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Travel eSIM vs Pocket Wi-Fi vs Roaming: Which Is Best?

For solo or couple travel a travel eSIM is the cheapest and most convenient option. Pocket Wi-Fi only makes sense for a group sharing one device, and roaming is best kept for a quick day-trip where convenience beats cost.

DealSifu·Updated 18 June 2026·6 min read

There are three common ways for a Hong Kong traveller to get mobile data overseas: a travel eSIM, a rented pocket Wi-Fi device, or roaming on your existing plan. They differ a lot on cost, convenience and hassle. Here is how to choose.

FactorTravel eSIMPocket Wi-FiRoaming
CostLowest per GBDaily rental adds upHighest per GB
SetupScan a QR code oncePick up / return a deviceToggle a setting
Extra deviceNoneA router to carry + chargeNone
Best forSolo / couple travellersGroups sharing one connectionQuick day-trips

Why eSIM usually wins

For one or two people, a travel eSIM beats the alternatives on almost every axis: it is the cheapest per GB, there is no device to carry, charge or return, and it does not drain a second battery. The only requirements are an eSIM-capable, unlocked phone. For most modern travellers, this is the default choice.

When pocket Wi-Fi or roaming still make sense

Pocket Wi-Fi earns its keep when a group of four or more wants to share one connection and split the cost, or when travellers have older phones without eSIM support. Roaming is worth it for a single overnight or day-trip where you would rather pay a small premium than set anything up — many HK operators sell a flat daily roaming pass that is fine for 24–48 hours.

See travel eSIM prices →

Frequently asked questions

Does a travel eSIM use more battery than a normal SIM?

No — an eSIM uses the same modem as a physical SIM, so battery use is identical. Pocket Wi-Fi is different: it is a second device with its own battery you must charge daily, and it drains your phone faster over Wi-Fi.

Can a group share one travel eSIM?

One person can buy an eSIM and share it via personal hotspot if the plan allows tethering, but that drains their phone. For a group that wants a dedicated shared connection all day, pocket Wi-Fi or one eSIM per phone is more practical.

Related guides

Guides are independent and for general information. Plan details change — always confirm current prices and terms with the provider.