eSIM Compatible Phones: Complete 2026 Device List
eSIM technology has gone from a niche enterprise feature to the default in flagship smartphones in just a few years. The iPhone 15 and 16 series in the US are physical SIM-free — eSIM only. Samsung, Google, Motorola, and dozens of other manufacturers have followed. But eSIM compatibility is not universal, and the details matter: carrier locks, regional variants, and dual-SIM capability all affect whether a travel eSIM will actually work on your device.
This is the complete, definitive list of eSIM-compatible phones for 2026, organized by manufacturer, with dual-SIM information and critical caveats.
What is eSIM? A Brief Explainer
An eSIM (embedded SIM) is a programmable SIM chip soldered directly onto your phone's motherboard. Unlike a physical SIM card that you insert and remove, an eSIM is permanently part of the device hardware. You activate it by scanning a QR code or entering an activation code — no physical card required.
Key advantages for travelers:
- No SIM swap needed. Keep your home SIM active while running a travel eSIM simultaneously.
- Instant activation. Buy and activate a data plan in minutes, from anywhere in the world.
- Multiple profiles. Store several eSIM profiles on one device and switch between them.
- No lost or damaged SIM cards. Everything is stored digitally.
For eSIM to work with a travel provider like CheapereSIM, your phone must: (1) have eSIM hardware, (2) not be carrier-locked, and (3) not be a regional variant with eSIM disabled.
Apple Devices with eSIM Support
Apple was one of the first mainstream manufacturers to adopt eSIM, introducing it in the iPhone XS in 2018. Since 2022 (iPhone 14, US models), Apple has removed the physical SIM tray entirely in US-market devices.
iPhone
| Device | eSIM Support | Dual SIM (eSIM + Physical) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| iPhone 16 Pro Max / Pro | ✓ | US: eSIM only. Intl: eSIM + nano-SIM | Up to 8 stored eSIMs |
| iPhone 16 / 16 Plus | ✓ | US: eSIM only. Intl: eSIM + nano-SIM | Up to 8 stored eSIMs |
| iPhone 15 Pro Max / Pro | ✓ | US: eSIM only. Intl: eSIM + nano-SIM | Up to 8 stored eSIMs |
| iPhone 15 / 15 Plus | ✓ | US: eSIM only. Intl: eSIM + nano-SIM | Up to 8 stored eSIMs |
| iPhone 14 Pro Max / Pro | ✓ | US: eSIM only. Intl: eSIM + nano-SIM | First US eSIM-only model |
| iPhone 14 / 14 Plus | ✓ | US: eSIM only. Intl: eSIM + nano-SIM | |
| iPhone 13 Pro Max / Pro | ✓ | Yes — eSIM + nano-SIM | All regions include physical SIM tray |
| iPhone 13 / 13 mini | ✓ | Yes | |
| iPhone 12 Pro Max / Pro | ✓ | Yes | China model: dual physical SIM, no eSIM |
| iPhone 12 / 12 mini | ✓ | Yes | China model: no eSIM |
| iPhone 11 Pro Max / Pro | ✓ | Yes | |
| iPhone 11 | ✓ | Yes | |
| iPhone SE (2nd gen, 2020) | ✓ | Yes | |
| iPhone SE (3rd gen, 2022) | ✓ | Yes | |
| iPhone XS / XS Max | ✓ | Yes | First iPhones with eSIM (2018) |
| iPhone XR | ✓ | Yes | |
| iPhone X and older | ✗ | — | Physical SIM only |
iPad
| Device | eSIM Support | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| iPad Pro 11-inch / 13-inch (M4, 2024) | ✓ | Cellular models only |
| iPad Air 13-inch / 11-inch (M2, 2024) | ✓ | Cellular models only |
| iPad mini 7 (2024) | ✓ | Cellular models only |
| iPad (10th gen, 2022) | ✓ | Cellular models only |
| iPad Pro (2018 and newer) | ✓ | Cellular models only |
Apple Watch
All Apple Watch Series 3 (GPS + Cellular) and newer models with cellular connectivity use eSIM. However, Apple Watch eSIM is tied to your iPhone carrier — you cannot load a travel eSIM onto an Apple Watch the same way you can on an iPhone. The Watch eSIM is for pairing with your carrier line only.
Samsung Galaxy Devices with eSIM Support
Samsung has offered eSIM on flagship devices since the Galaxy S20 series. However, Samsung is notable for regional variants that disable eSIM — Chinese and Hong Kong models, in particular, often omit eSIM support entirely even on otherwise identical hardware.
Galaxy S Series
| Device | eSIM Support | Dual SIM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy S25 Ultra / S25+ / S25 | ✓ | Yes | CN/HK models: no eSIM |
| Galaxy S24 Ultra / S24+ / S24 | ✓ | Yes | CN/HK models: no eSIM |
| Galaxy S23 Ultra / S23+ / S23 | ✓ | Yes | CN/HK models: no eSIM |
| Galaxy S22 Ultra / S22+ / S22 | ✓ | Yes | CN/HK models: no eSIM |
| Galaxy S21 Ultra / S21+ / S21 | ✓ | Yes | CN/HK models: no eSIM |
| Galaxy S20+ / S20 Ultra | ✓ | Yes | Standard S20 does not have eSIM |
Galaxy Z Flip & Fold Series
| Device | eSIM Support | Dual SIM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Galaxy Z Flip 6 / Flip 5 / Flip 4 / Flip 3 | ✓ | Yes | CN models: no eSIM |
| Galaxy Z Fold 6 / Fold 5 / Fold 4 / Fold 3 / Fold 2 | ✓ | Yes | CN models: no eSIM |
Galaxy A Series (select models)
| Device | eSIM Support | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Galaxy A55 | ✓ | Select markets only |
| Galaxy A54 | ✓ | Select markets only |
| Galaxy A35 | ✓ | Select markets only |
| Galaxy A14, A13, A04 and below | ✗ | Physical SIM only |
Google Pixel Devices with eSIM Support
Google has consistently supported eSIM since the Pixel 2, making its devices among the most reliably eSIM-compatible Android phones available globally.
| Device | eSIM Support | Dual SIM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pixel 9 Pro Fold / 9 Pro XL / 9 Pro / 9 | ✓ | Yes | |
| Pixel 8 Pro / 8 / 8a | ✓ | Yes | |
| Pixel 7 Pro / 7 / 7a | ✓ | Yes | |
| Pixel 6 Pro / 6 / 6a | ✓ | Yes | |
| Pixel 5 / 5a | ✓ | Yes | |
| Pixel 4 / 4a / 4 XL | ✓ | Yes | |
| Pixel 3a / 3a XL | ✓ | Physical SIM only | eSIM but no dual SIM |
| Pixel 3 / 3 XL | ✓ | Physical SIM only | eSIM but no dual SIM |
| Pixel 2 and older | ✗ | — | Physical SIM only |
Motorola Devices with eSIM Support
| Device | eSIM Support | Dual SIM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Moto Razr+ (2024) / Razr+ (2023) | ✓ | Yes | |
| Moto Razr (2024) / Razr (2023) / Razr 5G (2020) | ✓ | Yes | |
| Moto Edge (2024) / Edge+ (2024) | ✓ | Yes | |
| Moto Edge (2023) / Edge+ (2023) | ✓ | Yes | |
| Moto G series (most models) | ✗ | — | Most G series lack eSIM |
Other Brands with eSIM Support
| Brand & Device | eSIM Support | Dual SIM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| OnePlus 12 / 12R / Open | ✓ | Yes | Global models only; CN models no eSIM |
| Xiaomi 14 Ultra / 14 Pro / 14 | ✓ | Yes | Global models; CN models: no eSIM |
| Oppo Find X7 Ultra / Find N3 | ✓ | Yes | Global models only |
| Sony Xperia 1 VI / 5 VI / 10 VI | ✓ | Yes | |
| Huawei P60 Pro / Mate 60 Pro | ✓ | Yes | Limited to Chinese carriers; incompatible with most international eSIM providers |
| Nothing Phone (2a) Plus | ✓ | Yes | |
| ASUS ROG Phone 8 Pro | ✓ | Yes | |
| Surface Duo 2 | ✓ | Yes | Microsoft — US only |
Important Caveats: When eSIM Won't Work
1. Carrier-Locked Phones
A carrier-locked phone can only activate SIM profiles (including eSIMs) from the original carrier. If you bought your phone on a subsidized contract with AT&T, for example, it may be locked to AT&T. Check your lock status before purchasing a travel eSIM. You can request an unlock code from your carrier once your contract is paid or after a holding period (usually 60–90 days after purchase).
On iPhone: go to Settings → General → About and scroll to "Carrier Lock." If it says "No SIM restrictions," your phone is unlocked.
2. Samsung China and Hong Kong Regional Variants
Samsung produces region-specific hardware variants for China and (sometimes) Hong Kong that have eSIM functionality disabled at the hardware or firmware level. These phones are identical externally to global models but will not accept eSIM profiles. You can identify a Chinese Samsung by the model number — Chinese variants often end in "ZC" or are designated with "China" in the firmware.
3. iPhone China Models
iPhone models sold in mainland China (model numbers ending in "CH") use dual nano-SIM instead of eSIM. These phones have no eSIM hardware. If you purchased an iPhone in mainland China, it will not support travel eSIMs.
4. Android eSIM Compatibility Varies by Android Version
While the hardware may support eSIM, some older Android versions (pre-Android 9) may have incomplete eSIM management APIs. Most modern travel eSIM providers require Android 9+ for reliable eSIM activation. Always update to the latest available Android version before setting up an eSIM.
How to Check if Your Phone Has eSIM
On iPhone (iOS)
- Open Settings.
- Tap General.
- Tap About.
- Scroll down and look for "Available SIMs" or "Digital SIM". If you see an EID number (a long 32-digit number), your iPhone has eSIM hardware.
- Alternatively, go to Settings → Cellular. If you see an "Add eSIM" or "Add Cellular Plan" option, eSIM is supported.
On Android
- Open Settings.
- Go to About Phone (sometimes under "General Management").
- Look for "EID" — an eSIM identifier. If an EID is listed, your device has eSIM hardware.
- Alternatively, go to Settings → Connections → SIM Manager (Samsung) or Settings → Network → SIMs (Pixel). Look for an "Add eSIM" or "Download eSIM" option.
- On some Android phones, you can dial *#06# to view the IMEI and EID. An EID confirms eSIM hardware.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use eSIM if my phone is carrier-locked?
Generally no — a carrier-locked phone will only accept eSIM profiles from the locking carrier. Contact your carrier to request an unlock (usually free after the minimum holding period). Once unlocked, your phone can use any eSIM or physical SIM from any compatible carrier worldwide.
How many eSIMs can I store on my iPhone?
iPhone 13 and earlier can store up to 5 eSIM profiles. iPhone 14 and newer can store up to 8 eSIM profiles. However, only one eSIM can be active at a time (you can have one eSIM and one physical SIM active simultaneously on dual-SIM models). You can switch between stored eSIMs in Settings → Cellular.
What is the difference between eSIM and iSIM?
An eSIM is a dedicated chip soldered to the motherboard but physically separate from the main processor. An iSIM (integrated SIM) is embedded directly into the main SoC (system-on-chip). iSIM is even more compact and saves space, but from a traveler's perspective, both work identically — both accept downloaded eSIM profiles. The Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 supports iSIM, and some 2024+ devices use this architecture.
Can I transfer an eSIM from one phone to another?
Most travel eSIM providers allow one or more re-installs of your eSIM profile during its validity period. Apple also supports eSIM transfer between compatible iPhones during device setup. However, most eSIM profiles — once activated — are tied to the device. Always check the eSIM provider's transfer policy before switching phones mid-trip.
Does factory resetting a phone delete eSIM profiles?
Yes — a factory reset (or erasing all content on iPhone) will delete all stored eSIM profiles. Before resetting your phone, note down your eSIM provider's details so you can reinstall the profile. Many providers allow you to re-download the QR code from your account portal.
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