Afghanistan eSIM 2026: best plans and prices
Afghanistan eSIM data plans from $14.95. 16 Fizen options, no roaming bill, install before you fly.
16 plans from $14.95
How much does a Afghanistan eSIM cost?
A Afghanistan eSIM starts at $14.95 for 1 GB over 90 days. For a typical one to two week trip, the best value is the 10 GB plan at $65.02, which works out to $6.50 per GB. Long stays are covered up to 30 days. Prices were last checked on July 9, 2026.
Every Afghanistan plan, priced
Prices checked:
All prices in USD
- 1 GB Cheapest to try$14.95
90 days · $14.95/GB · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 3 GB$34.72
90 days · $11.57/GB · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 5 GB$44.29
90 days · $8.86/GB · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 1 GB/day$54.49
7 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 10 GB Best value$65.02
90 days · $6.50/GB · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 2 GB/day$72.83
7 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 3 GB/day$90.69
7 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 1 GB/day$111.26
15 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 20 GB$137.41
90 days · $6.87/GB · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 2 GB/day$150.80
15 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 3 GB/day$188.91
15 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 30 GB$198.95
90 days · $6.63/GB · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 1 GB/day$217.93
30 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 2 GB/day$296.85
30 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 50 GB$326.83
90 days · $6.54/GB · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price - 3 GB/day Long stay$373.23
30 days · — · Multi-network · then 128 kbps
Check price
How I check these prices: every plan above is repriced from the live rate sheet each month, stamped with the date, and compared against Airalo, Holafly, Nomad, Saily and Ubigi in the cross-brand price test. My full method is on the about page.
How much data do you need in Afghanistan?
My rule from years of watching my own usage: maps, messaging and browsing burn about 500 MB a day, and social video pushes it toward 1 GB. Matched to the actual plans above:
| Trip | Typical use | Buy this | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weekend, maps and messages | about 500 MB/day | 3 GB · 90 days | $34.72 |
| One week, normal tourist use | about 700 MB/day | 5 GB · 90 days | $44.29 |
| Two weeks, normal tourist use | about 700 MB/day | 10 GB · 90 days | $65.02 |
| Work trip with hotspot | 2 GB+/day | 3 GB/day · 7 days | $90.69 |
Why I recommend the Fizen 10 GB plan
For Afghanistan, the Fizen 10 GB plan at $65.02 is the value pick for a normal trip. If you just need maps and messaging, the 1 GB at $14.95 is enough; for a longer stay the 3 GB/day stretches further. I recheck these prices against Airalo, Holafly and the other big brands every month.
For most trips to Afghanistan the Fizen 10 GB plan is the one I would buy again, at $65.02 for 90 days on the Multi-network line. If your trip is shorter or longer, size up or down from the table above.
Airalo vs Holafly vs Nomad in Afghanistan: the same plan, priced
Prices checked:
Six stores, one allowance: 10 GB with 90 days of validity, priced the same week at Airalo, Holafly, Nomad, Saily, Ubigi and Fizen. This month Saily has the lowest price for Afghanistan; if budget is all that matters, buy there. The Fizen plan this site stocks is $65.02 for the same allowance.
| Provider | Comparable plan | Price | Per GB | Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|
SailyCheapest | 10 GB · 90 days | $20.90 | $2.09/GB | their store |
Airalo | 10 GB · 90 days | $22.90 | $2.29/GB | their store |
Nomad | 10 GB · 90 days | $24.90 | $2.49/GB | their store |
Ubigi | 10 GB · 90 days | $29.90 | $2.99/GB | their store |
Fizen | 10 GB · 90 days | $65.02 | $6.50/GB | Get this plan |
Holafly | Unlimited · 90 days | $277.50 | $27.75/GB | their store |
Competitor prices come from their public stores for the closest matching plan and are rechecked monthly. They sell in different bundle sizes, so I compare on price per GB for the allowance shown. See the full cross-brand price test →
How to set it up
- 1
Buy before you fly
Pick a plan below and buy it over home Wi-Fi. You get a QR code by email within a minute.
- 2
Scan the QR code
Open your phone settings, add a mobile or cellular plan, and scan the code. Label the line so you do not mix it up with your home number.
- 3
Turn it on when you land
Switch the Afghanistan data line on after you arrive. Validity counts from activation, so you never lose a day.
Afghanistan eSIM questions
What is the cheapest eSIM for Afghanistan?
For a 10 GB plan with 90 days of validity, the cheapest price this month is Saily at $20.90. Fizen, the plan this site stocks, is $65.02 for the same allowance, and the comparison table shows every brand side by side. Prices move, so check the date stamp next to the table.
Is Airalo or Holafly cheaper for Afghanistan?
Airalo is the cheaper of the two here: Airalo charges about $22.90 for a 10 GB-class plan while Holafly, which only sells unlimited, runs $277.50 for the same 90 days. Both are worth checking against the full table above before you buy.
Will an eSIM work in Afghanistan?
Yes, if your phone is eSIM capable and carrier unlocked. You install the plan by QR code before you fly and it connects when you arrive in Afghanistan. Your home number stays on your normal SIM.
Which networks does a Afghanistan eSIM use?
These are multi-network eSIMs: they attach to the strongest partner carrier available in Afghanistan rather than locking you to one operator, which helps outside the big cities.
Are there hidden costs or fees?
Nothing hidden on the price, and there is no activation fee. Two things to check before buying: validity starts when you activate, not when you pay, and after the high-speed allowance most plans here slow down instead of cutting off (between 128 kbps and 128 kbps depending on the plan; the exact speed is printed on each row of the table).
What is the difference between a day pass and a data pack?
A day pass gives you an allowance every day (like 1 GB per day) for the number of days you choose, which suits daily heavy use. A data pack is a fixed pool (like 10 GB) you use across a validity window. Both are in the table above so you can pick what fits.
How much data do I need for Afghanistan?
For maps, messaging and the odd video call I plan on about 3 to 5 GB a week. Stream or tether a laptop and 10 GB is safer. Match the tier to your trip length in the table.
When does validity start, and can I tether?
Validity counts from activation, not purchase, so install early and turn it on when you land in Afghanistan. Tethering works on these plans; a hotspot burns data fast, so size up if a laptop will lean on it.
Nearby destinations
Prefer one plan for the whole trip?
Asia regional eSIM One line across the regionGuides worth reading first
- Which phones support eSIM? The 2026 list Every major eSIM-capable phone in 2026: iPhone XS onward, Pixel 3 onward, Galaxy S20 onward, plus the carrier-lock trap and how to check your exact phone in 30 seconds.
- eSIM vs local SIM card: when the airport kiosk still wins A local SIM is often cheaper per GB, an eSIM wins on everything else. The honest breakdown, the three cases where the kiosk beats the app, and the hybrid move.
The buttons above are affiliate links. If you buy through them I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. I only rank plans by the prices shown, last checked 2026-07-09.