The best eSIM for Niger
A landlocked country in West Africa, named after the Niger River. Here is the plan we would pick today, the live pricing for every plan we track, and the practical things to know before you fly.
The lowest price-per-gigabyte we currently track for Niger. A solid fit for most one-to-two-week trips with maps, messaging, and the occasional photo upload.
| Provider | Data | Days | Price | $/GB | Get |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10GB | 30 | $35.09 | $3.51 | Get → | |
| 5GB | 30 | $23.99 | $4.80 | Get → | |
| 3GB | 30 | $17.99 | $6.00 | Get → | |
| 10GB | 30 | $70.00 | $7.00 | Get → | |
| 5GB | 30 | $37.50 | $7.50 | Get → | |
| 1GB | 7 | $7.99 | $7.99 | Get → | |
| 3GB | 30 | $24.00 | $8.00 | Get → | |
| 1GB | 7 | $9.50 | $9.50 | Get → | |
| 2GB | 30 | $19.99 | $9.99 | Get → | |
| 3GB | 30 | $29.99 | $10.00 | Get → | |
| 20GB | 30 | $216.50 | $10.82 | Get → | |
| 1GB | 30 | $10.99 | $10.99 | Get → | |
| 10GB | 30 | $120.50 | $12.05 | Get → | |
| 5GB | 30 | $65.50 | $13.10 | Get → | |
| 1GB | PAYG | $19.45 | $19.45 | Get → |
Prices are live and may change. Google Fi is excluded from the value ranking because it is a full phone plan rather than a travel data plan.
Airtel Niger, Orange Niger (now Moov Africa Niger) and Zamani Telecom all run 3G with occasional patches of 4G across central Niamey, the Grand Marché and the Niger River bridges. Airtel has the wider 3G/4G national footprint; speeds remain modest.
The drive on the west-bank river road from Niamey upstream to Ayorou (the hippo town) and Tillabéri has signal at the larger villages. The pinasse trips and the Mali-border zones thin out fast; security situations also affect access.
Zinder (Niger's second city, historically the colonial capital) has basic 2G/3G in town. The drive on the RN1 east from Niamey through Birnin Konni and Maradi stays connected at the larger towns; smaller Sahel villages thin briefly.
Agadez, the historic Tuareg city and the gateway to the Sahara, has basic Airtel signal at the centre and the Grand Mosque. The route into the Aïr Mountains, the Iférouane oasis and the deeper desert escarpments are reliably offline.
The vast Ténéré Desert, the Bilma salt-caravan route and the Libyan border zone have effectively no cellular signal. Multi-day camel trips and Sahara crossings need satellite communication; security restrictions also apply.
The W National Park (shared with Benin and Burkina Faso) has signal only at the entrance villages. The deeper safari blocks, the elephant-watching routes and the Mékrou River corridor run on ranger radio and satellite only.
Niamey
- Arriving
- Diori Hamani International (NIM) is close to the capital; transfers are by taxi. The airport has 3G with occasional 4G from Airtel Niger, Zamani Telecom and Moov Africa. Niamey, on the Niger River, is effectively the only place with functional data. Check security advisories, and download everything offline before leaving.
- On the subway and rail
- Niamey moves by shared taxis and motorbikes; there is no metro. Coverage holds across the centre, the Grand Marché and the Niger River bridges, with speeds modest by global standards. Outside Niamey, coverage drops off sharply, and security restricts much travel.
- Free public WiFi
- Hotels and the larger restaurants provide WiFi, generally the most reliable option. NIM airport has basic WiFi. Connectivity is concentrated in the capital.
- Coverage in the city
- Airtel Niger, Zamani Telecom and Moov Africa Niger run 3G with occasional 4G across central Niamey, the Grand Marché and the river bridges, with Airtel the wider. Zinder and the southern Sahel have basic service. Agadez, the Aïr Mountains and the Ténéré Desert are reliably offline.
- If you prefer a local SIM
- Airtel, Zamani and Moov sell SIMs at NIM and in Niamey, with Airtel the wider. Almost no international eSIM providers cover Niger, so a local Airtel SIM is the practical option; check advisories before any travel beyond the capital.
Grab an eSIM before you arrive in Niger to skip local SIM queues. Most urban areas offer 4G or better, while rural regions can slow down, so keep offline maps handy. Activating the eSIM in advance ensures you are connected the moment you clear customs.
Niger has very basic mobile infrastructure. Airtel, Orange, and Moov provide 3G service in Niamey, with limited 2G extending to secondary cities like Zinder, Maradi, and Agadez. The vast Saharan north, including the Air Mountains and Tenere Desert, has virtually no coverage.
Niamey's central areas have basic connectivity for messaging, but data speeds are slow by global standards. Security concerns restrict travel in many parts of the country. The Agadez region, historically important for trans-Saharan travel, has basic coverage in town only. Very few international eSIM providers cover Niger.
- Almost no eSIM providers cover Niger
- Only Niamey has functional data service
- Check security advisories before traveling
- The Saharan north has no cellular coverage
- Download all maps and essential information before leaving Niamey
Average Data Cost
~$6-$13/GB
Network Quality
3G in Niamey. Basic 2G in secondary cities. No coverage in Saharan north.
eSIM Availability
Very limited eSIM support.
Major Carriers
Recommended Providers for Niger
Plans for Niger
From $7.99
Plans for Niger
From $9.50
Plans for Niger
From $10.00
Pay-as-you-go: $10.00/GB
Plans for Niger
From $3.99
Plans for Niger
From $14.50
Plans for Niger
From $19.45
Pay-as-you-go: $19.45/GB
- 1
Buy and install at home on WiFi.
Installation is not the same as activation. You can install the Niger eSIM days ahead and only switch it on after you land, which avoids burning days of validity in transit.
- 2
Screenshot your current APN before you swap.
If you ever need to switch back to your home line quickly, that screenshot saves a support call from a foreign airport.
- 3
Decide on your dual-SIM strategy.
Keep your home line on for SMS-based bank logins, two-factor codes, and emergency calls. Set the travel eSIM as the data line only. Most modern phones can do both simultaneously.
- 4
Disable iMessage on the travel eSIM line.
Otherwise iMessage will try to re-activate against the new line on arrival and you will spend the first ten minutes troubleshooting it instead of finding the taxi rank.
- 5
Download offline maps for Niger.
Google Maps and Apple Maps both support offline regions. Pull them down on home WiFi so a flaky activation never leaves you without a route from the airport. Our offline maps guide walks through it step by step.
- 6
Activate at the airport, not before.
Once the validity timer starts it does not pause. A 15-day plan you turn on the morning of departure burns a full day of validity before you even land.
We are building this section from real, verified traveler submissions rather than stock testimonials, so it stays empty until we have notes we can stand behind. If you have used an eSIM in Niger recently, a one-paragraph note on what worked (and what did not) helps the next traveler.
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eSIM setup guide for Niger
Step-by-step activation on iPhone, Pixel, and Samsung Galaxy.
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Hotspot strategy, dual-SIM setup, what to do if data drops.
Offline maps for Niger
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Pricing on this page is pulled live from our database and refreshed every four hours. Coverage notes are sourced from carrier roaming agreements and updated when carriers change partners. Provider rankings are determined by price-per-gigabyte and plan flexibility, not by who pays the largest commission.





