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 Oceania regional plan covers Australia and New Zealand, the two countries most travellers in this part of the world actually visit and two of the most expensive to roam in on a home-carrier plan. A single profile covers both, which is handy for a combined Sydney, Melbourne, Queenstown and Auckland trip. One thing to know: it won't roam into the Pacific Islands like Fiji, Vanuatu or New Caledonia, so pick a country-specific plan if your trip includes those.
In Australia the eSIM runs on SingTel's Optus-affiliated network, and across the Tasman it uses One NZ, formerly Vodafone New Zealand. You get 3G, 4G and 5G. Coverage is strong across the cities and coast, with 4G and increasing 5G in Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane, Perth, Adelaide, Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch and Queenstown. Be aware the Optus-affiliated network is thinner than Telstra's in the remote outback, so the deep interior is more limited.
Yes. A single profile covers both Australia and New Zealand, with no manual switching. The plan activates in whichever country sees your device first, then hands off automatically when you cross. If you land in Sydney and fly to Auckland a few days later, the profile moves to One NZ the moment your phone connects to a New Zealand tower. A Gold Coast to Queenstown or Melbourne to Christchurch route works the same way, with the handoff happening on landing.
Right after purchase you'll get a confirmation email with your eSIM details, then you simply scan the QR code provided to install the profile. Do this on your home Wi-Fi before you fly. Activation is automatic: the eSIM registers on the first supported network your phone sees on arrival, usually the Optus and SingTel pairing at Sydney or One NZ at Auckland. Having data live while you queue for biosecurity and sniffer-dog checks makes the wait a little easier.
Most modern smartphones are fully compatible, though a few exceptions exist, so check our detailed compatibility list to confirm your device. Your phone must be carrier-unlocked. On an iPhone you can check eSIM support under Settings, General, About, where you'll see an EID number; on Android, look in your network or SIM settings. If your handset shows eSIM support and is unlocked, you're good to go.
It depends on your trip. A one-week east-coast Australia visit works comfortably on 5 GB. A two-week combined Australia and New Zealand itinerary, the common Sydney, Queenstown and Auckland shape, suits about 10 GB. A three-week grand tour covering east-coast Australia plus both New Zealand islands fits 20 GB. Working holiday-makers staying a month or more, especially anyone tethering a laptop from hostels or camper vans, benefit from around 50 GB.
Yes, tethering and hotspot are supported, so you can share your connection with a laptop, tablet or a travel companion's phone. This is genuinely useful for working holiday-makers running a laptop from a hostel or camper van. Just remember that hotspot use draws from the same data allowance, and signal can drop in remote spots like the Stuart Highway, Fiordland valleys or the Milford Road, where you should plan to be offline-first.
This is a data plan, so it gives you mobile internet rather than a local phone number for traditional calls and texts. You can still call and message easily over the internet using apps like WhatsApp, FaceTime or your usual messenger. Because an eSIM is a separate digital line, your physical home SIM can stay in the phone, keeping your normal number active for anything important while you travel on the Oceania data.