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How Much eSIM Data Do I Need? Calculator + Guide (2026)

The hardest part of buying a travel eSIM is guessing the size. Go too small and you’re rationing data three days into the trip; go too big and you’ve paid for gigabytes you bring home unused. This calculator gives you a sensible number based on how long you’re travelling and how you actually use your phone — then you pick the next plan size up. (New to eSIMs? Start with our honest Airalo review for how they work and whether they’re worth it.)

How much eSIM data do I need?

Set your trip length and travel style for an estimate.

Trip length7 days
11530+
Travel style
Countries
Trips this year

You’ll want about

10GB
10 GB single-country eSIM

7 days × 1 GB + 20% buffer = 8.4 GB → round up to 10 GB.

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Once you know roughly how much data you need, Airalo has plans for 200+ countries you can install before you fly. Pick the plan size just above your estimate — you can always top up in the app if you run low.

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How the estimate works

There’s no mystery to it. Every credible source lands on the same simple formula:

daily data × trip days + a 20% buffer → round up to the next plan size

The buffer matters. Real trips throw up data you don’t plan for — re-routing when you’re lost, translating a menu, an unexpected video call home, photos backing up before you’ve found Wi-Fi. Adding roughly 20% on top is what stops you running dry on day five, and it’s the one step most people skip.

How much data each travel style uses per day

The daily figures in the calculator come from real-world traveller usage, not lab tests. Here’s what sits behind each band:

StylePer dayWhat that covers
Light~0.3–0.5 GBMaps a few times a day, messaging, light browsing, the odd social check. Plenty if you’re on hotel Wi-Fi most evenings.
Moderate~0.8–1.2 GBNavigation all day, scrolling social, booking apps, the occasional short video. This is most travellers — the sweet spot is about 1 GB a day.
Heavy~2 GB+Regular video streaming, daily photo and video uploads, video calls, or using your phone as a hotspot for a laptop.

The single biggest swing is video. An hour of HD streaming on mobile data can burn 1–2 GB on its own — more than a light user gets through in three days. If you stream, you’re in the heavy band whether you feel like it or not.

How much data do I need? Trip length chart

The quick answer, with the 20% buffer already built in. Find your trip length, then read across to your travel style. These are the numbers to match against an eSIM plan size.

Trip lengthLight userAverage userHeavy user
3 days1–2 GB3 GB5–7 GB
5 days2–3 GB5 GB10–12 GB
7 days (1 week)3–5 GB7–10 GB15–20 GB
10 days4–6 GB10–15 GB20 GB+
14 days (2 weeks)5–8 GB10–20 GB25 GB+
21 days (3 weeks)8–12 GB20–30 GB40 GB+
30 days (1 month)10–15 GB20–35 GB50 GB+ / unlimited

If you fall between two styles, size up — running out mid-trip is more annoying than a couple of spare gigabytes. And remember most eSIMs, including Airalo, let you top up in the app if you run low, so you don’t need to massively over-buy.

How much data each app uses

If you’d rather work it out from what you actually do on your phone, here’s roughly what the common travel apps use. These are per-hour figures for the data-heavy ones, and per-action for the light ones — drawn from real-world usage, not lab tests.

ActivityData usedVerdict
Text messaging (iMessage, WhatsApp text)~1 MB per 100 messagesNegligible
Map navigation (Google/Apple Maps)~5–10 MB per hourVery light — near zero with offline maps
Web browsing~20–30 MB per hourLight
Social media (scrolling, light)~100–200 MB per hourModerate — more if video-heavy
Music streaming (Spotify, standard)~70–150 MB per hourModerate
Photo upload / backup~2–4 MB per photoAdds up fast over a day
Video calls (Zoom, FaceTime)~0.5–1 GB per hourHeavy
Video streaming (YouTube, Netflix, HD)~1–2 GB per hourVery heavy — the big one
Social media (constant video, Reels/TikTok)~600 MB+ per hourHeavy

The single biggest swing is video. An hour of HD streaming on mobile data can burn 1–2 GB on its own — more than a light user gets through in three days. If you stream, you’re in the heavy band whether you feel like it or not. Map navigation, by contrast, is almost free, especially if you download offline maps before you go.

Three ways to make a smaller plan last

  • Download offline maps for the city or region before you go — navigation is then almost free on data.
  • Set streaming to standard definition on mobile, and save HD for when you’re on Wi-Fi.
  • Turn off photo auto-backup on mobile data — let it sync when you’re back on Wi-Fi at the hotel.

Do those three and a moderate user can comfortably sit in the light band, which is real money saved on the plan.

A note on multi-country and regional plans

If you’re crossing borders on one trip, a single-country eSIM won’t follow you — you’d want a regional plan (Europe, Asia, and so on) that covers every country you’re visiting. And if you travel several times a year, a longer-validity global eSIM can work out simpler than buying a fresh one each trip. The calculator flags which type suits your answers, but the data amount is the same either way — it’s the coverage that changes.

One thing worth sorting before you rely on any eSIM: most travel eSIMs (including Airalo) are data only — they don’t carry your calls and texts. That matters more than people realise, because your Australian number is the key to your bank, MyGov and every app that texts you a verification code. Get the dual-SIM setup wrong and your number can go dark overseas, locking you out of all of it. We’ve written a full step-by-step on how to keep your Australian number active overseas — worth two minutes before any trip.

Frequently asked questions

How much eSIM data do I need for a week abroad?
For most travellers, around 7–10 GB covers a week of daily navigation, social media, messaging and the occasional short video. If you’re light (mostly on Wi-Fi, just maps and messages) 3–5 GB is plenty; if you stream video or use a hotspot, lean toward 15–20 GB. The rule of thumb is about 1 GB a day for a typical traveller, plus a 20% buffer.
Is 1GB a day enough for travel?
Yes, for most travellers. About 1 GB a day comfortably covers maps, messaging, social media and a bit of short video without constant monitoring. It runs short only if you stream a lot of video, make frequent video calls, or use your phone as a hotspot — in which case plan for 2 GB or more per day.
What happens if I run out of data on my eSIM?
With most eSIM providers, including Airalo, you can top up your existing plan in the app rather than buying a whole new one — so running a little short isn’t a disaster. That’s why it’s fine to buy the plan just above your estimate rather than massively over-buying: start sensible, top up if you need to.
Does navigation use a lot of data?
No — map navigation uses very little, roughly 5–10 MB per hour, and almost nothing if you download offline maps before you travel. It’s one of the cheapest things you can do on data. Video streaming, by contrast, can use 1–2 GB per hour, which is where data really disappears.
Will I keep my Australian number if I use a travel eSIM?
Yes — most travel eSIMs, including Airalo, are data-only and run alongside your existing SIM, so your Australian number stays on your phone. The key is the dual-SIM setup: turn data roaming off on your Australian SIM (so it doesn’t charge you) but leave the line active to receive calls and SMS verification codes from your bank, MyGov and apps. Get this wrong and your number can go dark overseas. See our guide on keeping your Australian number active overseas for the step-by-step.
Do I need a bigger plan for multiple countries?
Not a bigger plan, but a different type. A single-country eSIM only works in that country, so for a multi-country trip you’d want a regional plan (such as Europe or Asia) that covers everywhere you’re going. The amount of data you need is the same — it’s the coverage area that changes.
Drew
Drew

Having spent a career building banking products that Australians use every day at CommBank, Westpac, NAB and Xero, I now spend my time travelling and finance hacking. I love finding new ways to have fun and save money.

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