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 Telecom Liechtenstein AG, the principality's own operator that trades as FL1. You get 3G and 4G coverage across the country, so live navigation, messaging and streaming all work comfortably in town and out on the trails. Liechtenstein has its own dialling code, +423, and is treated as a separate network region from neighbouring Switzerland, so this is genuinely a local line rather than a roaming overlap.
Pretty much everywhere. The country is small and flat along the Rhine valley with the mountains to the east, so FL1's 4G reaches Vaduz, Schaan, Balzers and the road up through Triesenberg to Malbun. The Fuerstensteig ridge hike and other alpine routes above Malbun have signal at the refuges, with the odd dip on the higher passes. Right at the Swiss and Austrian borders your phone hands off constantly, so the line goes dormant the moment you cross.
Right after you buy, you get a confirmation email with your eSIM details, then you install it at home on Wi-Fi by scanning the QR code provided. Activation is automatic: the eSIM springs to life the moment you arrive in Liechtenstein and FL1 picks up your phone. Your Swiss or Austrian roaming handles the drive in, so turn off data roaming on your home line to stop it clinging on as you cross the border.
Most modern smartphones work fully with Blikst eSIMs, though a few exceptions exist, so it is worth checking our detailed compatibility list to confirm your handset before you buy. 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 the same option lives in your network or SIM settings.
Not much, given how compact the place is. A day trip fits comfortably in well under 1 GB. A two-day summer visit of hiking and passport-stamping in Vaduz sits around 1 GB. A full week at Malbun ski resort, with daily WhatsApp coordination, weather and lift checks and a bit of evening Netflix, wants roughly 3 to 5 GB. Longer stays are unusual; if you are relocating you would normally move to a resident plan instead.
Yes, tethering and hotspot are supported, so you can share the connection with a laptop, tablet or a travel companion's phone. That is handy for checking LIEmobil bus times, snow reports on Schneehoehen or Bergfex, or doing a bit of work from a cafe in Vaduz. Just remember that hotspot use draws on the same data allowance, and shared video or large downloads will get through it faster than browsing on a single phone.
This is a data plan, so it does not come with a local phone number for traditional calls or SMS. In practice that is rarely a problem, as you can call and message over the internet using apps like WhatsApp or FaceTime, which is exactly how most visitors sort hotel, restaurant and ski-instructor bookings here. Because the eSIM is a separate digital line, your physical home SIM can stay in the phone, keeping your usual number reachable.
Usually, yes. Liechtenstein is not in the EU, it is in the EEA and uses the Swiss franc, so EU roam-like-home rules do not apply. Most EU and UK carriers bill it at non-EU roaming rates of around five to ten euros a day or more, and US carriers charge roughly ten dollars a day. For one or two days that may be bearable, but anything longer favours the eSIM. Physical FL1 SIMs exist in Vaduz and Schaan but need ID registration and the offices keep limited hours.