Prepaid SIM Card & eSIM for Aruba (2026 Guide)
A prepaid travel eSIM is a digital SIM card that installs on your phone via QR code. It provides mobile data in Aruba without a physical SIM card, passport scan, or airport counter visit. Plans start from $1.70/GB.
- 0 Plans
- 2 Networks
- 4G LTE
- Updated June 2026
Key Facts
- Cheapest eSIM
- $1.70/GB
- Network
- Digicel
- Speed
- 4G LTE
- Plans available
- 0
As of June 2026, Aruba has 0 prepaid eSIM plans across 2 networks at 4G LTE speeds.
The cheapest rate is $1.70/GB via Saily on Digicel.
As of June 2026, a prepaid eSIM for Aruba costs under $10 for basic data with 4G LTE speeds on Digicel and SETAR networks.
Coverage runs on 4G LTE infrastructure on Digicel's 4G LTE network — bought online, no ID required at point of purchase. Getting a prepaid SIM in Aruba often means handing over your passport for a photocopy at the counter. Install an eSIM before you fly and skip the paperwork entirely.
Some Aruba prepaid eSIM plans carry unused data forward if you top up before expiry. That means a short trip with a larger plan is not necessarily wasted — leftover GB stay on your account. Digicel and SETAR power the 4G LTE connection across the country.
Compared
Aruba eSIM plans: which one to pick
All providers route through local carriers in Aruba. 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 Aruba: Saily
For Aruba in 2026, Saily scores 4.5/5 with plans from $3.99/GB on Digicel's 4G LTE network. Built-in VPN protection from Nord Security.
Comparison based on 4 providers tested in June 2026. Prices verified against official provider websites. See our methodology.
The Scenario
What happens when you land in Aruba without an eSIM
You step off the plane at Aruba's main airport feeling unwell. You need to find a clinic, call for help, and share your location. The SIM counter is across the terminal and your phone has no data. A prepaid eSIM installed before departure connects you the moment you land. PrepaidTraveleSIM at 4G LTE on Digicel — medical situations do not wait for counter hours.
Four Ways to Buy
What is the best way to get data in Aruba
Compare airport counters, city shops, online delivery, and instant eSIM activation.
Airport SIM counter
10-30 min waitAruba airport SIM counters require a passport at point of purchase. Most counters close between 10 PM and midnight. Buy a prepaid eSIM before you fly if your flight arrives late.
City phone shop
ID requiredPhone shops in Aruba stock local prepaid plans at city rates. Stock and English help vary by neighborhood — tourist areas are easier, outlying districts less so. ID required at all.
Online pre-order
Plan aheadHotel-delivery SIMs sit between the airport counter and a prepaid eSIM in terms of effort. They avoid the arrivals queue but need a week of lead time and a confirmed delivery address. For most short trips, a prepaid eSIM is faster and simpler.
Instant eSIM (our pick)
5 min setupBuy from Saily, scan the QR code over WiFi, and connect in 5 minutes. No ID required. Set up at home before you fly — arrive connected.
Pricing
How much a prepaid eSIM costs in Aruba
Prepaid eSIM plans for Aruba are available through Saily. Check current pricing before you travel.
Cost Breakdown
Aruba data prices for short and long trips
Airport SIM counters in Aruba charge $20-35 for a prepaid plan. A travel eSIM for Aruba undercuts that price and activates in minutes from home. No passport scan. No queue. The savings hold regardless of trip length.
Roaming vs eSIM
How to avoid roaming charges in Aruba
Why a prepaid eSIM beats carrier roaming in Aruba
Four travelers on carrier roaming at $10/day each: $40/day, $280/week, $560 for two weeks. That total often exceeds the flight cost for one person. Four prepaid eSIMs from Saily at $1.70/GB each cost a fraction total for the same trip length on Digicel. Each person manages their own plan. No shared data limits, no single bill absorbing four people's usage.
Coverage
Aruba mobile operators and signal reach
Public WiFi in Aruba varies by location. A prepaid eSIM on Digicel provides consistent 4G LTE data between WiFi spots — the same network and towers a physical SIM would use, bought from home instead of a counter.
A prepaid eSIM activates on Digicel without visiting an airport counter.
Available Networks
- RatingDigicel4G
- SETAR4G
Data Tips
How much mobile data do you need in Aruba
Most travelers to Aruba need 3-5 GB for a one-week trip. This covers maps, messaging, social media browsing, and occasional photo sharing.
- 0.5 GBEmail and chatCovers email, Slack, and basic browsing in Aruba — no video. 0.5 GB is enough for a day of light remote work on Digicel when you have hotel WiFi for calls.
- 1 GBLight callsTwo or three 30-minute video calls plus full-day email and messaging in Aruba. Works for a short business trip where meetings happen mostly over hotel WiFi on Digicel.
- 3 GBDaily meetingsSupports back-to-back video meetings, VPN usage, and cloud file uploads in Aruba. Covers a full week of remote work on Digicel without rationing.
- 5+ GBFull remote workLaptop tethering, all-day video calls, large file uploads, and VPN overhead in Aruba on Digicel. The right tier if your hotel WiFi is not reliable enough for client calls.
Need internet without voice? See our data-only plan guide.
Device Check
Phone and tablet eSIM compatibility for Aruba
The worst moment to discover your phone is carrier-locked is standing at Aruba's airport SIM counter after a long flight. Check compatibility before you leave. eSIM-compatible devices: iPhone XS (2018) and newer, Samsung Galaxy S20 (2020) and newer, Google Pixel 3 (2018) and newer. In Aruba, your eSIM connects through Digicel or SETAR. iPhone users confirm unlock under Settings → General → About. Android users check Settings → Connections → SIM Manager. If your phone fails the check, a physical SIM from the airport counter remains an option.
Pre-Flight Checklist
Pre-trip data checklist for Aruba travelers
Do this at home — not in the airport arrivals hall.
- 01
Verify phone unlock
Call your carrier or check Settings → General → About. Your phone must be carrier-unlocked to use a Aruba travel eSIM — a locked device will reject the foreign profile. Allow 24-72 hours if you need to request an unlock.
- 02
Confirm eSIM support
iPhone XR (2018) or newer, Samsung Galaxy S21+, and Pixel 3+ all support eSIM. Check your model specs if you are unsure — older and budget phones may be physical-SIM only.
- 03
Buy before you depart
Compare plans before you fly. Airport SIM counters at Aruba's main airport charge 2-5x more for the same Digicel coverage. Buying in advance takes under two minutes and the QR code arrives by email.
- 04
Install the eSIM at home
Open Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM and scan the QR code from your confirmation email. Installation requires a stable WiFi connection — do it on your home network, not at the boarding gate.
- 05
Set data line, keep your number
Keep your home SIM active for calls and texts. Switch cellular data to the Aruba eSIM under Settings → Cellular → Cellular Data. Enable data roaming on the travel line only — you connect to Digicel automatically when you land.
Step by Step
SIM counter vs eSIM activation in Aruba
Buying a SIM at the airport: land, find the counter (not always signposted), join the queue, show your passport for a photocopy, pick a plan from a card in a foreign language, pay (cash only at some counters), wait for activation, walk away — roughly 45 minutes. Buying a prepaid eSIM: order online before departure (2 minutes), scan the QR code at home (1 minute), enable it on landing (30 seconds). Total: under 5 minutes. The 15-30 minutes queue at the airport is not included.
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
Our Aruba provider picks by use case
Short weekend trip to Aruba and price is the priority? Nomad has the lowest per-GB rate. Multi-country itinerary that includes Aruba? Airalo covers 200+ countries on one account — switch destinations without buying a new plan.
Streaming video on a long trip or tethering a laptop? Holafly unlimited daily data means no counter to watch. Connecting through hostel or airport WiFi along the way? Saily adds NordVPN on the same account — your traffic stays encrypted on public networks.
Regional Plans
One plan for Aruba and the region
eSIM prices vary by country in Americas. Aruba plans start at competitive rates. Neighboring destinations may cost more or less per GB depending on local carrier rates.
A regional bundle averages the cost across countries. If one destination on your route is expensive, the bundle dilutes that cost. Compare individual country totals against the regional bundle price before you buy.
Related destinations: Guadeloupe, US Virgin Islands, Saint Martin, French Guiana
Compare providers side by side: Airalo vs Holafly · Airalo vs Nomad · Holafly vs Saily · Saily vs Nomad · All providers
The Honest Call
Aruba data: local SIM vs prepaid eSIM
Choose an eSIM if you...
- Connect to Digicel's 4G LTE network without buying a SIM at the counter
- Get the same carrier coverage as a physical SIM — no coverage trade-off
- Activate before departure so coverage starts the moment you land
- Switch between carriers automatically on multi-carrier plans
Choose a local SIM if you...
- You need the specific plan from a local carrier that includes voice minutes and a local number
- Staying in a rural area where in-store staff can advise on the strongest local signal
- Your phone does not support eSIM hardware
- You prefer to compare plans face-to-face at a carrier store after arrival
Compare alternatives: pocket WiFi vs eSIM | prepaid vs postpaid
Avoid These
What to avoid when getting data for Aruba
Underestimating daily data use.
Most travelers burn 500 MB to 1.5 GB per day between maps, messaging apps, and occasional video calls. Start with a plan that covers your stay without needing a mid-trip top-up.
Not knowing whether hotspot is included.
Some prepaid eSIM plans count hotspot data against your total at full speed; others throttle tethering or block it entirely. If you plan to share the connection with a laptop, confirm hotspot is supported before buying.
Ignoring fair-use throttling on unlimited plans.
Unlimited plans in Aruba often throttle speeds after a daily threshold — commonly 1-3 GB at full speed, then slower data for the rest of the day. This is fine for maps and messaging but affects video streaming. Check the plan's fair-use policy before buying.
Forgetting offline maps before departure.
Navigation is one of the heaviest data uses for travelers. Download your Aruba cities in Google Maps or Maps.me before you leave home. Offline maps save hundreds of megabytes per day and work when signal is patchy.
Privacy
VPN status and WiFi security in Aruba
Any time you connect to public WiFi in Aruba — airports, hotels, cafes — your traffic passes through a shared network. Without a VPN, login credentials and financial data travel unencrypted.
A prepaid eSIM on 4G LTE cellular avoids shared networks entirely. For sessions where WiFi is unavoidable, a VPN adds the missing encryption layer. Saily pairs eSIM data with NordVPN under one account.
Learn more: eSIM security and privacy guide
Troubleshooting
Fixing data issues after landing in Aruba
Plan started counting down too early
Installation does not start the clock — but a network connection does. Switch the Aruba eSIM off after scanning the QR code and leave it off until you land. Enable it once you are on the ground and past customs.
SIM conflict — no data despite active plan
Check which SIM is set as the active data line. Your phone may be routing data through your home SIM instead of Digicel. Open Settings → Cellular → Cellular Data, select the Aruba eSIM, and toggle data roaming on for that line specifically.
No signal after landing
Enable data roaming on the eSIM line specifically — not your home carrier line. Restart your phone and wait 2-3 minutes for network registration. Digicel in Aruba sometimes takes a moment to hand off a new eSIM profile on arrival.
Data disappearing quickly
Three quick fixes: turn off background app refresh, download offline maps for Aruba before departure, and switch streaming apps to WiFi-only mode. Under Settings → Cellular you can see which apps burned data in the background on Digicel's network without you opening them.
The Bottom Line
Aruba eSIM: the short answer
Having data when you land in Aruba means access to emergency services, real-time navigation, and translation tools from your first step outside Aruba's main airport. Saily connects to Digicel's 4G LTE network at $1.70/GB. Set it up at home and land with every tool working before you reach the curb.
Starting at $1.70/GB, a prepaid plan for Aruba is one of the easiest upgrades for any trip. See the full destinations list or explore more Americas destinations, or read how to activate your eSIM before you fly.
How we test and score: editorial policy · corrections log
FAQ
Aruba eSIM FAQ
Can I buy a SIM card at the airport in Aruba?
Airport SIM counter availability in Aruba varies by terminal and time of day. Counters may be closed on overnight arrivals, and tourist SIMs typically cost more than in-city phone shops. A prepaid eSIM eliminates the uncertainty: purchase online, install via QR code before departure, and connect to Digicel's 4G LTE network on landing. No airport counter needed.
Do I need a passport to buy a SIM in Aruba?
Passport requirements for SIM cards in Aruba 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 Aruba with data active on Digicel's network — no paperwork, no waiting, no identity verification.
Is an airport SIM or eSIM cheaper for Aruba?
A prepaid eSIM costs less — and saves time. Airport SIM counters in Aruba charge 30-50% more than city shops, and the queue eats 15-25 minutes after you land. A prepaid eSIM starts at $1.70/GB on Digicel's 4G LTE network. Install before your flight, skip the arrivals queue, and use those first minutes in Aruba for something better than waiting at a counter.
Can I install my Aruba eSIM before I travel?
Yes. Install the eSIM up to 30 days before your trip. For extra safety, install a second eSIM from a different provider as a backup — iPhones store up to 8 profiles, so there is no limit issue. Scan both QR codes at home over WiFi, leave them inactive, and enable your primary Aruba plan after landing. If one provider has poor coverage at your destination, switch to the backup in seconds. Plans start at competitive rates.
Which phones support eSIM for Aruba?
All iPhone models from the XS (2018) onward support eSIM. Samsung Galaxy S20 (2020) and newer, Google Pixel 3 (2018) and newer, and most flagship Android phones from 2020 onward also work with prepaid eSIM plans for Aruba. Carrier-unlock status matters more than the model year — a locked Galaxy S23 cannot install a travel eSIM. Check: Settings > General > About on iPhone, or Settings > Connections > SIM Manager on Android.
Can I use my prepaid eSIM as a hotspot in Aruba?
Yes, with provider-specific limits. Airalo allows hotspot on most Aruba data plans without a daily cap. Holafly's unlimited plans include hotspot but cap it at 1GB per day — enough for light laptop use but not video calls. Other providers vary. The safest approach: read the plan details on the provider's page before buying, not after. If the listing does not mention hotspot, assume it is limited.
What happens when my prepaid eSIM data runs out in Aruba?
Your Aruba data plan stops when you hit the limit. No overage charges, no automatic renewals, no hidden fees. The eSIM profile stays on your phone — you run on zero data until you top up. Open the provider app on WiFi (hotel, cafe, or airport), buy a new plan, and data resumes within a few minutes. The eSIM does not need to be reinstalled. You can also preload a second plan from a different provider as a backup before leaving home.
Can I keep my home phone number while using a Aruba eSIM?
Yes. Set your prepaid Aruba eSIM as the cellular data line and leave your home SIM active for calls and texts. Both run simultaneously on a dual-SIM phone. Incoming calls on your home number still ring through — your home carrier's standard rates apply to those calls, so check your plan if you expect to receive many. For most travelers, this setup means free data in Aruba and reachable home contacts without a second device.
How far in advance should I buy my Aruba prepaid eSIM?
For solo travelers, one to two days before departure. For group trips, buy earlier — coordinating eSIM installs for a family or travel group takes longer than doing it alone. Each person receives their own QR code and installs independently. Handle all purchases 3-5 days before the trip so everyone has time to scan and confirm. Plan validity starts from first use in Aruba, not the purchase date. Plans start at competitive rates.
Does eSIM work without WiFi after installation in Aruba?
Yes. The eSIM runs on Digicel's cellular network in Aruba — WiFi is not required after the one-time QR code install. Cellular connections actually use less battery than WiFi scanning, because your phone is not constantly searching for networks. Keep WiFi turned off while using the eSIM to extend battery life during long sightseeing days in Aruba. Toggle WiFi on only at your hotel if you prefer a faster connection for large downloads or video calls.
Can I have two eSIMs on my phone at the same time for Aruba?
Yes. The most common setup for Aruba travel: keep your home eSIM (or physical SIM) for calls and texts, and add a travel eSIM for data. Both run at the same time. Route cellular data through the travel eSIM and leave your home line active for incoming calls and SMS verification codes. iPhones store up to 8 eSIM profiles; Samsung Galaxy S21+ supports dual eSIM. No conflict, no SIM swap, no lost calls during your trip.
How do I check if my phone is unlocked for eSIM in Aruba?
The fastest test: borrow a SIM card from someone on a different carrier and insert it into your phone. If the phone connects to their network, yours is unlocked. No SIM available? Check Settings > General > About on iPhone — look for "No SIM restrictions" next to Carrier Lock. On Samsung, go to Settings > Connections > SIM Manager and look for the "Add eSIM" option. A locked phone cannot install any travel eSIM, including Aruba plans.
Keep Planning
More destinations in the region
Skip the counter and buy Aruba data online
Skip the airport SIM queue. Your data is running before you reach the taxi rank.