eSIM Nouvelle-Zélande
eSIM Premium pour Nouvelle-Zélande. Prix juste. Sans échange de SIM.
Plans de Données pour Nouvelle-Zélande
Nos Sélections
Sélectionnés à la main pour la valeur, le prix et la couverture
Most travelers · balanced usage
180 days validity
Vodafone
Short trips · light usage
15 days validity
Vodafone
Heavy usage · longer stays
30 days validity
Vodafone
7 days validity
Vodafone
30 days validity
Vodafone
30 days validity
Vodafone
30 days validity
Vodafone
Rappel de Configuration
Achetez Avant le Départ
Achetez votre plan eSIM avant d'embarquer pour Nouvelle-Zélande.
Installez le Profil eSIM
Scannez le QR code dans les paramètres de votre téléphone pour installer le profil eSIM.
Activez à l'Arrivée
Activez à votre arrivée en Nouvelle-Zélande et activez l'itinérance des données. Votre téléphone se connectera automatiquement.
Tip: Install your New Zealand eSIM before departure — have MetService and offline maps downloaded before you land at Auckland or Christchurch.
Plans Summary
13 plans
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Tip: Most travelers choose 5–10 GB for a 7–10 day trip
Foire aux Questions
Does the eSIM work on both North and South Islands?
Yes. Coverage extends across both islands in populated areas and along main highways. The South Island has more wilderness with genuine coverage gaps, particularly in Fiordland and the west coast.
Will I have signal hiking the Tongariro Alpine Crossing?
Coverage is available at the Mangatepopo and Ketetahi car parks and in open terrain on the volcanic plateau. Signal can be weak or absent in some lower sections of the trail. Download offline maps and check MetService weather before starting.
How is coverage on the Milford Sound road?
Coverage exists in Te Anau and the first part of the road. The final 70km to Milford Sound has very limited or no coverage — the Homer Tunnel section is a dead zone. Download offline maps and fuel up before Te Anau.
Does the eSIM work in Queenstown?
Yes. Queenstown and its surrounding tourist area (Arrowtown, Glenorchy road, main ski fields) have solid coverage. Queenstown is a hub and connectivity is generally reliable throughout the resort town.
Can I use Uber in New Zealand cities?
Uber operates in Auckland, Wellington, and Christchurch. In smaller cities (Dunedin, Hamilton, Napier) and resort towns (Queenstown, Rotorua), local taxis or the Ola app are the alternatives.
How is coverage in Fiordland National Park?
Very limited. Fiordland is one of New Zealand's remotest areas. Milford Sound itself has almost no mobile coverage. Te Anau, the gateway town, has good coverage. For Milford Sound or Doubtful Sound trips, treat it as offline — save bookings and maps before leaving Te Anau.
Is the eSIM useful for booking DOC hut passes?
Yes. The DOC website and booking app work over your eSIM data. Great Walk hut passes (Routeburn, Kepler, Abel Tasman) sell out months ahead — check availability and book any last-minute cancellations using your eSIM data on the go.
How much data do I need for a New Zealand trip?
For maps, MetService, messaging, and accommodation bookings, 1–2 GB per week is adequate. If you're on a road trip using GPS navigation continuously — particularly on the South Island where roads are less familiar — 3–5 GB gives more comfortable headroom.
Nouvelle-Zélande is part of these regional plans
Neighbouring countries
Guide eSIM pour Nouvelle-Zélande
Votre eSIM se connecte aux principaux opérateurs en Nouvelle-Zélande :
Réseaux disponibles : 4G
New Zealand is a country where outdoor activity dominates, and data use patterns reflect this. MetService — New Zealand's official met app, more granular than international weather apps — is used by everyone from trampers to surfers before heading outdoors. Checking it before driving the Haast Pass or starting the Tongariro Alpine Crossing is standard practice. Booking DOC (Department of Conservation) hut passes for the Great Walks is done via the DOC app or website — these sell out months ahead, and having data means you can grab last-minute cancellations.
Spark, One NZ (formerly Vodafone NZ), and 2degrees provide good coverage in cities and along main highways on both islands. Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, Dunedin, and Queenstown all have strong 4G connectivity. Rural areas and mountain passes have meaningful gaps. The South Island's west coast (Haast Pass, Fiordland) is notably patchy. The road from Te Anau to Milford Sound — one of New Zealand's most spectacular drives — has almost no coverage for the final 70km into the Sound itself.
Apps for NZ travel: MetService is essential. GeoNet for earthquake alerts (New Zealand sits on the Pacific Ring of Fire — notifications are part of informed travel). NZ Transport Agency for road closure updates (critical in winter on South Island mountain passes). Campermate if you're in a campervan — it shows freedom camping spots, dump stations, and campground reviews. Rankers NZ for campground ratings. Uber operates in Auckland, Wellington, and Christchurch; elsewhere taxis are standard.
Great Walk specifics: Tongariro Alpine Crossing has coverage at the car parks and reasonable signal in open terrain on the volcanic plateau. Routeburn Track and Milford Track have very limited coverage after the first hours of walking. Abel Tasman Coastal Track has reasonable signal in parts near the coast. For any multi-day tramp, download AllTrails offline maps and carry a physical backup — hut wardens are used to people arriving without coverage.
New Zealand SIM cards are available from Spark, One NZ, and 2degrees at Auckland and Christchurch airports. Prices are reasonable by developed-world standards. Flight arrival at Auckland often coincides with other international arrivals creating queues. An eSIM installed before departure means you're connected before clearing biosecurity — useful for navigating the agricultural declaration process.