Prepaid SIM Card & eSIM for Afghanistan (2026 Guide)
A prepaid travel eSIM is a digital SIM card that installs on your phone via QR code. It provides mobile data in Afghanistan without a physical SIM card, passport scan, or airport counter visit. Plans start from $5.15/GB.
- 6 Plans
- 1 Networks
- 4G LTE
- Updated June 2026
Key Facts
- Cheapest eSIM
- $5.15/GB
- Network
- Roshan
- Speed
- 4G LTE
- Plans available
- 6
As of June 2026, Afghanistan has 6 prepaid eSIM plans across 1 networks at 4G LTE speeds.
The cheapest rate is $5.15/GB via Nomad on Roshan.
As of June 2026, a prepaid eSIM for Afghanistan costs from $8.10 for 1GB with 4G LTE speeds on Roshan networks.
Fixed data plans start at $8.10 for 1GB on Roshan — installed at home over WiFi, active the second you land. Many travelers to Afghanistan walk out of arrivals without data and cannot call a taxi or open Maps. Your ride-share app works before you reach the taxi stand.
A prepaid eSIM for Afghanistan means data from the moment you land — including access to maps, ride-share apps, and emergency services at 119/102/100. No WiFi hunting, no SIM counter detour. Roshan carry the 4G LTE signal across the country, and your eSIM connects to the same network a physical SIM would use.
Coverage limited outside major cities Local currency in Afghanistan is the AFN (؋). Airport SIM counters often price plans in local currency — a prepaid eSIM is priced in USD with no conversion at point of purchase.
Compared
Our top prepaid eSIM choices for Afghanistan
All providers route through local carriers in Afghanistan. Sorted by overall rating.
We earn a commission on some links. It never changes our rankings or the price you pay.
| Provider | Rating | From / GB |
|---|---|---|
| 4.4 / 5 | from $3.00/GB | |
AiraloBest Overall | 4.8 / 5 | from $4.50/GB |
| 4.5 / 5 | from $3.99/GB | |
HolaflyBest Unlimited | 4.6 / 5 | from $2.99/day |
Prices verified June 2026. Updated monthly from provider websites.
Our pick for Afghanistan: Nomad
For Afghanistan in 2026, Nomad scores 4.4/5 with plans from $3.00/GB on Roshan's 4G LTE network. Best per-GB pricing for budget travelers.
Comparison based on 4 providers tested in June 2026. Prices verified against official provider websites. See our methodology.
The Scenario
The arrival queue at Afghanistan's main airport
You land at Afghanistan's main airport without AFN. The SIM counter is cash-only — your international card was just declined. So you walk to the currency exchange booth, wait 15 minutes, exchange money at a 5% markup, walk back to the SIM counter, and join the queue again. Total time: 45 minutes and two queues before you send your first message. A prepaid eSIM from PrepaidTraveleSIM at $8.10 for 1GB on Roshan was charged to your home card before you left. No currency, no double queue.
Four Ways to Buy
Prepaid data plans and internet access in Afghanistan
Compare airport counters, city shops, online delivery, and instant eSIM activation.
Airport SIM counter
10-30 min waitExpect 15-25 minutes at the counter at most Afghanistan airports — longer during peak arrival windows. Tourist pricing runs 2-4x above what you pay online. Passport copy is standard.
City phone shop
ID requiredCity shops in Afghanistan charge less than the airport counter but require a separate trip after you check in. Plan for 30-45 minutes total: travel, ID check, and activation wait.
Online pre-order
Plan aheadPhysical SIM delivery to Afghanistan works, but it requires a confirmed hotel address and 5-10 days lead time. A prepaid eSIM skips the shipping wait — your plan arrives by email the moment you buy it.
Instant eSIM (our pick)
5 min setupConnect to Roshan's 4G LTE network without a counter visit. Buy online, scan the QR code at home, and land with data already running. No ID required at any step.
Pricing
Budget prepaid eSIM pricing for Afghanistan
Budget travelers to Afghanistan need data for maps, messaging, and booking confirmations — not unlimited streaming. The 1GB plan at $8.10 covers that without paying for data you will not use.
The hidden cost is the airport counter: $10-25 for a comparable plan, sold to tired travelers who did not check prices before leaving home. Step up to the 20GB plan at $102.90 if you need more headroom — still $5.15/GB.
| Data | Price (USD) | Price per GB |
|---|---|---|
| 1GB | $8.10 | $8.10 |
| 3GB | $22.50 | $7.50 |
| 5GB | $29.40 | $5.88 |
| 10GB | $55.20 | $5.52 |
| 20GBBest value | $102.90 | $5.15 |
| Unlimited / day | $12.43/day | — |
Cost Breakdown
What a week of data costs in Afghanistan
A couple traveling to Afghanistan doubles every connectivity cost. Airport counter: $10-25 per person = $20 total. eSIM: 1GB at $8.10 per person = $16.20 total for a short trip. 5GB at $29.40 per person = $58.80 total for a full week. Each person gets their own plan, their own data, no hotspot sharing. For trips past two weeks, the 20GB plan at $102.90 avoids a mid-trip top-up.
| Trip | eSIM Plan | Airport SIM |
|---|---|---|
| 3 days | $8.10 (1GB) | ~$30 |
| 7 days | $29.40 (5GB) | ~$30 |
| 14 days | $102.90 (20GB) | ~$30 |
Roaming vs eSIM
The real cost of roaming in Afghanistan
Why a prepaid eSIM beats carrier roaming in Afghanistan
A 7-day trip with carrier roaming at $10/day costs $70 in data fees alone. A 14-day trip doubles that to $140. A prepaid eSIM for Afghanistan from Nomad starts at $8.10 for 1GB — enough for maps, messaging, and social media across a full week on Roshan. The difference between $70 and $8.10 buys two extra meals, a museum ticket, or a half-day tour.
Coverage
Prepaid data coverage in Afghanistan
Roshan covers Afghanistan's cities and main tourist corridors at 4G LTE speeds. Remote areas may see weaker signal — the same limitation applies to any SIM on the same network. A prepaid eSIM offers identical coverage to a counter-bought card without the airport markup.
The best-value prepaid eSIM plan from Nomad is 20GB at $102.90 ($5.15/GB) — no airport visit, no queue, no passport copy required.
Available Networks
- RatingRoshan4G
Quick Reference
Afghanistan logistics: the short version
- Emergency
- 119/102/100
- Power Socket
- Type C/F
- Time Zone
- AFT (UTC+4:30)
- Currency
- AFN (؋)
- eSIM Speed
- 4G LTE
WiFi
Internet access options in Afghanistan
WiFi in Afghanistan is limited, so your eSIM handles most of the data load. Budget a larger plan — maps, ride-share, and messaging all run on cellular between the occasional hotel WiFi session.
The prepaid eSIM on Roshan's 4G LTE network is your primary connection. WiFi supplements it, not the other way around.
Data Tips
Afghanistan travel connectivity: picking the right plan
Most travelers to Afghanistan need 3-5 GB for a one-week trip. This covers maps, messaging, social media browsing, and occasional photo sharing. The smallest plan available starts at $8.10 for 1GB.
- 0.5 GBLight duo0.5 GB covers one person for maps and messaging. For two travelers in Afghanistan, each person needs their own plan — hotspotting from one device drains battery and halves speed on Roshan. Prices are in USD — no AFN conversion at purchase.
- 1 GBStandard per personThe right amount for one traveler in Afghanistan — maps, messaging, and social for a week. If you are sharing a hotspot, double this estimate and buy the next tier up on Roshan. Afghanistan runs on AFT (UTC+4:30) — jet-lagged travelers tend to use more data in the first 48 hours while adjusting.
- 3 GBShared hotspot3 GB covers one person's heavy use in Afghanistan. If you are tethering a partner's phone or tablet off your Roshan eSIM, treat this as the minimum — two devices on one hotspot burn data faster than expected.
- 5+ GBTwo-person bufferThe safe choice for couples in Afghanistan sharing a hotspot or traveling without a backup WiFi plan. 5+ GB on Roshan eliminates the mid-trip "who used all the data" conversation. VPN usage in Afghanistan adds 10-15% data overhead — factor that into your plan size.
Need internet without voice? See our data-only plan guide.
Device Check
eSIM-compatible phones for Afghanistan travel
Afghanistan runs on 4G LTE infrastructure. Every eSIM-compatible phone from 2018 onward connects at full speed: iPhone XS and newer, Samsung Galaxy S20 and newer, Google Pixel 3 and newer. Roshan and AWCC both support eSIM connections in Afghanistan. Check carrier-unlock status before you purchase: Settings → General → About on iPhone, Settings → Connections → SIM Manager on Android. Budget phones from 2017 and earlier lack eSIM hardware entirely.
Pre-Flight Checklist
Afghanistan travel data: prepare before departure
Do this at home — not in the airport arrivals hall.
- 01
Verify your phone and backup devices
Your phone needs eSIM support (iPhone XR+, Samsung S20+, Pixel 3+) and carrier-unlock. If you also use a cellular iPad or tablet for photo editing in the field, check its eSIM compatibility separately. Both devices can run their own Afghanistan eSIM profiles on Roshan.
- 02
Buy a plan with upload headroom
Plans start at $8.10 for 1GB. Photography trips to Afghanistan burn data faster than sightseeing. Cloud backups, location tagging, and sharing full-resolution files add up. Budget one tier above what a normal traveler would choose, or consider an unlimited daily plan if available.
- 03
Download maps and location data before departure
Save offline maps for all Afghanistan shoot locations. Download sunrise/sunset and weather apps with cached data. Pre-load any location scouting research. The less you need to download in the field on Roshan, the more data you keep for cloud backups of your actual photos.
- 04
Configure cloud sync to WiFi-only by default
Set your photo backup service (iCloud, Google Photos, Lightroom) to sync over WiFi only. Upload your day's work from the hotel each evening. If you need to share a few selects mid-shoot over Roshan, do it manually — automatic cloud sync over mobile data drains a Afghanistan plan in hours.
- 05
Activate and test upload speeds on arrival
Enable the Afghanistan eSIM at Afghanistan's main airport. Roshan registers in 2-3 minutes. Test an upload immediately — send a 5 MB file to yourself to gauge actual upload speed. If speeds are strong, you can do selective cloud uploads from the field. If not, plan to batch everything over hotel WiFi each night.
Step by Step
Getting data in Afghanistan: two processes compared
Arrival volume at the airport peaks during holiday seasons — the SIM counter queue grows, counter staff rush through activations, and plans can sell out entirely. A prepaid eSIM bought before your flight has no queue, no stock limit, and no seasonal pressure. Three steps at home replace 30+ minutes at the terminal.
Airport SIM — 7 steps (~45 min)
- Land and collect bags
- Locate the SIM counter (not always signposted)
- Join the queue
- Show passport for registration
- Choose a plan from a rate card
- Pay (cash only at some counters)
- Wait for SIM activation
Prepaid eSIM — 3 steps (~5 min)
- Buy online before departure (2 min)
- Scan QR code over home WiFi (1 min)
- Enable on landing — connects automatically
Which Provider
Picking the best provider for Afghanistan
Cost-conscious traveler: Nomad posts the most competitive per-GB pricing we found for Afghanistan routes. Quality-first traveler who wants the best-rated app and widest fallback coverage: Airalo at a small premium.
No-limit traveler who refuses to manage a data counter: Holafly unlimited daily plans cost more upfront but there is nothing to track. Privacy-aware traveler on open networks in Afghanistan: Saily runs NordVPN alongside the eSIM under one login.
Regional Plans
Cross-border eSIM options for Afghanistan
Business trips covering Afghanistan and Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka need uninterrupted data between meetings in different cities and countries. A single-country eSIM stops working at the border.
A regional South Asia bundle maintains your connection across all stops. Email, calendar, and VPN stay live through every crossing. Single-country plans start at $8.10 for 1GB; the regional premium pays for itself in avoided connectivity gaps between meetings.
Related destinations: Bangladesh, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, India
Compare providers side by side: Airalo vs Holafly · Airalo vs Nomad · Holafly vs Saily · Saily vs Nomad · All providers
The Honest Call
eSIM or local SIM: the Afghanistan verdict
Choose an eSIM if you...
- Pay $5.15/GB instead of 2-3x more at the airport counter
- Buy online at home with no airport markup or tourist-rate pricing
- Compare plans before you travel with no time pressure or jet lag
- Top up in-app at the same per-GB rate — no surprise charges
Choose a local SIM if you...
- City phone shops often sell local prepaid SIMs cheaper than airport counters for extended stays
- Long stay of a month or more where a local monthly plan is more cost-effective
- You found a local carrier promotion that undercuts standard eSIM per-GB pricing
- Phone is not eSIM-capable so a physical SIM is the only option
Compare alternatives: pocket WiFi vs eSIM | prepaid vs postpaid
Avoid These
How not to buy data in Afghanistan
Buying the eSIM at the boarding gate.
Gate WiFi is unreliable, and you need a stable connection to receive the QR code and complete installation. Buy and install at home the night before your flight, not at the airport.
Not pre-installing before departure.
Installation requires WiFi. Airport WiFi often needs a phone number to register — which you cannot get without data. Do the whole setup from your home network.
Enabling the eSIM too early on a connecting flight.
Most plans start counting from first network connection. If your route has a layover and you enable the eSIM at the connecting airport, you burn a full day before reaching Afghanistan. Keep it toggled off until you land at your final destination.
Not downloading provider support before your flight.
Top-ups, usage tracking, and support tickets all run through the provider app. Download it and log in while you have home WiFi. Some airport WiFi portals block app store access during initial registration.
Privacy
Afghanistan VPN rules and travel security
VPN access in Afghanistan is restricted. Some VPN protocols work, others are throttled or blocked. The situation changes periodically — what worked last month may not work today.
Install your VPN app and test it before you travel. Saily, from the team behind NordVPN, bundles VPN protection with its eSIM plans — a practical option for travelers who want data and privacy under one account.
Use VPN over cellular rather than public WiFi for better reliability. Your prepaid eSIM on 4G LTE provides the stable connection a VPN needs to maintain its tunnel.
Learn more: eSIM security and privacy guide
Troubleshooting
Troubleshooting no signal in Afghanistan
Camera won't read the QR code
First, confirm your phone is carrier-unlocked — a locked device blocks all foreign eSIM profiles. If it is unlocked, you may be at the 8-profile limit on iPhone. Delete an old unused eSIM in Settings → Cellular, then retry the Afghanistan installation.
Dual-SIM setup confusion
Set your Afghanistan eSIM as the cellular data line and leave your home SIM active for calls only. Both SIMs run simultaneously. Go to Settings → Cellular → Cellular Data and select the travel eSIM. Your home number stays reachable on Roshan's network.
Selected incorrect plan at checkout
Act before activating. Most eSIM providers offer a cancellation window of up to one hour on unused plans. Do not toggle the eSIM on — open the provider app, find your Afghanistan order, and contact support to cancel before any data is consumed.
Running low on data mid-trip
Check Settings → Cellular for a per-app data breakdown. Background app refresh is usually the culprit in Afghanistan — data consumption spikes when apps refresh silently over Roshan. Disable it globally before landing and download offline maps over hotel WiFi.
The Bottom Line
Final take on prepaid data for Afghanistan
Traveling with a partner or family? Each person can install their own eSIM before departure — no splitting data, no queuing twice at the Afghanistan's main airport counter. Nomad puts Roshan's 4G LTE network on every compatible phone at $5.15/GB each. If someone in the group has a non-eSIM phone, a physical SIM works for them; everyone else travels lighter. Note: VPN access is restricted in Afghanistan — install your VPN app before arrival.
Starting at $5.15/GB, a prepaid plan for Afghanistan is one of the easiest upgrades for any trip. See the full destinations list or explore more South Asia destinations, or read how to activate your eSIM before you fly.
How we test and score: editorial policy · corrections log
FAQ
Afghanistan data questions and answers
Can I buy a SIM card at the airport in Afghanistan?
SIM counters at Afghanistan airports often close between 10 PM and 6 AM. If your flight lands late, you may have no option at the airport. Tourist SIMs also cost more than in-city shops — sometimes 40% more for the same data. A prepaid eSIM removes that uncertainty: install at home before your flight and connect to Roshan's 4G LTE network on landing. Plans start at $8.10 for 1GB. No counter hours to worry about.
Do I need a passport to buy a SIM in Afghanistan?
Passport requirements for SIM cards in Afghanistan depend on the retailer and local regulations. Airport counters are more likely to require ID than city shops. A prepaid eSIM removes this variable: purchase and install from your phone at home, with no ID check at any counter. You land in Afghanistan with data active on Roshan's network — no paperwork, no waiting, no identity verification.
Is an airport SIM or eSIM cheaper for Afghanistan?
A prepaid eSIM is cheaper than airport SIM counters in nearly all cases. Airport tourist SIMs in Afghanistan carry a premium for convenience — often 30-50% more than the same data volume from a local carrier. A prepaid eSIM starts at $8.10 for 1GB on Roshan's 4G LTE network, with $5.15/GB on the 20GB plan. The eSIM also connects faster — no counter queue, no paperwork, no overnight availability gaps.
Can I install my Afghanistan eSIM before I travel?
Yes. Open Settings on your phone, tap Cellular (iPhone) or Connections (Samsung), then "Add eSIM" or "Add Cellular Plan." Scan the QR code from your confirmation email. Name the line "Afghanistan Data" and set it to inactive. The entire process takes under 3 minutes over home WiFi. The eSIM sits dormant on your phone until you toggle it on after landing — validity starts from first use in Afghanistan, not the scan date. Plans start at $8.10.
Which phones support eSIM for Afghanistan?
Budget phones are the most common eSIM blocker. Phones under $200 released before 2023 usually lack eSIM hardware — check your exact model before buying. Premium phones are safe: iPhone XS (2018)+, Samsung Galaxy S20 (2020)+, Google Pixel 3 (2018)+, and most flagship devices from 2020 onward. The second requirement is carrier-unlock: even a brand-new Galaxy S24 rejects foreign eSIM profiles if the carrier locked it. Check Settings > General > About on iPhone or Settings > Connections > SIM Manager on Samsung.
Can I use my prepaid eSIM as a hotspot in Afghanistan?
Yes — most prepaid eSIM plans for Afghanistan allow tethering. Keep in mind hotspot use burns data faster than direct phone use: streaming video over a hotspot consumes roughly 1GB per hour at standard quality. If you plan to share your connection with a laptop or tablet, buy at least 50% more data than your phone-only estimate. Check each provider's hotspot policy before purchasing — Holafly limits hotspot to 1GB per day on unlimited plans.
What happens when my prepaid eSIM data runs out in Afghanistan?
Data stops — no overages, no automatic charges. Your first move is to find WiFi: most hotels, cafes, and airport lounges in Afghanistan have open networks. Once connected, open your provider's app and top up in about 2 minutes. If you have another eSIM provider's app already downloaded, you can also buy a second plan from a competitor without removing the first eSIM. Keep your provider's app installed and your login saved before departure — reinstalling over hotel WiFi while jetlagged is slower than it sounds.
Can I keep my home phone number while using a Afghanistan eSIM?
Yes. Your home SIM and the Afghanistan eSIM run simultaneously — no SIM swap needed. Leave your home SIM active for incoming calls; route all data through the travel eSIM. WhatsApp, iMessage, and Signal all work over the eSIM data connection and stay tied to your home phone number. You receive messages on the same number your contacts already have. Voice calls over WhatsApp and FaceTime also work free over the eSIM data line — no international calling rates apply.
How far in advance should I buy my Afghanistan prepaid eSIM?
One to two days before departure works well for most travelers. That window gives you time to install over home WiFi, verify the eSIM shows up in Settings, and contact support if the QR code fails — without the pressure of a boarding countdown. Plan validity starts from first use in Afghanistan, not the purchase date, so buying two days early costs nothing extra. Plans start at $8.10.
Does eSIM work without WiFi after installation in Afghanistan?
Yes — after installation, the eSIM connects to Roshan's 4G LTE cellular network in Afghanistan. Hotel and cafe WiFi often runs slower than cellular data due to shared bandwidth. WiFi is only needed during the initial QR code scan at home. After that, the eSIM operates on local cellular towers. For most travel use, the cellular connection is faster and more consistent than public WiFi in Afghanistan.
Can I have two eSIMs on my phone at the same time for Afghanistan?
Yes. Install two eSIM profiles from different providers before your trip to Afghanistan. If your primary provider has weak coverage in a specific area, switch to the backup eSIM in Settings — the process takes about 5 seconds. iPhones hold up to 8 profiles; Samsung Galaxy S21+ and newer hold at least 2. Both stay installed permanently until you delete them. This dual-provider strategy costs nothing extra until you activate the backup plan.
How do I check if my phone is unlocked for eSIM in Afghanistan?
Some carriers lock the eSIM slot separately from the physical SIM slot. Your phone may accept a foreign physical SIM but reject a foreign eSIM — or the reverse. Check both: on iPhone, go to Settings > General > About and confirm "No SIM restrictions." On Samsung, go to Settings > Connections > SIM Manager and verify the "Add eSIM" option is active. If the eSIM option is missing or grayed out, contact your carrier about eSIM-specific unlock for Afghanistan travel.
Buy your Afghanistan eSIM now
Plans start at $5.15/GB. Set up takes under 5 minutes. No ID, no counter, no cash.