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 Germany eSIM runs on Vodafone Germany's network, one of the country's main mobile operators. You get both 4G and 5G speeds, so streaming, video calls and live transit data all run smoothly. There's 5G across the city centres of Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Cologne, Stuttgart and Düsseldorf, with solid 4G/5G filling in almost everywhere else you'll be travelling.
Vodafone Germany works best in the big cities, with 5G across Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Cologne, Stuttgart and Düsseldorf. The A3, A5, A7 and A9 autobahn corridors hold 4G/5G nearly end-to-end, and ICE rail lines stay connected almost the whole route. Be honest with yourself about the gaps: German rail tunnels still drop signal, rural Mecklenburg, the Bavarian Forest, Sauerland and the Harz interior fall to 4G, and Alpine areas around Garmisch-Partenkirchen and Berchtesgaden go offline above the tree line.
Right after purchase you'll get a confirmation email with your eSIM details and a QR code. Install it on home Wi-Fi before you fly, since scanning a QR code is far easier than wrangling airport Wi-Fi at Frankfurt or Munich. Activation is automatic: the Vodafone Germany line picks up the moment you land and switch off airplane mode. If you connect through Amsterdam, Zurich or Vienna first, the plan only registers once a German tower sees it.
Most modern smartphones are fully compatible with Blikst eSIMs, though a few exceptions exist, so it's worth checking our detailed compatibility list to confirm your device. Your phone also needs to be carrier-unlocked. To check eSIM support, look on an iPhone under Settings, General, About for an EID number, or in your Android network settings. If you see an EID, you're almost certainly good to go.
It depends on your trip. A long weekend in Berlin or Munich is fine on 2 to 3 GB. A one-week loop, say Berlin, Dresden and Leipzig, or Munich plus a castle day trip, fits into 5 GB. Two weeks covering Berlin, Hamburg, the Rhine and Bavaria sits comfortably at 10 GB. A month-long stay for remote work or a language course is more realistic at 20 GB or higher, especially if you're hot-spotting from trains regularly.
Yes, tethering and hotspot use are supported, so you can share your connection with a laptop or tablet. This is genuinely handy on long ICE journeys when you want to work between Frankfurt, Cologne, Berlin, Hamburg and Munich, as those lines stay connected almost the whole route. Just remember tunnels are a known gap, and if you're regularly hot-spotting from trains your data will go faster, so size your plan accordingly.
This is a data plan, so it's built for mobile internet rather than a traditional phone number. You can still call and message easily over the internet using apps like WhatsApp, FaceTime or your usual chat apps. Because an eSIM is a separate digital line, your physical home SIM and number can stay in the phone. That matters in Germany, where banking apps lean heavily on SMS and app-based 2FA, so keep your home number active and use the German line for everything else.
For most non-EU travellers, yes. US, UK and other non-EU home carriers typically charge around $10 to $12 a day for Germany roaming, which adds up fast over a two-week trip. A Blikst Germany plan runs a fraction of that and removes the guesswork entirely, with one QR code covering the whole country. EU travellers roaming under roam-like-home don't necessarily need an eSIM here, so it's worth checking your domestic plan first.