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Originally Posted by draver
(Post 35909986)
I’ll be back in Thailand in 2 days, can I help ? I used AIS and can vouch for their service at several locations as steady & fast.
Originally Posted by docbert
(Post 35910525)
I got a dtac eSim via Airalo a few months ago. The price was basically the same as going direct, but without any extra registration/etc. Worked perfectly.
first thing I notice, not necessarily about their eSIMs but their service in general, is that they have speed tiers, including a lot of offerings at 10 Mbps or less? Do you guys go for their high speed or “max speed” tiers? Do you go to their big stores at the malls to get help in English, including registration? Or can you register through their apps? can you buy their 7 or 8 day offers repeatedly through apps or just top up with US credit cards? |
Also is there a good eSiM for Thailand and Singapore or better to get two different eSIMs?
I see Airlo offers dTAC packages at 50 GB for 10 days for $9.90 and unlimited for 15 days at $19.95. but how fast is it and do they route traffic through another country? can you tether it? |
You can tether with Airalo eSIMs. Another option might be a prepaid eSIM from Singtel, which covers both Singapore and Thailand:
https://www.singtel.com/personal/pro...ans/hi-tourist |
Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 35911134)
You can tether with Airalo eSIMs. Another option might be a prepaid eSIM from Singtel, which covers both Singapore and Thailand:
https://www.singtel.com/personal/pro...ans/hi-tourist Thanks for the link. Interesting but I will be spending far more time in Thailand than Singapore so 5 or 10 GB roaming in Thailand may not be enough. If it were reversed it might work. |
Originally Posted by frappant
(Post 35910633)
but how fast is it and do they route traffic through another country?
Thailand is one of the few exceptions for that. The SIM is clearly advertised as being dtac, who are a major Thai telco, so you know it's going to be local. I don't know that I did any speed tests when I was there, but the speed was plenty fast enough for general use. |
Originally Posted by docbert
(Post 35912352)
The Moshi Moshi eSIM for Japan was, at least when I had it, actually a SingTel SIM - so all traffic was routed via Singapore.
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Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 35911134)
You can tether with Airalo eSIMs. Another option might be a prepaid eSIM from Singtel, which covers both Singapore and Thailand:
https://www.singtel.com/personal/pro...ans/hi-tourist The only quirk was: on a lark, I tried using it in Vietnam and it did not connect, but since the list of countries hadn't included it, I thought nothing of it. Upon arrival in Thailand however, it still didn't seem to want to connect. I had to go into the settings and change the APN from "Singtel (PostPaid)" to "Singtel (PrePaid)" and then it worked. Now I wonder if I could've gotten it to work in Vietnam after all :p |
Originally Posted by Zorak
(Post 35912864)
I had to go into the settings and change the APN from "Singtel (PostPaid)" to "Singtel (PrePaid)" and then it worked.
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I am going to be in Koh Samui on 1-17. It’s an island off the coast of Thailand and I was there last week also. I got good service and speeds on AIS and they seem to be a major Thai carrier since my T-Mobile roaming service always lists them and connects when selected. I ran a Speedtest with 127Mbps down, 40Mb up last visit. They also have an English website for tourists that is pretty well laid out and has decent pricing and top up instructions.
AIS Link: https://www.ais.th/en/consumers/pack...l/tourist-plan. Disclaimer: I have not purchased directly from them, but they seem pretty legit from what I can tell. My converter shows 100 Thai Baht = $2.85. |
I think their networks are capable of high speeds. They have mmWave.
But they offer bundles at 10 Mbps or less for the price sensitive as well as “max speed” bundles. |
I tried Airalo for the first time on a trip to Japan last weekend. It worked fine, no complaint in speeds. One time I had to manually change networks after losing connection, but otherwise was without issues.
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Originally Posted by Majuki
(Post 35912901)
That was the initial problem with my Moshi Moshi eSIM from Airalo. While the APN settings should be automatic, they sometimes aren't.
It's been connecting to Softbank locally. |
I have a DTAC eSIM I got at BKK airport a while back. I've topped it up in the DTAC app numerous times using my US credit card.
The DTAC app makes numerous offers and packages available. I typically choose a "4GB at max speed for 30 days" (sometimes there are offers for bonus data, so I would get 6GB instead, etc). A speed test typically shows around 150Mbps download. |
Originally Posted by tai4de2
(Post 35922502)
I have a DTAC eSIM I got at BKK airport a while back. I've topped it up in the DTAC app numerous times using my US credit card.
The DTAC app makes numerous offers and packages available. I typically choose a "4GB at max speed for 30 days" (sometimes there are offers for bonus data, so I would get 6GB instead, etc). A speed test typically shows around 150Mbps download. Thanks for the datapoint about the speeds. Airalo offers a 10-day, 50 GB eSIM using DTAC network for $10 but it's not clear if it's "max speed." The one advantage of going through Airalo seems to be that you don't have to take time to go and register your passport at a carrier store. I'm arriving at BKK just after midnight so picking it up at BKK probably isn't likely, so I'll have to hunt down a store in the city. |
Looking for a eSIM card for Indonesia and Taiwan, 5G if available. Need about 10gb data for phone and tablet.
Any suggestions are welcome. |
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