USA SIM Guide 2026

From Manhattan to Yosemite, connected coast to coast.

An Australian-friendly guide to staying online in the United States. The three big networks compared, what works for road trips versus city stays, and how to skip the airport SIM queue with an eSIM before you fly.

$30AUD
From, for a week of data
10GB
Typical week's use
5Gcities
Across major US metros
The short answer

For most Australian visitors, a travel eSIM bought before flying is the easiest and usually cheapest path. The USA has less free public Wi-Fi than Japan or Europe, so you will actually use mobile data daily. Plan on 10 to 15 GB for a week, around $30 to $50 AUD. Pick a network based on where you are going: T-Mobile for cities, Verizon for road trips and national parks, AT&T as a balanced middle ground.

Why USA is different

One country, but the size of a continent.

The USA is geographically vast. A trip from New York to Los Angeles covers more ground than from London to Moscow. Unlike Europe where you cross borders, in the USA you stay in one country, but you may cross from dense urban 5G coverage (Manhattan, Chicago, San Francisco) into remote rural areas (the Mojave Desert, Yellowstone backcountry, Route 66 stretches) where network choice genuinely matters.

All three major US networks have nationwide coverage and work fine in cities. The differences show up when you leave the metros. If your itinerary is New York or LA only, any of them is fine. If you are doing a national-parks road trip, your network choice changes the experience significantly.

Your three options

eSIM, local prepaid, or AU roaming?

Three legitimate paths for staying connected in the USA. The right one depends on trip length, where you are going, and how much friction you want to deal with on arrival.

Most convenient

Travel eSIM before you fly

Install the eSIM at home over Wi-Fi, activate when you land at JFK, LAX or your arrival airport. Connected from the moment you walk out of customs.

  • Online from arrival, no airport queue
  • Keep your AU number on existing SIM
  • Set up at home with stable Wi-Fi
  • Usually cheaper than US carrier prepaid
  • Needs an eSIM-compatible phone
  • Data-only on most plans (no US phone number)
Best for: most Australian visitors, trips of 1 to 4 weeks, anyone with a phone from the last 5 years.
US phone number

Carrier-store prepaid SIM

Walk into a T-Mobile, AT&T or Verizon store in any US city and buy a prepaid SIM with US phone number. Stores are everywhere in tourist areas.

  • Get a US phone number for calls and SMS
  • Stores in every city, often open late
  • Often includes unlimited 5G data
  • Around $40 to $65 USD for a tourist plan
  • 30 minutes in-store on arrival day
  • Airport SIM availability varies
Best for: trips longer than 2 weeks, anyone who needs a US phone number (vacation rentals, restaurant reservations).
Easiest for short trips

AU carrier roaming day-pass

Many Australian carriers offer USA roaming day-passes from around $5 to $10 AUD per day, with some data and calls included. Activates automatically when you land.

  • Zero setup, works the moment you land
  • Keep your AU phone number active
  • Often includes calls and SMS too
  • Adds up fast for trips longer than a week
  • Data caps usually 1 to 2 GB per day
  • Speeds may throttle after the daily cap
Best for: short trips of 3 to 7 days, business travel, or anyone who absolutely needs their AU number live for calls.
Networks compared

The big three US networks for tourists

All three networks cover the major cities well. The choice matters most for road trips, national parks, and rural travel. Most travel eSIMs use the T-Mobile or Verizon networks behind the scenes, often without telling you upfront. Worth checking before buying if you have a strong network preference.

Network
What to know
Best for
T-Mobile Strongest 5G in cities
Best for city stays. Largest 5G network in the USA, excellent speeds in metros like New York, Los Angeles, Chicago and San Francisco. Coverage can thin out in deep rural areas and remote highways.
City focus
Verizon Best rural coverage
Best for road trips. Strongest network in rural areas, on remote highways and in national parks. The pick if you are driving through Yellowstone, Yosemite, the Grand Canyon, the Rockies or Route 66. Usually slightly more expensive.
Road trips
AT&T Reliable middle ground
Strong nationwide coverage, solid 5G in cities, decent rural reach. Sits between T-Mobile and Verizon on coverage. A good pick for itineraries that mix city stays with some driving between regions.
Balanced

Coverage information verified May 2026. Travel eSIMs typically use T-Mobile or Verizon networks under the hood. Check the plan details if you want to know which.

Where Australians travel

Three popular US itineraries, and what to choose.

ITINERARY 01
East Coast cities
New York, Boston, Washington DC, Philadelphia. Dense urban areas with subway-heavy travel and constant navigation use.
Suggested: T-Mobile network
ITINERARY 02
National parks road trip
Yellowstone, Grand Canyon, Yosemite, Zion. Long drives between parks, remote stretches where coverage thins.
Suggested: Verizon network
ITINERARY 03
West Coast mix
LA, San Diego, San Francisco, Las Vegas. Mix of city stays, beach towns, and the desert drive. Solid coverage from all three.
Suggested: T-Mobile or AT&T
If you go local

Where to buy a SIM card in the USA

If you choose the local-SIM path, four common options. Bring a passport for identity verification, though US prepaid SIMs require less paperwork than many countries.

Carrier retail stores

Most reliable

T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon stores in every city centre, often within walking distance of major hotels. Times Square, downtown LA and central Chicago have multiple within blocks. Walk in, buy a prepaid SIM, walk out in 30 minutes.

Walmart and big-box

Bigger selection

Walmart, Best Buy and Target carry prepaid SIMs from multiple carriers. Sometimes cheaper than carrier stores. Selection varies by location, larger suburban stores have more options than city centre branches.

Airports

Hit and miss

Major US airports vary widely on SIM availability. JFK, LAX and ORD have some kiosks but pricing is premium and selection limited. Many regional airports have none at all. Do not rely on buying at the airport, plan ahead.

Online before you fly

Skip the in-person step

Order a US travel eSIM online from Australia, install before flying, activate when you land. No in-person SIM-shop visit needed. The path most Australian visitors take in 2026.

If you prefer eSIM

An Australian-friendly eSIM option

Lyca Mobile has genuine US operations, their US plans run on the T-Mobile network, so the eSIM pitch for the USA is stronger than for most countries. Same Lyca app you use for your AU plan offers US travel passes and US-network coverage. Lyca has historically served expat communities making calls back home, so international calling features are usually well-suited to Australians visiting.

An AU-accessible eSIM path

Lyca Mobile travel eSIM for USA

Buy a travel eSIM through the Lyca app, install before you fly, activate on arrival. Runs on US carrier networks for full 4G LTE and 5G in cities. One provider, one app, one bill across both your AU plan and your US travel data.

Explore Lyca plans
Before you fly

Six practical USA SIM tips

  • Public Wi-Fi is less reliable than in Japan or Europe. The USA has Wi-Fi in cafes, hotels and most fast-food chains, but stations, public transport and street-level Wi-Fi are far patchier than Asian or European destinations. Expect to use more mobile data day-to-day, especially in cities where you rely on Uber, Lyft and Google Maps.
  • Match your network to your itinerary. City-heavy trip in New York, LA or Chicago? T-Mobile network is usually fastest. Road trip through national parks or rural areas? Verizon coverage is more reliable in the backcountry. Mixed itinerary? AT&T is a sensible middle ground.
  • Do not rely on US airport SIM kiosks. Coverage varies wildly. Some major airports have kiosks with premium pricing, others have nothing. Buy your travel eSIM before you fly, or plan to visit a downtown carrier store on day one. Avoid the airport SIM gamble.
  • Most travel eSIMs are data-only. For calls, use WhatsApp, FaceTime or other internet-based apps over data. If you genuinely need a US phone number (for booking restaurants, vacation rentals, or work calls), go to a carrier store and get a local prepaid SIM with a US number.
  • Activate your AU roaming as a backup. Even with a travel eSIM as primary, keep your AU SIM active in the background for SMS authentication codes from banks and apps. Roaming charges only kick in if you actively use the AU SIM for calls or data, not for receiving SMS codes.
  • Download offline Google Maps for your destinations. For major cities, download the offline map before flying. Saves data on the day, loads faster, and gives you backup navigation if your network drops out in a subway, underground parking lot or rural canyon.
FAQ

Common questions on USA SIMs and eSIMs

Do I need a SIM card for the USA?
For most Australian visitors, yes. The USA has less free public Wi-Fi than Japan or Europe, and many essential apps (Uber, Lyft, restaurant bookings, Google Maps, navigation between cities) need a constant data connection. A travel eSIM or local prepaid SIM is worth it from day one of any trip longer than a couple of days. Budget around $30 to $60 AUD per week for typical use.
Which is the best US network for tourists?
It depends on where you are going. T-Mobile has the strongest 5G in cities and is most tourist-friendly. Verizon has the best overall coverage including rural areas, highways, and national parks, making it the pick for road trips through Yellowstone, Yosemite, or the Grand Canyon. AT&T sits between the two, with reliable nationwide coverage and a good middle ground for itineraries that mix cities and remote areas.
How much data do I need for a week in the USA?
For most Australian visitors, 10 to 15 GB covers a week comfortably. The USA has less free public Wi-Fi than Japan or Europe, so you use more mobile data than you might expect, especially for Uber, Lyft, navigation between cities, restaurant booking apps, and social posting. For road trips or longer stays, allocate 20 to 30 GB per week. Many US plans are unlimited which sidesteps the data-planning question entirely.
Should I buy a SIM in the USA or get a travel eSIM before flying?
A travel eSIM is usually the easier and cheaper choice. Install it from home over Wi-Fi, land connected at JFK, LAX, SFO, ORD or wherever you arrive, no airport SIM-shop hunting. Physical tourist SIMs at US airports are unreliable, many airports do not have SIM card shops at all, and the ones that do often charge premium prices. For most Australian visitors, an eSIM installed before flying skips all that.
Where do I buy a SIM card in the USA?
The most reliable option is a carrier retail store. T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon have stores in every US city, often within walking distance of hotels in tourist areas like Times Square in New York. You can walk in, buy a prepaid SIM, and be connected in under 30 minutes. Walmart also sells prepaid SIMs. Airport SIM kiosks vary widely, some major airports have them with premium pricing, others have none at all. An eSIM purchased online before flying avoids all the in-person steps.
Does my Australian SIM work in the USA?
Yes with roaming enabled, but at AU roaming rates. Most Australian carriers offer roaming day-passes for the USA at around $5 to $10 per day with some data and calls included. For trips of a few days, a roaming day-pass can be the simplest option. For trips longer than about a week, a local US prepaid SIM or travel eSIM is usually cheaper overall. Check your carrier's roaming page before assuming roaming is active.
Will I get 5G across the USA?
In cities and along major routes yes, in rural areas mostly 4G LTE. T-Mobile has the most extensive 5G network and is generally fastest in urban areas. AT&T and Verizon 5G coverage is strong in cities and growing. National parks, remote highways, mountain regions, and rural countryside often fall back to 4G LTE, which is fine for navigation and messaging but slower for video streaming.
What about US prepaid SIMs from MVNOs?
The US has many smaller carriers (called MVNOs) that run on the big three networks at lower prices. Most require a US billing address or US payment method, which makes them impractical for Australian tourists. The major-carrier prepaid plans, or a global travel eSIM bought from Australia, are the realistic paths for visitors. Some MVNOs sell SIMs at Walmart or similar retail locations if you happen to find them in person.

Heading to the USA? Sort your SIM before you fly.

Install a Lyca travel eSIM at home, land in New York, LA or wherever your first stop is, and skip the airport SIM scramble. Lyca runs on US carrier networks so coverage is the real thing, not a workaround.

Explore Lyca travel plans