The Peru eSIM guide
Everything a first-time visitor needs to use an eSIM in Peru: how to check your phone is compatible, how to install and activate one by QR code, which networks you will be on, and how to avoid roaming charges, so you walk out of the airport already connected.

No sign-up
Buy online, activate by QR code.
Local networks
Runs on Claro, Movistar, Entel, Bitel.
Keep your number
Works alongside your home SIM.
Why an eSIM beats roaming and local chips in Peru
Visitors to Peru have three ways to get online: pay home-carrier roaming, buy a local prepaid chip, or use a travel eSIM. Roaming is convenient but expensive and easy to overspend on across a long South American trip.
A local Peruvian chip is cheap but means finding a store, sometimes presenting your passport for registration, dealing with a Spanish-language signup, and swapping out your home SIM right after a tiring flight.
A travel eSIM sidesteps all of that: you buy it online before you leave, nothing physical changes hands, your home number keeps working, and there is no paperwork on arrival. For most visitors that combination of price, speed and simplicity makes the eSIM the obvious choice on a trip where you are already juggling flights, buses, altitude and a new language, and a promo code only widens the gap in its favour.
Is your phone compatible?
Almost every phone sold in the last few years supports eSIM, but it is worth a quick check before you buy. On iPhone, eSIM works from the iPhone XS and XR onwards; on Android, recent Google Pixel, Samsung Galaxy S and many mid-range models support it too.
The fastest test is to open your settings and look for an option such as Add eSIM, Add Mobile Plan or Add Data Plan in the cellular or network menu. Your handset also needs to be carrier-unlocked, which is standard for phones bought outright but occasionally locked on operator contracts.
If you cannot find the option, searching your exact model alongside the word eSIM confirms support in moments, so you never buy a plan you cannot use on the road in Peru.
Installing and activating, step by step
Setup takes about two minutes on Wi-Fi. Do it before you travel so you arrive online, then switch the data line on after landing in Peru.
- Buy your Peru plan and open the confirmation email with the QR code, ideally on a laptop or second screen.
- On your phone, open settings, choose Add eSIM, and scan the QR code; the Peru plan downloads in seconds.
- Label the line (for example Peru) and set it as your data line for when you arrive.
- Turn on data roaming for the Peru line only; this lets the eSIM connect to local networks and does not trigger home-carrier fees.
Networks and avoiding roaming fees
Peru eSIMs connect to the country's operators, chiefly Claro and Movistar with Entel and Bitel as further options, so you get genuine local coverage without choosing a network yourself. To make sure you only ever pay the flat, prepaid price you chose, keep your home SIM's mobile data switched off for the whole trip and route all data through the Peru eSIM.
You can leave your home line active for calls and texts if you want to stay reachable on your usual number, but disabling its data stops the phone quietly falling back to expensive roaming when you cross between regions or lose signal in the mountains. With the eSIM handling everything, there is no bill shock when you return, and pairing the plan with a current promo code keeps the cost of a whole trip's data low even over several weeks.
Smart data tips for Peru
A few simple habits keep you connected and your data low across a long trip. Hotels, hostels, cafes and the better restaurants almost always offer free Wi-Fi, so lean on it for big downloads, photo backups and video calls home, and reserve your eSIM for maps, taxis and payments on the move.
Download offline maps of Lima, Cusco and each region before you fly, along with your accommodation and tour bookings, because the long-distance bus legs, the train to Machu Picchu and the high passes often have weak or no signal. For a single-city break a small volume pack is plenty; for a multi-week tour across the coast, the Andes and the Amazon an unlimited plan removes any need to ration.
With those habits plus the right plan and a promo code, staying online across Peru costs very little.
What a Peru eSIM really costs
Cost is the reason most visitors switch to an eSIM, and the gap is large on a Peru trip. Home-carrier roaming is typically billed per day or per megabyte and can run to many times the price of a local plan, so a week of being online easily costs more than a guided day tour.
A prepaid Peru eSIM, by contrast, is a single fixed price you choose up front, with no surprise charges waiting when you land back home. Pair it with a verified promo code from this site and the saving widens again, which is exactly why we always suggest a quick look at the ranking before you pay rather than after.
Peru eSIM setup FAQ
- Do I need ID or a passport to use an eSIM in Peru?
- No. A local Peruvian prepaid chip can ask for your passport in a shop, but a travel eSIM is bought online before arrival and activates by QR code with no paperwork, which is a big part of why visitors prefer it after a long flight into Lima.
- Can I keep my home number in Peru?
- Yes. The eSIM runs alongside your physical SIM, so your home number stays active for calls and texts while data routes through the Peru eSIM. Just keep your home line's data switched off to avoid roaming charges.
- When should I install the eSIM?
- Install it on home Wi-Fi a day or two before you fly. Installation needs internet; using the plan in Peru does not. You simply switch on the data line after you land at Lima's Jorge Chavez airport or your arrival point.
Ready to choose a plan?
Compare Peru eSIMs