Prepaid SIM Card & eSIM for Mali (2026 Guide)
A prepaid travel eSIM is a digital SIM card that installs on your phone via QR code. It provides mobile data in Mali without a physical SIM card, passport scan, or airport counter visit. Plans start from $6.88/GB.
- 2 Plans
- 1 Networks
- 4G LTE
- Updated June 2026
Key Facts
- Cheapest eSIM
- $6.88/GB
- Network
- Orange
- Speed
- 4G LTE
- Plans available
- 2
As of June 2026, Mali has 2 prepaid eSIM plans across 1 networks at 4G LTE speeds.
The cheapest rate is $6.88/GB via Nomad on Orange.
As of June 2026, a prepaid eSIM for Mali costs from $7.99 for 1GB with 4G LTE speeds on Orange networks.
Fixed data plans start at $7.99 for 1GB on Orange ML's 4G LTE network, ready before you fly. Travelers to Mali who skip the prepaid eSIM typically spend 20-30 minutes at arrival finding a SIM counter and activating a plan.
Most modern phones support two active SIMs at once. Set the Mali prepaid eSIM as your data line and keep your home number active for calls. Orange carry 4G LTE data while your original carrier handles incoming calls.
Security concerns in north; coverage also limited there Local currency in Mali is the XOF (CFA). Airport SIM counters often price plans in local currency — a prepaid eSIM is priced in USD with no conversion at point of purchase.
Compared
Tested eSIM providers for Mali travel
All providers route through local carriers in Mali. 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 Mali: Nomad
For Mali in 2026, Nomad scores 4.4/5 with plans from $3.00/GB on Orange'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
What happens at the SIM kiosk in Mali
You are traveling with four people. Everyone needs a SIM at Mali's main airport. That is four passport scans, four plan selections from a laminated card, four activation waits — roughly 80 minutes at the counter for one group. Each person in the group sets up their own prepaid eSIM before the trip. PrepaidTraveleSIM at $7.99 for 1GB on Orange ML per person, done in under 5 minutes each from home. You all land on Orange ML at the same time, no counter required.
Four Ways to Buy
Budget prepaid data for Mali trips
Compare airport counters, city shops, online delivery, and instant eSIM activation.
Airport SIM counter
10-30 min waitMali 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 Mali 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 Nomad, scan the QR code over WiFi, and connect in 5 minutes. No ID required. Set up at home before you fly — arrive connected.
Pricing
Per-GB rates for Mali prepaid plans
Airport SIM counters adjust pricing with tourist demand — high season means higher markups at the kiosk. A prepaid eSIM for Mali holds a fixed online price regardless of travel season: $7.99 for 1GB on 4G LTE.
The best per-GB rate is $6.88/GB on the 3GB plan at $20.65.
| Data | Price (USD) | Price per GB |
|---|---|---|
| 1GB | $7.99 | $7.99 |
| 3GBBest value | $20.65 | $6.88 |
Cost Breakdown
Mali SIM prices: airport rate vs eSIM rate
A 3-day conference in Mali needs maps to the venue, messaging between sessions, and a ride-share home each night. The 1GB eSIM at $7.99 — $2.01 less than the counter covers that without overpaying for data you will not use. Step up to 3GB at $20.65 if the schedule runs longer or includes a post-event day. Airport SIMs at $10-25 are sized for tourists, not attendees.
| Trip | eSIM Plan | Airport SIM |
|---|---|---|
| 3 days | $7.99 (1GB) | ~$30 |
| 7 days | $20.65 (3GB) | ~$30 |
Roaming vs eSIM
Mali roaming math: carrier plan vs eSIM
Why a prepaid eSIM beats carrier roaming in Mali
SoftBank International Roaming charges JPY 2,980/day (about $20). NTT Docomo World Wing runs JPY 1,980-2,980/day depending on the zone. A one-week trip to Mali on either plan costs JPY 14,000-21,000 in data fees alone. A prepaid eSIM from Nomad at $7.99 for 1GB on Orange covers the same trip at a fixed price. No per-day billing, no surprise charges on your next Docomo statement.
Coverage
Carrier coverage across Mali
VPN connections on Orange in Mali add 10-15% data overhead and slightly reduce throughput. This applies equally to physical SIM cards and prepaid eSIMs — the encryption layer runs on top of 4G LTE infrastructure regardless of SIM type. If you use a VPN for work, budget one plan tier higher to offset the overhead.
The best-value prepaid eSIM plan from Nomad is 3GB at $20.65 ($6.88/GB) — no airport visit, no queue, no passport copy required.
Available Networks
- RatingOrange4G
Quick Reference
Mali basics every traveler should know
- Emergency
- 17/18
- Power Socket
- Type C/E
- Time Zone
- GMT (UTC+0)
- Currency
- XOF (CFA)
- eSIM Speed
- 4G LTE
WiFi
WiFi reliability for Mali travelers
Streaming video on public WiFi in Mali is unreliable — connections are inconsistent and buffering is common during peak hours. Mobile data on Orange ML's 4G LTE network handles streaming more reliably.
If you plan to stream daily during your trip, the prepaid eSIM is your primary video connection. Size your plan accordingly — 1 GB per hour of standard-definition video.
Data Tips
Prepaid data amounts for Mali travel
Most travelers to Mali 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 $7.99 for 1GB.
- 0.5 GBLow dataMaps and messaging in Mali. This tier works if you plan around WiFi stops. Prices are in USD — no XOF conversion at purchase.
- 1 GBStandardThe everyday tier for Mali: maps, messaging, and social without hunting for WiFi. Mali runs on GMT (UTC+0) — jet-lagged travelers tend to use more data in the first 48 hours while adjusting.
- 3 GBHeavy useVideo calls, streaming, and all-day navigation in Mali. A week of heavy use without top-ups.
- 5+ GBUnlimited styleGroup travel, laptop tethering, or two-week trips in Mali. Buy once, stop thinking about it.
Need internet without voice? See our data-only plan guide.
Device Check
Device compatibility checklist for Mali travel
Traveling with multiple people means checking every phone before departure. One incompatible device in the group means one person standing in the SIM counter line at Mali's airport while everyone else walks to the taxi stand. Each device must be eSIM-compatible and carrier-unlocked. iPhone XS (2018) and newer, Samsung Galaxy S20 (2020) and newer, Google Pixel 3 (2018) and newer. Orange ML and Moov Africa ML both support eSIM connections in Mali. Check each phone individually — Settings → General → About on iPhone, Settings → Connections → SIM Manager on Android. Children's hand-me-down phones from 2016-2017 will not have eSIM hardware.
Pre-Flight Checklist
Get your Mali data sorted before departure
Do this at home — not in the airport arrivals hall.
- 01
Verify your phone works with eSIM
iPhone XR (2018) and newer, Samsung Galaxy S20 (2020) and newer, and Google Pixel 3 (2018) and newer all support eSIM hardware. Confirm carrier-unlock status under Settings on iPhone or SIM Manager on Android before you buy.
- 02
Pick a Mali data plan
Plans start at $7.99 for 1GB. Choose a plan that covers your trip length — most travelers need 3-5 GB for a week. Compare fixed and unlimited options before departure while you have time to think, not at Mali's main airport on 6 hours of sleep.
- 03
Scan the QR code at home
Open Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM and scan the QR from your order email. You need a stable WiFi connection — home network is ideal. The install takes about 90 seconds. Disable the Mali eSIM right after so the plan clock does not start early.
- 04
Set Mali eSIM as your data line
Go to Settings → Cellular → Cellular Data and select the travel eSIM. Leave your home SIM active for calls and texts. Turn off data roaming on the home SIM line to avoid unintended charges on the Orange ML network.
- 05
Turn on data after landing in Mali
Enable the eSIM and turn on data roaming for that line after you clear customs. Orange ML picks up the signal in 2-3 minutes. Your maps, messages, and ride-share app are all working before you reach the exit — no detour to the Mali's main airport SIM counter. Emergency services are reachable at 17/18 even without data, but having your eSIM active means you can also share your GPS location.
Step by Step
SIM counter vs eSIM activation in Mali
Every SIM counter at the airport requires a passport. Some make a photocopy, some run it through a scanner, and a few ask you to fill in a form by hand — with jet lag, in a foreign language. That is before the 15-30 minutes wait. A prepaid eSIM skips every one of those steps. You buy it, scan a QR code over WiFi, and it connects the moment you land. No passport required at point of purchase.
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
eSIM providers for Mali business travel
First time in Mali? The SIM counter at the main airport is a real option — it sells plans from local carriers and works if you have 20 minutes and your passport handy. But buying a prepaid eSIM before you board means you skip that stop entirely.
Airalo is the safest first pick: well-reviewed, easy activation, and coverage across Mali's main 4G LTE networks. If price is the priority, Nomad edges it out on per-GB cost. Both beat the airport counter rate before your bags hit the carousel.
Regional Plans
Data plans for trips beyond Mali
Managing multiple eSIM profiles — one per country — means toggling between them at each border, remembering which profile covers which destination, and sometimes dealing with activation delays.
A regional Africa bundle installs once and covers Mali plus Comoros, Tunisia and Burundi. One QR code, one profile, one data balance to track. The setup simplicity alone is worth the marginal premium over separate single-country plans.
Compare providers side by side: Airalo vs Holafly · Airalo vs Nomad · Holafly vs Saily · Saily vs Nomad · All providers
The Honest Call
Comparing eSIM and local SIM in Mali
Choose an eSIM if you...
- Want to skip passport registration entirely
- Are arriving late or on a tight schedule
- Have an iPhone XR or newer
- Only need data, not a local phone number
- Want to set everything up before you fly
Choose a local SIM if you...
- Need a local phone number for bookings
- Are staying months and want a local plan
- Have an older phone without eSIM support
- Prefer a physical card you can hand to staff
- Want in-person help at a counter
Compare alternatives: pocket WiFi vs eSIM | prepaid vs postpaid
Avoid These
What not to do when buying data for Mali
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 Mali 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 Mali 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
Online privacy while traveling in Mali
No VPN restrictions apply in Mali — connect freely to any provider. The main reason to use a VPN while traveling is public WiFi security: hotel and cafe networks share bandwidth and traffic with every connected guest.
Saily, backed by NordVPN, offers eSIM data with built-in VPN. If you access sensitive accounts on the road, the VPN layer is worth the marginal overhead. Your prepaid eSIM on 4G LTE handles the cellular side.
Learn more: eSIM security and privacy guide
Troubleshooting
What to check when your Mali eSIM fails
QR code scanning fails
Check two things: carrier lock status and available eSIM slots. iPhones support 8 profiles maximum, 2 active at once. If slots are full, go to Settings → Cellular and remove an old eSIM before adding the new Mali plan.
Plan activated before landing
Data clocks start on first network connection, not at installation. Keep the Mali eSIM toggled off in Settings → Cellular until your plane touches down. Turning it on during a layover or before you reach Mali starts burning your days early.
Connected but no data in Mali
Data roaming must be enabled on the travel eSIM line, not the home line. Open Settings → Cellular, select the Mali eSIM, and turn on Data Roaming. Restart your phone. Orange ML typically registers new eSIM profiles within 2-3 minutes of landing.
Wrong plan ordered by mistake
You have a short window. Most providers cancel unused plans within 60 minutes of purchase. Do not activate the eSIM. Go straight to in-app support with your order number and request a refund before the Mali plan is marked as started.
The Bottom Line
Prepaid data verdict for Mali travelers
Airport SIM counters in Mali price plans in XOF (CFA). If you land without local cash, the counter may not accept your card — or the exchange rate adds a hidden fee on top. A prepaid eSIM from Nomad at $6.88/GB is priced in USD and charged to your home card before you leave. No currency exchange, no cash-only kiosk surprise.
Starting at $6.88/GB, a prepaid plan for Mali is one of the easiest upgrades for any trip. See the full destinations list or explore more Africa destinations, or read how to activate your eSIM before you fly.
How we test and score: editorial policy · corrections log
FAQ
Mali prepaid data questions
Can I buy a SIM card at the airport in Mali?
Airport SIM cards in Mali carry a 30-50% tourist markup compared to in-city shops. Availability depends on terminal and time — many counters close at night. A prepaid eSIM costs less and removes the guesswork: purchase before your flight, install via QR code, and land on Orange ML's 4G LTE network with data already active. Plans start at $7.99 for 1GB. No arrival-day surprises.
Do I need a passport to buy a SIM in Mali?
Passport requirements for SIM cards in Mali 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 Mali with data active on Orange ML's network — no paperwork, no waiting, no identity verification.
Is an airport SIM or eSIM cheaper for Mali?
Airport SIM counters in Mali target tired travelers willing to overpay for convenience — prices run 30-50% above in-city rates. A prepaid eSIM reverses that: buy at the lowest price from your couch, install before departure, and arrive with data working. Plans for Mali start at $7.99 for 1GB on Orange ML's 4G LTE network, dropping to $6.88/GB on the 3GB plan. The eSIM is both cheaper and faster.
Can I install my Mali eSIM before I travel?
Yes. Install over WiFi at home while your home SIM stays active in the background. The process takes under 5 minutes: scan the QR code from your confirmation email, name the eSIM line (e.g. "Mali trip"), and set it to inactive. Both SIMs coexist without conflict. When you land in Mali, switch cellular data to the travel eSIM and your home number stays reachable for incoming calls. Validity counts from first use, not purchase date. Plans start at $7.99.
Which phones support eSIM for Mali?
Samsung Galaxy S20 (2020) and newer support eSIM, along with the Galaxy A54 and Z Fold/Flip series. Google Pixel starts at the Pixel 3 (2018) — every Pixel since works with any prepaid eSIM plan. Apple iPhone XS (2018) onward supports eSIM; the iPhone 14 US models are eSIM-only with no SIM tray. OnePlus 12, Motorola Razr, and Xiaomi 13 Pro also support eSIM. One rule applies to all: your phone must be carrier-unlocked. Check in Settings > Connections > SIM Manager on Android or Settings > General > About on iPhone.
Can I use my prepaid eSIM as a hotspot in Mali?
Yes — most prepaid eSIM plans for Mali allow tethering. You can share the connection with a laptop, tablet, or travel companion's phone the same way you would on a home carrier plan. Check each provider's terms before purchasing: Airalo allows hotspot on most plans, while some providers limit it or require a specific tier. If you plan to tether regularly, buy at least 50% more data than your phone-only estimate. Hotspot drains a plan faster than solo browsing.
What happens when my prepaid eSIM data runs out in Mali?
Data cuts off — no automatic charges, no overages. The smartest preparation is to install a second eSIM from a different provider before your trip as a backup. iPhones hold up to 8 profiles; Samsung devices hold at least 2. If your primary plan runs out in Mali, switch to the backup eSIM in Settings > Cellular and buy a fresh plan on the spot. This dual-provider approach also protects against coverage dead zones with a single carrier's network.
Can I keep my home phone number while using a Mali eSIM?
Yes. On iPhone, go to Settings > Cellular after installing the Mali eSIM. Tap Cellular Data and select the travel eSIM. Your home SIM stays active for calls and texts. iMessage and FaceTime continue working on your home number using the travel eSIM's data. Incoming calls on your home number still ring through — your carrier's standard rates apply. This dual-line setup is the main reason travel eSIMs are better than old SIM-swap methods for visiting Mali.
How far in advance should I buy my Mali prepaid eSIM?
Buy when you remember. eSIM prices for Mali do not change based on how close you are to departure — there is no "last-minute markup" like with flights. Plan validity starts from first use, not purchase date. The only advantage of buying earlier is time to troubleshoot: a failed QR scan, an incorrect email address, or a provider account issue. All fixable in 10 minutes at home, all stressful at an airport gate. Plans start at $7.99.
Does eSIM work without WiFi after installation in Mali?
Yes. The eSIM connects to Orange ML's cellular network in Mali without WiFi. Coverage depends on location — cities and tourist areas have strong 4G LTE signal, while remote regions may drop to 3G or lose signal entirely. This is the same for any SIM, physical or digital. WiFi is only needed for the initial QR code scan at home. After that, the eSIM runs on local cellular towers independently.
Can I have two eSIMs on my phone at the same time for Mali?
Google Pixel 7 and newer support dual eSIM — two digital SIM profiles active at the same time. Earlier Pixels (3 through 6) support one eSIM plus one physical SIM. Go to Settings > Network & Internet > SIMs to manage profiles. Install your Mali eSIM alongside your home SIM, set the travel eSIM as the data line, and keep your home number active for calls. Switching between profiles takes a few taps — no QR rescanning needed.
How do I check if my phone is unlocked for eSIM in Mali?
Check Settings > General > About on iPhone (look for "No SIM restrictions") or Settings > Connections > SIM Manager on Samsung. If your phone is locked, contact your carrier to unlock it. AT&T requires 60 days of active service before unlocking. T-Mobile requires 40 days. Verizon automatically unlocks phones 60 days after purchase. International carriers have similar policies. Start the unlock request before your Mali trip — do not wait until departure day.
Get Mali data before you board
Covers a full week of maps, messaging, and calls. Buy once, stop thinking about data.