Eswatini, Lesotho, Mozambique, Ghana, Cameroon, Rwanda, the DRC, Malawi, Senegal, Cote d'Ivoire, Mali, Burkina Faso and Botswana. If your overland route passes through a country not on the partner list, the eSIM goes dark until the next covered country, so check the exact list against your itinerary before you book.
It runs on a partnership of the five biggest footprints on the continent: Orange, Airtel, Cell C, Vodacom and MTN. MTN and Vodacom dominate Southern and East Africa, Airtel fills gaps across East and Central Africa, Orange covers the Francophone West and parts of Morocco, and Cell C backs up Southern Africa. Speeds reach 4G in cities like Cape Town, Johannesburg, Nairobi, Lagos and Dar es Salaam, dropping to 3G across most rural areas and some national parks.
Yes. One QR code handles the whole overland route, whether that is Cape Town to Victoria Falls or Nairobi down through Tanzania to Zanzibar. The eSIM auto-switches between the partner networks as you move and picks whichever one has the best signal, so you don't choose. When you cross a border, the line re-registers on the new country's partner carrier within a few minutes of you clearing it and toggling airplane mode off and on. The data pool is shared across the whole trip, not per country.
After purchase you get a confirmation email with your eSIM details within minutes. Install the profile at home over Wi-Fi before you fly by scanning the QR code provided. Activation is automatic: the eSIM switches on with first data use once you reach a covered African country and clears tower registration. If you transit through Dubai or Doha, don't toggle data on, since the plan only starts counting when you hit an African partner tower, not in transit.
Most modern smartphones work fully with Blikst eSIMs, though a few exceptions exist, so check the detailed compatibility list to confirm your device. Your phone also needs to be carrier-unlocked. On an iPhone you can check eSIM support under Settings, General, About by looking for an EID number; on Android it's in the network or SIM settings. If both show eSIM support, you're good to scan the QR code.
It depends on your route. A 10-day safari plus Cape Town stay fits comfortably in 5 GB. A two-week overland Nairobi to Zanzibar to Kilimanjaro loop needs around 10 GB. A month-long Cape-to-Cairo classic run through six or more countries with heavy map use should start at 20 GB. If you're working remotely from a Nairobi or Cape Town co-working space for a month, go for 50 GB or a country-specific plan. WhatsApp and GPS apps like Uber and Bolt are constant background drains.
Yes, tethering and hotspot are supported, so you can share your connection with a laptop, tablet or a travel companion's phone. Just remember the data pool is shared across the whole trip rather than per country, with a 30-day 10 GB plan being a popular choice and 20 GB suiting longer overland runs. Hotspotting in 4G cities like Johannesburg or Nairobi works well, but expect slower speeds out in rural areas and national parks where coverage drops to 3G.
This is a data-only plan, so it doesn't come with a local voice number for traditional calls or SMS. In practice that's no barrier in Africa, where WhatsApp is the default comms channel for lodges, drivers and tour operators, and you can call or message over the internet using apps like WhatsApp or FaceTime on your data. Because the eSIM is a separate digital line, you can leave your physical home SIM in the phone and keep your usual number reachable.