Prepaid SIM Card & eSIM for Sudan (2026 Guide)
A prepaid travel eSIM is a digital SIM card that installs on your phone via QR code. It provides mobile data in Sudan without a physical SIM card, passport scan, or airport counter visit. Plans start from $7.68/GB.
- 3 Plans
- 1 Networks
- 4G LTE
- Updated June 2026
Key Facts
- Cheapest eSIM
- $7.68/GB
- Network
- Zain
- Speed
- 4G LTE
- Plans available
- 3
As of June 2026, Sudan has 3 prepaid eSIM plans across 1 networks at 4G LTE speeds.
The cheapest rate is $7.68/GB via Nomad on Zain.
As of June 2026, a prepaid eSIM for Sudan costs from $8.64 for 1GB with 4G LTE speeds on Zain networks.
Fixed data plans start at $8.64 for 1GB on Zain SD's 4G LTE network, picked to match your trip length. Phone shops in Sudan sell one-size plans aimed at tourists — often more data and days than a short visit needs. A prepaid eSIM lets you choose the exact tier before departure.
Installing a prepaid eSIM before your flight takes less time than checking your bag. The QR code arrives by email. You scan it, set it active, and pocket your phone. Sudan networks — Zain — carry the 4G LTE signal to your device on arrival.
Infrastructure damaged by conflict Local currency in Sudan is the SDG (£). Airport SIM counters often price plans in local currency — a prepaid eSIM is priced in USD with no conversion at point of purchase.
Compared
Prepaid eSIM providers for Sudan
All providers route through local carriers in Sudan. 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 Sudan: Nomad
For Sudan in 2026, Nomad scores 4.4/5 with plans from $3.00/GB on Zain'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 the first 30 minutes in Sudan look like
Three-hour layover at Sudan's main airport. You need data to find the connecting terminal, check the departure board, and let your next contact know your status. Buying a local SIM is overkill — you will not even leave the transit zone. A prepaid eSIM for Sudan at $8.64 for 1GB on Zain SD covers the layover and stays active when you return on your next visit. Zain SD picks up your signal the moment you land. No counter, no activation wait, no SIM tray.
Four Ways to Buy
Business travel data options for Sudan
Compare airport counters, city shops, online delivery, and instant eSIM activation.
Airport SIM counter
10-30 min waitWait times at the main Sudan airport run 15-25 minutes on a normal arrival day. Counters close by midnight — flights that land late leave you without data until morning.
City phone shop
ID requiredBuying in-store gets you a local rate, but the ID check and activation add 20-40 minutes to your first day. Stock varies by neighborhood — tourist districts are more reliable.
Online pre-order
Plan aheadPhysical SIM delivery to your Sudan hotel takes 5-10 business days. Order at least a week before departure. Shipping is free from most providers. No arrivals-hall queue.
Instant eSIM (our pick)
5 min setupNomad runs on Sudan's same networks as physical SIMs. Install it over WiFi before you board — your home number stays active on the other SIM slot. Land with data ready.
Pricing
Prepaid data pricing for Sudan trips
WiFi coverage in Sudan varies between cities and rural areas. Budget a mid-range eSIM plan to avoid hunting for connections: 3GB at $23.05.
The best per-GB rate is $7.68/GB on the 3GB plan at $23.05. Airport SIM kiosks typically charge 2-3× more than online prepaid rates. Prepaid eSIM plans start at $8.64 for 1GB.
| Data | Price (USD) | Price per GB |
|---|---|---|
| 1GB | $8.64 | $8.64 |
| 3GBBest value | $23.05 | $7.68 |
| 5GBBest value | $38.40 | $7.68 |
Cost Breakdown
Sudan data savings: eSIM vs airport SIM
Airport SIM counters in Sudan charge $10-25 regardless of your trip length. A short trip (3 days): the 1GB plan at $8.64 — $1.36 less than the counter. A standard week: the 3GB plan at $23.05 covers most travelers. Both beat the airport price before you even reach the taxi stand. For trips past two weeks, the 5GB plan at $38.40 avoids a mid-trip top-up.
| Trip | eSIM Plan | Airport SIM |
|---|---|---|
| 3 days | $8.64 (1GB) | ~$30 |
| 7 days | $23.05 (3GB) | ~$30 |
| 14 days | $38.40 (5GB) | ~$30 |
Roaming vs eSIM
Roaming vs eSIM cost breakdown for Sudan
Why a prepaid eSIM beats carrier roaming in Sudan
Singtel ReadyRoam charges SGD 10-15/day outside covered zones. StarHub DataTravel runs SGD 8-12/day for select destinations. A week in Sudan on either plan adds SGD 56-105 to your phone bill. A prepaid eSIM from Nomad at $8.64 for 1GB on Zain costs a fraction of that. Fixed price, no daily cap, no post-trip bill from your Singapore carrier.
Coverage
Sudan network speeds and carrier access
Sudan operates a single primary network: Zain. Both physical SIM and eSIM connect to the same towers — there is no carrier-switching advantage in a single-operator market. The eSIM advantage here is the purchase process: online at home vs. counter at the airport.
The best-value prepaid eSIM plan from Nomad is 3GB at $23.05 ($7.68/GB) — no airport visit, no queue, no passport copy required.
Available Networks
- RatingZain4G
Quick Reference
What to know before landing in Sudan
- Emergency
- 999
- Power Socket
- Type C/D
- Time Zone
- CAT (UTC+2)
- Currency
- SDG (£)
- eSIM Speed
- 4G LTE
WiFi
How reliable is WiFi in Sudan
Zain SD's 4G LTE network in Sudan delivers consistent throughput for maps, messaging, and video calls. Hotel WiFi varies floor by floor and hour by hour — evening congestion routinely halves the posted speed.
A prepaid eSIM gives you your own cellular connection. No shared bandwidth, no evening slowdowns. Plans start at $8.64 for 1GB.
Data Tips
Data needs for Sudan by traveler type
Most travelers to Sudan 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 $8.64 for 1GB.
- 0.5 GBShort tripA 2-3 day trip to Sudan covering maps and messaging. Works if you are on hotel WiFi each night. Prices are in USD — no SDG conversion at purchase.
- 1 GBStandard weekA full week in Sudan: maps, messaging, social media, and light browsing on Zain SD. Sudan runs on CAT (UTC+2) — jet-lagged travelers tend to use more data in the first 48 hours while adjusting.
- 3 GBActive travelerA week+ in Sudan using video calls, streaming, and navigation without worrying about running low.
- 5+ GBRemote workerLaptop tethering, video meetings, and all-day data use in Sudan. Eliminates mid-trip top-ups.
Need internet without voice? See our data-only plan guide.
Device Check
Which devices work with Sudan eSIM plans
Google Pixel 3 (2018) brought eSIM to the Pixel line — every Pixel since supports it. Apple followed the same year: iPhone XS (2018) and all newer models work, with the iPhone 14 US edition removing the physical SIM entirely. Samsung's eSIM support started with the Galaxy S20 (2020) and extended to the A54 in the mid-range. All three connect through Zain SD in Sudan or MTN SD. General rule: flagship phones from 2020 onward support eSIM. Mid-range and budget models often do not. Check carrier-unlock status on iPhone under Settings → General → About, or on Android under Settings → Connections → SIM Manager.
Pre-Flight Checklist
What to do before your Sudan trip
Do this at home — not in the airport arrivals hall.
- 01
Confirm your work phone is unlocked
Corporate phones are often carrier-locked by IT policy. Contact your IT team before departure — unlock requests can take 48-72 hours to process. If the device cannot be unlocked in time, install the Sudan eSIM on a personal phone and hotspot your laptop for any meetings that need data.
- 02
Buy a plan that supports hotspot
Plans start at $8.64 for 1GB. Choose a Sudan plan that explicitly allows personal hotspot — you will need it to tether a laptop for calls and document uploads. Zain SD in Sudan delivers 4G LTE speeds that handle video calls without buffering.
- 03
Install the eSIM before you travel
Add the Sudan eSIM at home or at the office before departure. Open Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM and scan the QR from your confirmation email over a stable WiFi connection. Do not wait until the hotel lobby — installing on a tired mind after a long flight wastes time you need for prep.
- 04
Test VPN over the travel data line
Configure your corporate VPN to use the Sudan eSIM as the active data line, then test the connection before you leave. Some VPN providers authenticate against specific IP ranges — catching that friction at home is far better than discovering it 10 minutes before a client call in Sudan.
- 05
Activate before your first meeting
Enable the Sudan eSIM when you land and verify hotspot is working before your first scheduled call. Zain SD connects in 2-3 minutes. You can join a video meeting from the Sudan's main airport lounge without hunting for guest WiFi credentials or waiting until hotel check-in to get online.
Step by Step
How the Sudan SIM counter process actually works
Physical SIM counters at the airport ask for your passport at point of purchase — a photocopy is standard, and some counters run it through a scanner. The 15-30 minutes queue comes before the ID check, not after. A prepaid eSIM skips all of it: no passport, no photocopy, no form. Buy it online, scan a QR code over WiFi, and the plan is ready before you board.
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 Sudan provider picks by use case
Most visitors to Sudan stay under two weeks — long enough to need a full data plan but not so long that a local SIM pays off. Airalo and Nomad both offer plans that match that window without requiring you to buy more than you need.
Going longer or hitting multiple countries? Airalo covers 200+ destinations on one account, so you do not need a new plan at the next border. Heavy data users staying two weeks or more should look at Holafly unlimited rather than topping up a fixed plan mid-trip.
Regional Plans
Covering multiple countries from Sudan
Download offline maps and translation packs for Comoros while you still have strong 4G LTE signal in Sudan. If you are on a single-country eSIM, your data cuts off at the border.
A regional Africa bundle avoids the pre-download scramble entirely. Continuous data from Sudan through Comoros, Tunisia and Burundi — no offline prep needed, no signal gap at the crossing.
Compare providers side by side: Airalo vs Holafly · Airalo vs Nomad · Holafly vs Saily · Saily vs Nomad · All providers
The Honest Call
Local SIM or eSIM for short trips to Sudan
Choose an eSIM if you...
- Flight lands after 9 PM and airport counters close early
- One-week or shorter trip where time in lines is wasted vacation time
- Traveling with family — each person gets their own eSIM in minutes
- Working remotely and need data from the moment you clear customs
- Phone is eSIM-capable and carrier-unlocked
Choose a local SIM if you...
- Relocating or staying 3+ months — local plans are cheaper for long stays
- Need to receive SMS verification codes on a Sudan number
- Phone is not eSIM-capable or is carrier-locked
- In a rural area where a local carrier with dominant coverage sells physical SIMs at market stalls
- Travelling with someone who needs a SIM for their non-eSIM device
Compare alternatives: pocket WiFi vs eSIM | prepaid vs postpaid
Avoid These
Prepaid data mistakes to avoid in Sudan
Not checking whether your phone is carrier-locked.
A locked phone rejects every foreign eSIM profile. Confirm unlock status in Settings → General → About before you buy. Unlocking requests take 24-72 hours — do it at least two days before departure.
Activating the eSIM during a layover.
Many plans count days from first network connection, not from installation. Keep the eSIM toggled off until you land in Sudan. Enabling it at a connecting airport burns a full day of your plan.
Leaving home-carrier data roaming on.
With two SIMs active, your home carrier's roaming can silently rack up charges. Turn data roaming off on the home SIM before you leave and route all data through the travel eSIM.
Not downloading the provider app before your flight.
Top-ups, support, and data tracking all happen in the app. Download and log in while you still have your home WiFi — airport WiFi login pages can block app stores.
Privacy
Digital privacy in Sudan
VPN access in Sudan 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
Sudan internet connection issues and fixes
QR code won't scan
Two common causes: a carrier-locked phone that rejects foreign profiles, or a full eSIM storage. iPhones store up to 8 profiles but can only run 2 at once. Use the manual activation code in your order email — it contains the same profile data as the QR image.
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 Zain SD. Open Settings → Cellular → Cellular Data, select the Sudan 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. Zain SD in Sudan sometimes takes a moment to hand off a new eSIM profile on arrival. If you need to reach emergency services before data connects, dial 999 — that works without a data plan on any phone.
Ordered the wrong data amount
Check whether the plan is still inactive. If you have not started using data, most providers will cancel and refund within 60 minutes of purchase. Open the app, go to support, and request a cancellation before enabling the Sudan eSIM.
The Bottom Line
Prepaid eSIM for Sudan: worth buying
Peak travel season turns airport SIM counters into bottlenecks — long lines, sold-out plans, and staff who cannot keep up with the arrival volume. A prepaid eSIM from Nomad at $7.68/GB sidesteps all of it. Buy before you fly, install at home, and land on Zain SD's 4G LTE network regardless of how crowded the terminal is. Note: VPN access is restricted in Sudan — install your VPN app before arrival.
Starting at $7.68/GB, a prepaid plan for Sudan 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
Questions travelers ask about Sudan eSIM
Can I buy a SIM card at the airport in Sudan?
Airport SIM counter availability in Sudan 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 Zain SD's 4G LTE network on landing. Plans start at $8.64 for 1GB. No airport counter needed.
Do I need a passport to buy a SIM in Sudan?
Physical SIM purchases in Sudan may require a passport for ID verification at the counter — requirements vary by carrier and retailer. A prepaid eSIM purchased online does not require in-person ID verification. You complete the purchase and install the QR code from your phone before your trip. No counter visit, no paperwork, no passport scan required for eSIM activation on Zain SD's network.
Is an airport SIM or eSIM cheaper for Sudan?
A prepaid eSIM costs less — and saves time. Airport SIM counters in Sudan charge 30-50% more than city shops, and the queue eats 15-25 minutes after you land. A prepaid eSIM starts at $8.64 for 1GB on Zain SD's 4G LTE network ($7.68/GB on the 5GB plan). Install before your flight, skip the arrivals queue, and use those first minutes in Sudan for something better than waiting at a counter.
Can I install my Sudan eSIM before I travel?
Yes. You can scan the QR code over home WiFi up to 30 days before your flight. Open your phone's eSIM settings, scan the code, and leave the plan inactive until you land in Sudan. The night before departure is the sweet spot — your home network is fast, support is reachable if anything goes wrong, and you board with everything ready. Validity starts from first use in Sudan, not the purchase date. Plans start at $8.64.
Which phones support eSIM for Sudan?
Apple removed the SIM tray from iPhone 14 US models, and Samsung followed on select Galaxy models. The industry is moving toward eSIM-only devices. Current compatibility: iPhone XS (2018)+, Samsung Galaxy S20 (2020)+, Google Pixel 3 (2018)+, and most 2020+ flagships. The critical check is carrier-unlock status — not the model. A carrier-locked iPhone 16 cannot use a Sudan eSIM. Verify in Settings > General > About (look for "No SIM restrictions") before purchasing any travel plan.
Can I use my prepaid eSIM as a hotspot in Sudan?
Yes — tethering works on most Sudan eSIM plans. Battery drain is the hidden cost: running a hotspot cuts your phone's battery life roughly in half. Carry a power bank if you plan to tether for more than an hour. Data consumption also doubles or triples compared to phone-only use. A 1-hour video call over hotspot uses 1-2GB. Airalo allows hotspot on most plans; Holafly caps daily hotspot at 1GB. Check provider terms before buying a plan for Sudan.
What happens when my prepaid eSIM data runs out in Sudan?
Data stops. No overages, no hidden fees. Budget travelers visiting Sudan can use this to their advantage: buy the smallest plan as a test run. If coverage and speed meet your needs, top up with a larger plan through the app over WiFi. This approach costs slightly more per GB than buying large upfront, but it limits risk if the provider's Sudan coverage disappoints. Top-ups take about 2 minutes and do not require a new QR code scan.
Can I keep my home phone number while using a Sudan eSIM?
Yes — and keeping your home SIM active is important for SMS verification codes. Banks, email providers, and two-factor authentication systems send codes to your home number. With both SIMs active, those codes arrive normally in Sudan. Route all data through the travel eSIM and leave your home SIM on for calls and SMS only. Your home carrier charges standard rates for incoming SMS (usually free). No app reconfiguration needed.
How far in advance should I buy my Sudan prepaid eSIM?
Buying at the gate works if you have WiFi access — most airports offer free terminal WiFi. The install takes under 5 minutes once the QR code arrives in your email. The risk with last-minute purchasing is support availability: if the QR code does not scan or the provider's app has a login issue, you have minutes, not hours, to fix it. One to two days before departure removes that risk entirely. Plan validity starts from first use in Sudan, so buying early is never wasted. Plans start at $8.64.
Does eSIM work without WiFi after installation in Sudan?
Yes. After installation, the eSIM connects to Zain SD's cellular network in Sudan without WiFi. The landing sequence is simple: turn off airplane mode, make sure the Sudan eSIM is toggled on in your cellular settings, and wait 30-60 seconds for the phone to find a local tower. No WiFi needed at the airport, on the tarmac, or anywhere else. WiFi is only required for the one-time QR code scan during initial setup at home.
Can I have two eSIMs on my phone at the same time for Sudan?
iPhones store up to 8 eSIM profiles at once, with 2 active simultaneously (iPhone 13 and newer). You can install your Sudan travel eSIM alongside your home eSIM and toggle between them in Settings > Cellular. No need to delete one to add another. The iPhone 14 US models are eSIM-only, so dual eSIM is the standard setup for those devices. Switching the active data line takes about 5 seconds — tap the profile name and confirm.
How do I check if my phone is unlocked for eSIM in Sudan?
Go to Settings > General > About (iPhone) or Settings > Connections > SIM Manager (Samsung). If you see an option to add an eSIM or cellular plan, your phone supports it. To check carrier unlock status, insert a SIM from a different carrier — if it connects, your phone is unlocked. You can also call your carrier and ask directly. A locked phone will reject any foreign eSIM profile, including plans for Sudan.
Get connected in Sudan before you land
Set it up tonight. Land with data already running. From $7.68/GB on Zain.