Best eSIM for Indonesia (2026) — A Buyer's Guide From an Actual Provider
Last updated: June 2nd, 2026
Most "best eSIM for Indonesia" guides are written by travel blogs earning affiliate commissions. We sell eSIMs ourselves — so we're biased too.
The difference? We'll show you the exact criteria that matter for Indonesia specifically, compare the major providers on those criteria, and let you decide. No rankings, no "#1 pick," no editor's choice badges. Just facts.
Here's how to choose the right Indonesia eSIM for your trip — whether you're spending a week in Bali, working remotely from Canggu, or island-hopping across Lombok and Flores.
At a glance
- Best network combination (Telkomsel + XL): Travelsim Asia / Holafly
- Lowest fixed-plan prices: Travelsim Asia (5 GB, 20 GB, 50 GB) / Ubigi (3 GB, 10 GB)
- No-app setup: Travelsim Asia
- Best truly-unlimited option: Holafly
- Best soft-unlimited value: Nomad ($18 / 5d, $33 / 10d)
- Multi-country trips: Airalo or Saily regional plans
Based on publicly listed info, May 2026. Policies and prices can change.
The 5 things that actually matter
Based on what travelers ask us most, these are the five criteria that determine whether your Indonesia travel eSIM works well — or causes problems.
1. Network quality in Indonesia
Indonesia has five mobile networks, but only two really matter for travelers: Telkomsel and XL Axiata. Which network(s) your Indonesia tourist eSIM connects to affects your coverage, speed, and — particularly outside Java and Bali — whether you have a signal at all.
| Network | Coverage | 5G | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Telkomsel | Widest nationwide — including outer islands, rural areas, ferry routes | Yes (cities) | Lombok, Flores, Sumba, Sumatra, multi-island trips |
| XL Axiata | Strong urban + most secondary cities | Yes (cities) | Jakarta, Bali, Yogyakarta, Surabaya, Bandung |
| Indosat Ooredoo | Decent urban; thinner rural | Partial | City-only stays |
| 3 (Hutchison) | Java + Bali focus; spotty elsewhere | Partial | Java/Bali tourists on a budget |
| Smartfren | Limited footprint; weakest of the five | Partial | Backup only |
Why this matters: Most eSIM providers connect to one or two of the weaker networks. Telkomsel has by far the widest coverage, and pairing it with XL Axiata gives you Indonesia's strongest combined urban + rural footprint. If you're staying in Bali or Jakarta only, any network will work fine. If you're heading to Lombok, Komodo, Raja Ampat, Flores, or anywhere off the well-trodden tourist path, Telkomsel access becomes the deciding factor.
2. Throttling and Fair Usage Policies
Most "unlimited" Indonesia eSIMs aren't actually unlimited. They include a Fair Usage Policy that reduces speed after a daily high-speed cap is reached.
Fixed data plans (1 GB, 5 GB, 10 GB, etc.) give you full speed for the entire data allowance. No daily caps, no throttling.
"Unlimited" plans from Airalo, Saily, Nomad, and Ubigi all throttle after a daily or total cap. Only Holafly offers truly uncapped unlimited data for Indonesia (with a 90 GB/month soft cap).
| Provider | "Unlimited" reality | Throttle speed |
|---|---|---|
| Holafly | Truly unlimited | 90 GB/month soft cap |
| Saily | 5 GB/day high-speed | 1 Mbps after cap |
| Airalo | 3 GB/day high-speed | 1 Mbps after cap |
| Ubigi | High-cap fixed (20/30/60 GB) | 2 Mbps after cap |
| Nomad | ~2 GB/day high-speed | 512 Kbps after cap |
What to check: If a plan says "unlimited," find the FUP details and the throttled speed before buying. Nomad's 512 Kbps post-throttle speed is the most restrictive in the market — barely usable for video calls or photo uploads. Saily's 1 Mbps and Ubigi's 2 Mbps are more tolerable but still drop video quality significantly.
3. Purchase and installation friction
Some providers require you to download an app, create an account, and manage everything through their platform. Others deliver the Indonesia prepaid eSIM by email and let you install it directly through your phone's settings.
Neither approach is wrong — but if you prefer not to create another account or install another app, check the provider's process before buying. Airalo, Nomad, Saily, and Ubigi all require apps for full functionality. Holafly is optional (web works fine). Travelsim Asia delivers entirely by email — no app, no account, installs in any browser.
Practical scenario: You land at Bali Ngurah Rai with no data, walk through immigration, and need to book a Grab from the airport to Seminyak. Without an active eSIM, you can't download a new app. App-required providers create a chicken-and-egg problem — either install everything before you leave home (recommended) or scramble for airport WiFi.
4. Top-up flexibility
Running out of data in Indonesia is particularly stressful — you need mobile data for Grab and Gojek, WhatsApp for villa hosts and tour guides, and Google Maps for navigating between scooter, ferry, and shuttle stops.
Some providers let you top up instantly through a web portal or app. Others require buying and installing a completely new eSIM. And with most soft-unlimited plans, there's no top-up option — you're stuck at throttled speed until the daily reset.
Pro tip: If top-up is easy, start with a smaller plan and add data only if you need it. That's cheaper than overbuying "just in case." Travelsim Asia's web-portal top-up means you can add data without re-installing — useful if your trip extends or you underestimate Grab usage.
5. Price per usable GB
Indonesia eSIM pricing varies widely. An "unlimited" plan for $27/week sounds generous — until you realize usable high-speed data is only 2–3 GB per day. A fixed 10 GB plan for $16.99 gives you 10 GB at full speed, anytime.
Compare plans by the cost of data you can actually use at full speed, not the headline number. And factor in validity: a 1 GB plan that expires in 3 days is poor value compared to one that lasts 7 days for the same money.
Indonesia eSIM providers compared
Here's how the major providers stack up on the criteria above. No rankings — just facts you can verify on each provider's website.
| Provider | Indonesian network(s) | Unlimited FUP | App required | Top-up | 5 GB price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Travelsim Asia | Telkomsel + XL Axiata | N/A — no unlimited plans | No — email delivery | ✓ Web portal | $10.99 / 30 days |
| Airalo | 3 (Hutchison) + Indosat | 3 GB/day → 1 Mbps | Yes | ✓ Via app | $13.50 / 30 days |
| Holafly | XL Axiata + Telkomsel | Truly unlimited (90 GB/mo soft cap) | Optional | ✓ Customer panel | N/A — unlimited only |
| Nomad | Telkomsel + Smartfren | ~2 GB/day → 512 Kbps | Yes | Varies by plan | $12.00 / 30 days |
| Saily | Not publicly disclosed | 5 GB/day → 1 Mbps | Yes | ✓ Via app | $13.99 / 30 days |
| Ubigi | Indosat + XL (XLSmart) | High-cap fixed → 2 Mbps | Yes | ✓ Via app | N/A at 5 GB |
Prices and policies checked May 2026. These can change — always verify on the provider's website before purchasing. Travelsim Asia is our own product.
Travelsim Asia and Holafly use the same network combination — Telkomsel + XL Axiata. The difference is the plan model: Travelsim Asia offers fixed plans starting at $3.99 with full speed throughout; Holafly offers unlimited plans at $3.90/day with no daily throttle. Same coverage, different value proposition. For most travelers, fixed plans deliver more usable data per dollar.
When each provider makes sense
Different providers suit different travelers. Here's when each one is a reasonable choice — including when a competitor might be a better fit than us.
Airalo
Good for: travelers who want a well-known brand with a polished app, and who are visiting multiple Southeast Asian countries (Airalo's regional Asia plans cover Indonesia plus 13+ other destinations on a single eSIM). Their unlimited Indonesia plan is transparent about its FUP (3 GB/day, 1 Mbps after). Less ideal for: travelers heading outside Java or Bali — connecting only to 3 (Hutchison) and Indosat means weak coverage in Lombok, Flores, Sumba, Sumatra, and Sulawesi. Airalo also has the most expensive small plans in the Indonesia market ($4.50 for 1 GB / 3 days).
Holafly
Good for: travelers who want truly unlimited data without thinking about plan sizes or daily caps. Holafly is the only Indonesia eSIM in this comparison without a stated daily throttle threshold — useful if you're hotspotting a laptop, video-calling daily, or running a content workflow from Bali. Their XL + Telkomsel network combination gives strong coverage in cities, on Bali, and across the outer islands. Less ideal for: price-conscious travelers — at $3.90/day for short trips, a 7-day Holafly plan ($27.30) costs over 2.5x what a Travelsim Asia 5 GB plan covers comfortably for the same trip ($10.99). Holafly only makes sense if unlimited certainty is genuinely worth the premium.
Nomad
Good for: travelers who want Telkomsel coverage at competitive prices, particularly on the soft-unlimited tiers — Nomad's $18 / 5 days and $33 / 10 days are the cheapest "unlimited" options in the Indonesia market. Their 50 GB / 45-day fixed plan at $41 offers excellent validity if you need a long window. Less ideal for: travelers who want to top up easily (top-up options vary by plan), or those who fall into Nomad's 2 GB/day FUP throttle — at 512 Kbps post-throttle, video calls and photo uploads become impractical.
Saily
Good for: travelers who value brand security (built by the NordVPN team) and want a polished app experience with the most duration flexibility in the soft-unlimited market — Saily offers unlimited tiers at 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30 days, with a generous 5 GB/day high-speed cap. Less ideal for: travelers who want to know exactly which network they're connecting to (Saily doesn't publicly disclose this for Indonesia), or those heading to outer islands without confirmed Telkomsel access. Saily is also among the more expensive Indonesia eSIMs at standard data tiers — $4.79 for 1 GB and $8.99 for 3 GB sit at the top of the price range.
Ubigi
Good for: travelers who want the cheapest 3 GB ($7.00 / 15 days) or 10 GB ($14.00 / 7 days or $16.00 / 30 days) plans in the market, and don't need outer-island coverage. Their Indosat + XL combination works well in Jakarta, Bali, and major Java cities. Ubigi also operates as a full MVNO rather than a reseller, which can mean cleaner connection quality. Less ideal for: travelers heading to Lombok, Flores, Sumba, or anywhere requiring Telkomsel coverage. Ubigi's "unlimited" tiers are technically high-cap fixed plans (20/30/60 GB) with 2 Mbps throttling after exhaustion.
Travelsim Asia
Good for: travelers who want the strongest Indonesia network coverage at fixed-plan prices. We connect to Telkomsel and XL Axiata — the same network combination as Holafly, but on fixed plans with full speed and no daily throttle. Our prices are the lowest in the Indonesia market at 1 GB ($3.99), 5 GB ($10.99), 20 GB ($27.99), and 50 GB ($34.99). No app, no account, eSIM arrives by email and installs in any browser. Top-ups via web portal. Less ideal for: travelers who specifically need unlimited data (we don't sell it), travelers heading to multiple Southeast Asian countries on one eSIM (use Airalo regional), or those who want the absolute cheapest 3 GB or 10 GB / 30-day plan (Ubigi wins both, by $0.99 and $0.99 respectively). We're biased here — this is our product.
Indonesia-specific things to consider
Indonesia has connectivity factors that don't apply to most other destinations. Keep these in mind when choosing your Indonesia data eSIM.
- Bali is connectivity-easy. The outer islands aren't. Within Bali, almost any provider works fine — coverage in Seminyak, Canggu, Ubud, Uluwatu, Sanur, and Nusa Dua is solid across all networks. Once you move to Nusa Penida, Lombok, the Gili Islands, Flores, Komodo, or further east, Telkomsel becomes essential. If your trip stays in Bali, save money with the cheapest option. If you're going further, Telkomsel access is non-negotiable.
- You'll use Grab and Gojek constantly. Indonesia's two main ride-hail apps run in the background nearly all day for urban travelers — booking rides, tracking ETAs, ordering food (GoFood), even arranging laundry pickup. Each booking pings location data; a typical day might use 200–400 MB just on transport apps. Budget more data than you would for a destination with widespread public transit.
- WhatsApp is non-negotiable. In Indonesia, WhatsApp isn't just a messaging app — it's how you contact villa hosts, scooter rental shops, tour operators, restaurants, dive schools, and almost any small business. Voice and video calls work well over the major Indonesian networks. Make sure your eSIM provider doesn't throttle to a speed that breaks voice calls.
- Scooter navigation eats data. If you're renting scooters in Bali or Lombok, Google Maps runs constantly in your pocket. Pre-download offline maps before riding out — Bali alone can save 200–500 MB/day in map tile requests.
- Free WiFi in Bali is genuinely good. Unlike most Southeast Asian destinations, Bali's café and villa WiFi is reliable and often fast. You can supplement your eSIM data for heavier tasks — laptop work, photo backups, streaming — without burning through your plan. Outside Bali, free WiFi gets sparse quickly.
- An eSIM works across all of Indonesia. All providers listed here offer nationwide coverage — your plan works in Jakarta, Bali, Yogyakarta, Lombok, Sumatra, Sulawesi, and the outer islands (subject to each provider's network access). You don't need separate plans for different islands.
How much data do you actually need?
Indonesia is moderately data-hungry — heavier than Thailand for urban travelers (Grab/Gojek), lighter than Japan (no translation app dependency). For a detailed breakdown, read our full data calculator guide.
| Trip type | Daily usage | 7-day plan | 14-day plan |
|---|---|---|---|
| Grab, maps, WhatsApp, browsing | 300–600 MB | 3–5 GB | 5–10 GB |
| + social media and photo uploads | 1–1.5 GB | 5–10 GB | 10–20 GB |
| + video calls, streaming, hotspot | 2–4 GB | 10–20 GB | 20–50 GB |
Most travelers land in the middle row. A 5 GB plan covers a full week in Indonesia, and 10 GB gives comfortable headroom for two weeks — especially if you're using villa or café WiFi for heavier tasks.
What about buying a SIM at Bali Airport or Jakarta?
Indonesia's major airports — Bali Ngurah Rai (DPS) and Jakarta Soekarno-Hatta (CGK) — have SIM card counters from Telkomsel, XL, and Indosat. Here's the honest comparison:
Airport SIM card
- Local Indonesian phone number included
- Often cheaper per GB than international eSIMs
- Telkomsel sells direct at most major airports
- IMEI registration required — your phone must be registered within 90 days of arrival or it stops working on Indonesian networks
- Passport registration required at point of sale
- Counter queues can be long after international arrivals
- Physical SIM swap — your home SIM is offline
eSIM (any provider)
- Buy online before your trip, install at home
- Activate the moment you land — no queues
- Keep your home SIM active alongside it
- No IMEI registration needed — eSIMs roam on international agreements
- No passport scanning, no physical swap
- No Indonesian phone number included
- Requires an eSIM-compatible phone
The IMEI registration trap: Indonesia requires foreign mobile devices using local SIM cards to register their IMEI with the Ministry of Communications. Tourists get a 90-day grace period — after that, the phone is blocked from connecting to any Indonesian network on a local SIM. The registration process can be done online or at airport kiosks, but it's bureaucratic and easy to forget. eSIMs from international providers bypass this entirely because they connect via roaming agreements, not as local subscribers. For most short-to-medium trips, this alone is enough reason to choose an eSIM over a physical local SIM.
For most travelers, an Indonesia data eSIM is more convenient — especially given the IMEI registration headache for physical SIMs. You're connected the moment you land at Ngurah Rai or Soekarno-Hatta, your home number stays active, and there's nothing to register, swap, or return.
Dig deeper
This guide covers the decision framework. For specifics, we've written dedicated articles on the topics travelers ask about most:
- Indonesia eSIM Prices 2026 — Airalo, Holafly, Nomad & more compared, with unlimited plans included.
- Cheapest Indonesia eSIM 2026 — pure price comparison, lowest price at every data tier.
- Travelsim Asia vs Airalo Indonesia eSIM — head-to-head on the two most popular options.
- Travelsim Asia vs Holafly Indonesia eSIM — same networks, two pricing models: fixed-data vs unlimited showdown for Bali travelers.
- How Much Data Do You Need for Indonesia? — full breakdown by trip type, including Bali villa stays and island hopping.
- How to Buy and Install an Indonesia eSIM — step-by-step setup for iPhone and Android, activation at Bali Ngurah Rai and Jakarta Soekarno-Hatta.
The bottom line
There's no single "best" eSIM for Indonesia. There's the best one for how you travel. Use the five criteria above — network quality (especially Telkomsel access), throttling transparency, setup friction, top-up flexibility, and price per usable GB — and you'll make a better decision than any affiliate ranking can make for you.
Indonesia rewards travelers who stay connected: Grab to your villa, WhatsApp to your dive school, Google Maps across Bali's tangle of one-way streets, and reliable signal when you ferry to Nusa Penida or fly into Labuan Bajo. Whatever provider you choose, make sure your eSIM can keep up — and that the network it connects to actually reaches where you're going.
Not sure which plan to pick? Our support team can help — available 24/7 via email and live chat.