Kornelijus
Affordable and reliable. Traveled to the US for a trip and used blikst. It was much more affordable than other companies and was very
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Confirm that your smartphone or device supports our Blikst eSIM functionality.
Learn MoreUse the provided step-by-step guide to set up and activate your eSIM in few minutes. Then enjoy your trip.
Learn MoreAffordable and reliable. Traveled to the US for a trip and used blikst. It was much more affordable than other companies and was very
Smooth, simple, just works. Use it again.
Quick activation and stable connection. Super handy 🌟 Used it during my trip in Madeira.
Lovely support, got an esim for UK. Had no issues.
I used to have 3 mobile but the internet connection was not the best, that’s why I started to use Blikst and I find it very useful
It runs on the Sky network, also known as Sky Mobile, the Beeline KG brand operated under the VEON group. It is the country's largest operator by subscribers, so you are on the same network registered locals use. You get 3G and 4G speeds, with 4G across the cities and along the main highway spine, dropping to 3G in the valleys and remoter reaches.
Bishkek, Osh, Karakol, Naryn and Jalal-Abad all have 4G in the urban core, and the M-41 Bishkek-to-Osh highway is covered along most of its length. Be honest with yourself about the gaps: the Tor-Ashuu tunnel and the Too-Ashuu and Alabel passes see signal drops, Issyk-Kul's southern shore is patchier than the north, and Song-Köl and Tash Rabat have little to no signal at all.
Right after purchase you get a confirmation email with your eSIM details, usually within minutes. Install the profile at home over Wi-Fi by scanning the QR code provided. Activation is automatic on arrival, so just switch off airplane mode after you land at Manas in Bishkek or Osh airport and the line registers on Sky by itself. No registration run to a local carrier shop needed.
Most modern smartphones work fully with Blikst eSIMs, though a few exceptions exist, so check our 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, looking for an EID number; on Android it is usually in the network or SIM settings. If in doubt, check before you travel.
It depends on your trip. A one-week Bishkek, Ala-Archa and Issyk-Kul loop works on 3 to 5 GB if you lean on guesthouse Wi-Fi. A two-week trip taking in Song-Köl, Karakol and the south fits around 10 GB. A three-week CBT homestay tour or cross-country overland route pushes 15 to 20 GB. Trekkers should treat the plan as a messaging, weather and emergency line, since most data gets used in towns between treks.
Yes, tethering and hotspot are supported, so you can share your connection with a laptop or a travel companion's phone. Bear in mind coverage shapes the experience more than anything here: hotspotting works well in Bishkek, Osh and the other 4G city cores, but on the high passes, the southern Issyk-Kul shore or up at Song-Köl there is little or no signal to share in the first place.
This is a data-only plan, so it does not come with a local phone number for traditional calls or SMS. In practice that is rarely a problem: you can call and message over the internet using apps like WhatsApp, FaceTime or Telegram, and guesthouses in Bishkek and Osh routinely confirm pickups over WhatsApp. Because the eSIM is a separate digital line, your physical home SIM can stay in the phone to keep your number active.
Usually, yes. Physical SIMs here require passport registration at an official store, which is not always available at the airport, while the Blikst eSIM skips that and sits on the same Sky network. Against US or EU roaming rates of 10 to 15 dollars a day, a 15-day 5 GB plan comes in well below two days of those charges. For overlanders on a multi-country Central Asian route, an eSIM is often the only realistic option between border crossings.