An eSIM for Georgia starts at $1.79 per gigabyte, while a local Magti SIM card costs 10 GEL (~$3.70) for the plastic alone, plus a data package on top. The price difference is modest, but the convenience gap is huge: eSIM activates before your flight, requires no passport, and works the moment you land. Below is a breakdown of nine providers with real prices, hidden trade-offs, and an honest verdict on who should use eSIM and who is better off buying a local card in the city.

Los Angeles, CA, United States
Jacob

Key takeaways:

  • eSIM from $1.79 per 1 GB – cheapest option is Esim4travel, but data-only with short validity
  • Local Magti SIM costs 10 GEL (~$3.70) for the card + data packages from 5 GEL, but requires passport and an in-store visit
  • eSIM coverage depends on the partner network – most providers use Geocell/Silknet, while Magti has better mountain coverage
  • Airport SIM prices in Tbilisi are inflated – sometimes 2–3x more expensive than city operator stores
  • Only Airalo offers plans with calls – other eSIM providers are data-only
  • Crypto payments available at Yesim and Esim4travel – useful if you lack an international card

Price comparison: how much does eSIM for Georgia cost

Below are the best local-coverage plans from each provider. All prices are for Georgia-only packages. (Updated: March 2026)

5 GB packages

ProviderDataValidityPriceCalls
Esim4travel5 GB30 days$8.53No
Amigo eSIM5 GB14 days€11No
Airalo5 GB30 days€15No
Airalo5 GB30 days€15Yes
Saily5 GB30 days$17.99No
Yesim5 GB15 days$16.80No
aerial photo of houses
Denis Arslanbekov

10 GB packages

ProviderDataValidityPriceCalls
Esim4travel10 GB30 days$16.11No
GoMoWorld12 GB30 days€10.99No
Amigo eSIM10 GB30 days€17No
Ubigi10 GB30 days€19No
Airalo10 GB30 days€25No
Yesim10 GB30 days$25.20No
Saily10 GB30 days$30.99No

20 GB+ and unlimited packages

ProviderDataValidityPriceCalls
GoMoWorld30 GB30 days€19.99No
Amigo eSIM20 GB30 days€25No
Yesim20 GB30 days$31.20No
Airalo20 GB30 days€32No
Airalo50 GB30 days€43No
YesimUnlimited7 days$28.80No
UbigiUnlimited7 days€29No
GoMoWorld45 GB30 days€29.99No

Provider-by-provider breakdown

Esim4travel – cheapest per gigabyte

The price leader: 1 GB for 7 days at $1.79, and 10 GB for 30 days at $16.11. Accepts regular cards, crypto, and PayPal. All plans are data-only, no calls. For a week-long trip to Tbilisi, the 5 GB plan at $8.53 is one of the best deals available. The partner network is not disclosed, so mountain coverage may vary.

GoMoWorld – best volume-to-price ratio

12 GB for €10.99 per month is among the lowest cost-per-gigabyte options available. The 30 GB plan at €19.99 suits travelers who rely heavily on navigation and video calls. Accepts cards and PayPal. No app required – purchase through the website.

Airalo – the only one with call packages

The world's largest eSIM marketplace. The main advantage for Georgia is the availability of plans with calls: 5 GB + calls for 30 days costs the same €15 as the data-only plan. Airalo works through a local Georgian network, with stable coverage in cities and along major highways. Prices aren't the lowest, but the range is the widest: from 1 GB for 3 days to 50 GB for a month.

Мужчина в коричневой толстовке с капюшоном стоит перед поездом
Clem Onojeghuo

Yesim – unlimited plans and wide language support

Supports Georgian among its interface languages. Offers unlimited plans: 7 days for $28.80 or 30 days for $54. For travelers who don't want to track megabytes, this is a solid option – though unlimited costs more than large fixed packages from competitors. Fixed plans are available too: 10 GB for 30 days at $25.20. Accepts cryptocurrency.

Ubigi – unlimited for short trips

Two unlimited packages: 7 days for €29 and 15 days for €49. Fixed data plans are mid-range: 10 GB for €19 per month. A good option for week-long visits where you want worry-free data usage.

Amigo eSIM – simple and competitive

Only three plans: 5 GB for €11, 10 GB for €17, and 20 GB for €25. Data-only, English interface. Competitive mid-range pricing. Best for travelers who prefer a no-fuss purchase with minimal options to sift through.

Saily – built by the NordVPN team

Privacy-focused eSIM provider. Prices are above average: 5 GB for $17.99, 10 GB for $30.99. Worth considering if you already use their security ecosystem.

iRoamly and Voye – expensive and niche

iRoamly offers a huge number of packages (from 1 day to 30), but prices run higher than the market: 10 GB for 7 days costs $20, and unlimited for a day costs $7. Voye is pricier still: 3 GB for 7 days at $15. Neither provider is the best value pick for Georgia.

eSIM vs. local SIM card: which one to choose

A local SIM card in Georgia is among the cheapest in the region. Magti sells cards for 10 GEL (~$3.70), and unlimited internet for 30 days costs about 32 GEL (~$12). A 5 GB package runs just 12 GEL (~$4.50). That's noticeably cheaper than any eSIM.

But there are trade-offs:

Important: SIM cards at the airports in Tbilisi, Kutaisi, and Batumi are sold at inflated prices – sometimes 2–3 times more than city operator stores. The "tourist packages" at 30 GEL in the airport give you just 3 GB + calls for 15 days, while the same money in a city store gets unlimited data for a week.

Buying requires a passport, a queue at the operator store, and basic communication with staff who may not speak English fluently. If you arrive late at night or simply value your time – eSIM wins on convenience.

a city street filled with lots of traffic next to tall buildings
Aleksandr Popov

Choose eSIM when:

  • Your trip is 3–7 days with moderate data use (maps, messaging)
  • You don't want to visit an operator store and wait in line
  • Your phone supports eSIM and you want to keep your home SIM for calls
  • Check visa requirements for your nationality before travel

Choose a local SIM when:

  • You're staying 2+ weeks – the savings become substantial
  • Your route includes mountains (Mestia, Kazbegi) – Magti's coverage in remote areas is superior to Geocell/Silknet
  • You need a Georgian phone number for local calls and registrations
  • You're willing to spend 20 minutes at a Magti store in the city

Coverage and connection quality

Most eSIM providers connect through the Geocell/Silknet network – Georgia's second-largest operator. This means stable 4G in Tbilisi, Batumi, Kutaisi, and along main highways. Silknet launched 5G in central Tbilisi (from Freedom Square to Bagebi), but the zone is still narrow.

Magti leads in coverage: 5G works across most populated areas, and 4G reaches even remote mountain villages. The only confirmed dead zone is Vashlovani Nature Reserve.

For a tourist sticking to the TbilisiBatumiKutaisi route, eSIM coverage via Geocell is perfectly sufficient. But if your itinerary includes Mestia, Ushguli, or Svaneti mountain passes – a local Magti SIM is the safer bet.

How to activate your eSIM

The process is the same across all providers and takes 3–5 minutes:

  1. Confirm your phone supports eSIM (iPhone XS and newer, most Samsung Galaxy S20+, Google Pixel 3+)
  2. Purchase a plan on the provider's website – pay by card, PayPal, or crypto
  3. Scan the QR code or install the profile through the provider's app
  4. Activate the data package – some providers activate automatically, others require tapping "Activate" in the app
  5. Enable data roaming in your phone settings
Tip: Install your eSIM at home on Wi-Fi. If the QR code won't scan on the plane or abroad without internet, you'll be stuck offline.
Moskva, Moskva, Russia
Andrey Matveev

Frequently asked questions

1. What is the cheapest eSIM for Georgia? Esim4travel starts at $1.79 for 1 GB. For a week-long trip, their 3 GB plan at $5.49 is the most affordable option. If you need more data, GoMoWorld offers 12 GB for €10.99.

2. Is there an unlimited eSIM for Georgia? Yes. Yesim sells unlimited plans at $28.80 for 7 days and $54 for 30 days. Ubigi offers unlimited for 7 days at €29. Note that "unlimited" typically comes with a Fair Use Policy – speeds may slow after a certain threshold.

3. Which eSIM provider has the best coverage in Georgia? Most providers use the Geocell/Silknet network, which covers cities and main roads well. For mountain areas like Mestia or Kazbegi, a local Magti SIM offers superior coverage. No eSIM provider currently uses Magti's network.

4. Should I buy an eSIM or a local SIM in Georgia? For a standard TbilisiBatumi itinerary, eSIM works perfectly. For mountain routes, a local Magti SIM is more reliable. Price-wise, a local SIM is cheaper if bought at a city store: unlimited data for a month costs about $12.

5. Can I use eSIM and a physical SIM simultaneously? Yes, if your phone supports dual SIM (most modern smartphones do). You can keep your home SIM for calls and texts while using the eSIM for data in Georgia. Just set the eSIM as your preferred data line in phone settings.

Summary

For most travelers visiting Georgia, eSIM is a convenient and reasonably priced option. Best price per gigabyte goes to Esim4travel and GoMoWorld. Widest plan selection with calls goes to Airalo. Unlimited data goes to Yesim and Ubigi. But for extended stays or mountain adventures, a local Magti SIM at 10 GEL + a data package remains unbeaten on the price-to-coverage ratio.

Read also:

Sources: