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Tunisia

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Features

  • Coverage: Tunisia
  • Network Provider: Orange
  • Speed: 3G / 4G
  • Tethering / Hotspot: Yes

Plan Details

Device Compatibility: Most modern smartphones are fully compatible with Blikst eSIMs. However, a few exceptions exist. Check our detailed compatibility list to confirm your device works flawlessly with our service..

Activation Policy: Enjoy automatic activation by simply scanning the QR code provided after purchase. Your eSIM will instantly activate upon your arrival at Tunisia, ensuring immediate connectivity.

Delivery Time: Receive a confirmation email with your eSIM details right after completing your purchase. Quick and seamless delivery ensures you’re ready to go in minutes.

Description

Tunisia packs Roman ruins (Carthage, El Jem), desert edges (Douz, Tozeur), and Mediterranean beaches (Hammamet, Sousse, Djerba) into a country you can cross in a day's drive. A Blikst Tunisia eSIM runs on Orange Tunisia at 3G / 4G speeds across the coastal strip, the interior, and the Saharan edge towns.

Where Orange reaches

Tunis, Sousse, Monastir, Sfax, Hammamet, and Djerba all have consistent 4G. The A1 motorway down the coast has continuous signal. Sidi Bou Saïd and Carthage (both within the Tunis metro area) are well covered. Inland, Kairouan and Tozeur have 4G in town. The desert southwest — the Chott el Jerid salt flats, Douz, the Matmata troglodyte villages — drops to 3G in villages and has significant gaps on the tracks between. The Dahar mountains and Ksour (fortified granaries) routes south of Tataouine are patchy at best. If you're heading into the deep Sahara south of Douz for a camel or 4x4 trek, treat it as offline.

Cost vs. a local SIM

Ooredoo, Orange, and Tunisie Telecom all sell tourist SIMs at Tunis-Carthage (TUN), Monastir (MIR), Djerba (DJE), and Enfidha (NBE). Passport registration is required; plan 20–30 minutes at the counter. Home-carrier roaming for Tunisia from EU and UK carriers runs roughly €5–€10/day. A Blikst plan for a one-week stay typically costs less than two days of that.

Arrival at TUN, MIR, DJE, or NBE

Tunis-Carthage (TUN) is the main gateway. Enfidha-Hammamet (NBE) and Monastir (MIR) handle heavy European charter and package tour traffic. Djerba-Zarzis (DJE) is the southern gateway for island resorts. Install the eSIM before you fly. Wi-Fi at all four airports is available but crowded. The line registers on Orange after landing.

Apps Tunisia travellers use

  • Bolt: The dominant ride-share app in Tunis and increasingly in Sousse. More reliable than hailing a taxi in the capital during peak.
  • Yassir: North African ride-share alternative, strong in Tunis and Sfax.
  • Facebook and Facebook Messenger: Much of Tunisian tourism and small business runs on Facebook — restaurants post menus and opening hours there, tour operators message through it.
  • WhatsApp: Common for Djerba and Tozeur-based hotels and desert-tour operators.
  • Google Maps: Cities are well mapped; medinas (Tunis, Sousse, Kairouan) are intricate and Maps.me or OsmAnd with offline data sometimes reads the alleys better.
  • Google Translate: Tunisian Arabic (Derja) and French are both in daily use. Camera mode for menus and signs is useful, especially inland.

Desert and interior notes

If you're doing a classic southern loop — Tozeur, Douz, Matmata, Tataouine, Chenini, and the Ksour — signal is reliable in the main towns and unreliable on the desert pistes between. Download offline Google Maps and an offline GPS track if you're self-driving. 4x4 tours out of Douz or Zaafrane into the Grand Erg Oriental are functionally offline; the operator usually carries a satellite phone for emergencies. Star Wars filming locations (Mos Espa near Tozeur, Sidi Driss hotel at Matmata) are within reasonable coverage of nearby towns.

Plan sizing for typical trips

A long weekend in Tunis and Sidi Bou Saïd: 1–2 GB. A one-week beach resort in Hammamet or Djerba: 3 GB. A one-week cultural circuit (Tunis, Kairouan, El Jem, Sousse): 5 GB. A two-week grand tour including the desert southwest: 10 GB. A month of remote work or study based in Tunis or Sousse: 20 GB.

Install before you fly into TUN, NBE, MIR, or DJE. Land with Bolt and Google Translate live, and go straight to the hotel shuttle or medina walk without losing an hour to a SIM kiosk.

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Important Information

  • This eSIM plan is only compatible with iPhone, Samsung and Google devices.
  • To activate this plan, you will need to provide your IMEI, EID/ICCID and preferred eSim Activation Date.
  • On the specified date your eSim will be activated automatically in the USA no QR code needed.
  • The plan must be purchased at least 2 days before the activation date to allow time for processing.

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Use the provided step-by-step guide to set up and activate your eSIM in few minutes. Then enjoy your trip.

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Blikst eSIM Reviews

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

Marius

Smooth, simple, just works. Use it again.

Elinga

Quick activation and stable connection. Super handy 🌟 Used it during my trip in Madeira.

James

Lovely support, got an esim for UK. Had no issues.

Capone

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

eSIM FAQ

The Blikst Tunisia eSIM runs on Orange Tunisia, one of the country's main mobile operators. You get 3G and 4G speeds, with consistent 4G across the main population centres. Coverage stretches along the coastal strip, through the interior towns, and out to the Saharan edge, so for everyday browsing, maps and messaging you'll be on a solid connection in most places you'll actually stay.

Tunis, Sousse, Monastir, Sfax, Hammamet and Djerba all have consistent 4G, and the A1 coastal motorway has continuous signal. Sidi Bou Saïd, Carthage, Kairouan and Tozeur are covered too. Be honest with yourself about the south: the Chott el Jerid salt flats, Douz and the Matmata villages drop to 3G with real gaps between, the Dahar and Ksour routes south of Tataouine are patchy, and the deep Sahara below Douz is effectively offline.

Right after you buy, you'll get a confirmation email with your eSIM details, then you simply scan the QR code provided to install it on your phone. Activation is automatic and the line registers on Orange once you land in Tunisia, so you arrive already connected. Install it before you fly into Tunis-Carthage, Enfidha, Monastir or Djerba so you can skip the crowded airport Wi-Fi and the SIM kiosk queue entirely.

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. As a quick test, the phone must be carrier-unlocked and eSIM-capable: on iPhone look under Settings > General > About for an EID number, and on Android check the network or SIM section of your settings. If both show up, you're good to install.

It depends on your trip. A long weekend in Tunis and Sidi Bou Saïd runs on about 1 to 2 GB. A one-week beach stay in Hammamet or Djerba suits roughly 3 GB. A one-week cultural circuit through Tunis, Kairouan, El Jem and Sousse is comfortable on 5 GB. A two-week grand tour including the desert southwest fits around 10 GB, and a month of remote work based in Tunis or Sousse is better on 20 GB.

Yes, tethering and hotspot use are supported, so you can share your connection with a laptop, tablet or a travel companion's phone. Bear in mind it draws from the same data allowance, and a hotspot is only as good as the underlying signal. In Tunis, Sousse, Hammamet, Djerba and along the coastal motorway that's reliable 4G, but out on the southern desert pistes the connection thins out, so don't count on tethering there.

This is a data-only plan, so it doesn't include a Tunisian phone number for traditional calls or SMS. In practice that's rarely a problem: you call and message over the internet using apps like WhatsApp, FaceTime or Messenger, all widely used by Tunisian hotels and tour operators. Because the eSIM is a separate digital line, you can leave your usual physical SIM in the phone and keep your home number active for anything essential.

Usually, yes. Home-carrier roaming from EU and UK networks runs roughly €5 to €10 a day, and a Blikst plan for a one-week stay typically costs less than two days of that. A local tourist SIM from Orange, Ooredoo or Tunisie Telecom is available at the airports, but it needs passport registration and around 20 to 30 minutes at the counter, whereas your Blikst eSIM is installed before you fly and live the moment you land.