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
The Blikst Canada eSIM runs on Rogers' network, one of Canada's big-three national carriers. You get 4G and 5G speeds, with full 5G in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal, Calgary, Ottawa, Edmonton and Halifax, and 5G reaching out along the Windsor-Quebec corridor on the 401 and across BC's Lower Mainland. It connects the moment you land at airports like Toronto Pearson, Vancouver or Montreal.
Coverage is strong across the major cities and the populated stretches of the Trans-Canada Highway, which holds 4G through most of its length. Be honest with yourself about the wild bits, though. Banff, Jasper and Lake Louise have signal in the townsites and along main highways, but the Icefields Parkway and alpine trails drop to 4G patches or go offline. The Yukon and far north are very thin outside Whitehorse, Yellowknife and Iqaluit, and Cape Breton, Gros Morne and northern Ontario cottage country have gaps off the highways.
Right after you buy, you'll get a confirmation email with your eSIM details, usually within minutes. Install it on home Wi-Fi before you fly by scanning the QR code provided. The plan activates automatically the moment you arrive in Canada and switch off airplane mode, so the Rogers line registers on its own. Turn off data roaming on your home SIM so it doesn't default to a pricier international-roaming tier.
Most modern smartphones work fully with Blikst eSIMs, though a few exceptions exist, so it's worth checking our detailed compatibility list to confirm your exact device. Your phone also needs to be carrier-unlocked. On an iPhone you can check eSIM support under Settings, General, About and look for an EID number; on Android it's in your network settings. If both show up, you're good to go.
It depends on your trip. A long weekend in Toronto, Vancouver or Montreal works on 2 to 3 GB. A one-week trip, say Vancouver plus a Banff loop or Toronto with Niagara and Montreal, fits into about 5 GB. Two weeks Rockies-to-coast or an East Coast road trip through New Brunswick, PEI and Nova Scotia sits around 10 GB. Month-long ski stays in Whistler, Banff or Tremblant should budget 20 GB or more, especially with video calls and map-heavy days.
Yes, tethering and hotspot use are supported, so you can share the connection with a laptop, tablet or a travelling companion's phone. That's handy for working from a cabin in Banff or keeping a back-seat passenger's tablet running on a long Trans-Canada drive. Just remember that hotspot use draws from the same data allowance, so heavier sharing like video streaming will get through your plan more quickly.
These are data plans, so they don't come with a Canadian phone number for traditional calls or SMS. In practice that's rarely a problem, since you can call and message over the internet using apps like WhatsApp, FaceTime or Messenger. Because the eSIM is a separate digital line, your physical home SIM stays in the phone, so keep your home number active for banking 2FA codes and use the Rogers line for data.
Usually, yes. US carriers charge around 10 to 15 dollars a day for Canada roaming under most postpaid plans, and UK and European carriers charge a similar 10 to 15 dollars a day. A Blikst plan runs well below that on any multi-day stay, and it doesn't throttle after a small threshold the way some US carrier included roaming does. Picking up a local Rogers, Bell or Telus SIM is possible but means a store visit and a contract-style activation.