eSIM technology offers a more reliable and cost-effective solution for staying connected abroad. South Africans are becoming more and more adventurous in their travels Dubai, London, Bangkok, Nairobi — travel routes are becoming longer, more diverse, and the frequency of trips is steadily rising. Along with this growth comes rising mobile internet costs.
After returning home, bills from providers such as Vodacom or MTN often turn into an unpleasant surprise. Sometimes even to the tune of several thousand rand. The problem is not new, but a solution has appeared relatively recently.
A new generation of eSIM providers — such as Swiss industry leaderYesim—allows travellers to set up mobile internet before leaving home, whether in Cape Town or Johannesburg, and connect to the best available network immediately after landing. No waiting in line at operator kiosks and no unexpected bills arriving a month later. At first glance, roaming seems like the obvious choice, because you use the same SIM card, the same number, and there are no extra steps.
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But it is this very feeling of simplicity that hides the main problem — unpredictable costs. With Vodacom, the standard roaming data cost for certain destinations starts from R0.75 per MB, and in some countries reaches R5.05 per MB. This is over R5,000 per gigabyte — an amount that an active tourist can burn through in half a day of navigation, messaging, and online bookings. MTN, without special packages, operates on a similar logic: the tariff depends on the destination country and partner network, and destinations with a price above R15 per MB are automatically blocked — unless the user explicitly allows such charges.
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