The best eSIM for Norway
Stunning fjords, Viking history, and the Northern Lights. 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 Norway. A solid fit for most one-to-two-week trips with maps, messaging, and the occasional photo upload.
| Provider | Data | Days | Price | $/GB | Get |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50GB | 30 | $19.99 | $0.40 | Get → | |
| 75GB | 30 | $29.99 | $0.40 | Get → | |
| 15GB | 30 | $10.99 | $0.73 | Get → | |
| 100GB | 30 | $85.00 | $0.85 | Get → | |
| 50GB | 30 | $44.00 | $0.88 | Get → | |
| 50GB | 30 | $45.00 | $0.90 | Get → | |
| 4GB | 7 | $3.99 | $1.00 | Get → | |
| 20GB | 30 | $20.00 | $1.00 | Get → | |
| 20GB | 30 | $20.00 | $1.00 | Get → | |
| 100GB | 180 | $103.49 | $1.03 | Get → | |
| 10GB | 30 | $12.00 | $1.20 | Get → | |
| 20GB | 30 | $25.19 | $1.26 | Get → | |
| 50GB | 90 | $68.99 | $1.38 | Get → | |
| 5GB | 30 | $7.50 | $1.50 | Get → | |
| 3GB | PAYG | $7.35 | $2.45 | 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.
Telenor and Telia both run dense 5G across central Oslo, Bergen and Trondheim. Telenor has the widest 5G footprint nationally; Ice is competitive on price but smaller in coverage.
Fjord villages and the Hurtigruten coastal route are well covered by Telenor and Telia. The vertical cliff walls cause brief signal drops mid-fjord, particularly on cruise boats below tall cliffs.
Telenor has the widest reach along the long west-coast drive. Highway tunnels (and Norway has many) lose signal for the length of the tunnel; the 24 km Lærdal tunnel is the longest gap on E16.
Tromsø, Bodø and the Lofoten village hubs are fully covered. Northern lights tours that drive inland away from town and the long Senja and Vesterålen back roads thin out fast, even on Telenor.
High-mountain hut traverses on DNT trails see real signal gaps even on Telenor. The Bessheim and Glittertind hut areas have intermittent coverage; treat alpine days as offline.
Longyearbyen itself has functional 4G via Telenor, but anything beyond town (Pyramiden, Barentsburg, snowmobile tours, polar bear safari range) is reliably offline. Plan accordingly.
Oslo
- Arriving
- Oslo Gardermoen (OSL) is about 50 km north. The Flytoget Airport Express train runs to Oslo S (Central) in around 20 minutes with cell coverage; the cheaper Vy regional trains also serve the route. All terminals have full 5G from Telenor, Telia and Ice. Norway is in the EEA, so most European regional eSIMs cover it automatically.
- On the subway and rail
- The Oslo T-bane metro (five lines) has cell coverage on the platforms and through the tunnels. The trams, buses and the Bygdøy and island ferries (Ruter) all stay connected. The Ruter and Entur apps handle tickets and routing and need data. Coverage holds out to the Holmenkollen ski jump and across the harbour to the museum peninsula.
- Free public WiFi
- The malls leave WiFi open: Oslo City and Byporten by the central station. The Opera House, the Aker Brygge waterfront and cafes across Grünerløkka offer free WiFi. OSL airport has free terminal WiFi. Hotels provide guest WiFi as standard, so the city is easy to stay connected in.
- Coverage in the city
- Telenor has the widest 5G footprint across Oslo, with Telia and Ice present. The centre, Aker Brygge, Frogner with the Vigeland sculpture park, Grünerløkka, the Opera House, the new Munch museum and the Deichman library are all covered. The Holmenkollen ski jump and the T-bane up to the forest trailheads stay connected.
- If you prefer a local SIM
- Telenor, Telia and Ice, plus budget brands Talkmore and Chilimobil, sell prepaid SIMs at OSL and in Narvesen kiosks. Norwegian prepaid needs no registration. Standalone Norway data can cost more than the EU average, so a European regional eSIM that includes Norway under EEA roaming is usually the better value.
Bergen
- Arriving
- Bergen Flesland (BGO) is about 17 km south. The Bybanen light rail line 1 runs from the airport to the centre (Byparken) in around 45 minutes with cell coverage. All terminals have full 5G from Telenor, Telia and Ice. As an EEA country, European regional eSIMs cover Bergen automatically on most plans.
- On the subway and rail
- The Bergen Bybanen light rail (lines 1 and 2), the Skyss buses, the Fløibanen funicular up Mount Fløyen and the Ulriken cable car all stay connected. The Skyss and Entur apps handle tickets and routing. The compact UNESCO centre is best walked, and Bergen is the main gateway to the western fjords and the Norway in a Nutshell route.
- Free public WiFi
- Bergen Storsenter and Galleriet leave WiFi open, and the Bryggen wharf cafes and the Fish Market offer WiFi with a purchase. The Fløyen mountain-top lodge has guest WiFi. BGO airport has free terminal WiFi. Hotels provide guest WiFi as standard.
- Coverage in the city
- Telenor and Telia both run 5G across central Bergen, the Bryggen Hanseatic wharf, the Fish Market and up to the Fløyen viewpoint. The funicular and the Ulriken cable car hold signal. Bergen is the launch point for fjord cruises on the Hardangerfjord, Sognefjord and Nærøyfjord; the boats hold signal near shore but drop briefly below the tallest cliffs.
- If you prefer a local SIM
- Telenor, Telia and Ice, plus Talkmore and Chilimobil, sell prepaid SIMs at BGO and in Narvesen kiosks. No registration is needed. A European regional eSIM that includes Norway under EEA roaming is usually the better value for a Bergen and fjords trip than a standalone Norway plan.
Grab an eSIM before you arrive in Norway 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.
Norway impresses eSIM travelers with strong mobile coverage that extends into fjords, mountains, and Arctic regions. Telenor, Telia, and Ice provide 5G in Oslo, Bergen, Stavanger, and Trondheim, while 4G coverage spans most populated areas including small coastal towns. Norway has invested heavily in connectivity along its dramatic western fjords and northern coastline, so popular tourist routes like the Atlantic Road and Lofoten Islands generally maintain reliable 4G.
As an EEA member, Norway is included in EU roaming regulations, meaning most European regional eSIM plans cover Norway alongside EU countries. Tunnels, which are plentiful on Norwegian roads, often have mobile coverage inside them. Remote mountain hiking above the treeline and deep inland valleys may lose signal, so offline maps are wise for backcountry adventures.
- Norway is included in EU/EEA roaming - most European regional eSIM plans cover it automatically
- Fjord cruises and coastal ferries generally maintain 4G signal along the route
- Download offline maps before mountain hikes - trails above the treeline often lack coverage
- The Entur app is essential for planning and booking Norwegian public transit
- Data costs are moderate via regional plans, but standalone Norway plans can be pricier than EU averages
Average Data Cost
~$0.63-$2/GB
Network Quality
5G in Oslo, Bergen, and major cities. Good 4G along fjords and coastal towns. Remote mountain areas may have gaps.
eSIM Availability
eSIM supported by Norwegian carriers. EEA member, so EU roaming regulations apply.
Major Carriers
Recommended Providers for Norway
Plans for Norway
From $3.99
Plans for Norway
From $2.50
Plans for Norway
From $4.50
Plans for Norway
From $3.99
Plans for Norway
From $2.45
Pay-as-you-go: $2.45/GB
Plans for Norway
From $4.99
Plans for Norway
From $10.00
Pay-as-you-go: $10.00/GB
- 1
Buy and install at home on WiFi.
Installation is not the same as activation. You can install the Norway 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 Norway.
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 Norway recently, a one-paragraph note on what worked (and what did not) helps the next traveler.
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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.






