Estonia is the most digital country you'll visit
This isn't a marketing line. The Estonian government has run nearly all citizen services online for years — taxes, voting, prescriptions, business registrations. The cultural side-effect is that connectivity is treated as default rather than premium: cafés assume you'll work, restaurants assume contactless payment, the public transport in Tallinn is free for residents and ticketless for visitors who tap a card. None of that works without a phone on a network.
Roamzy charges $1.43 per gigabyte in Estonia. That's $0.0014 per megabyte, billed in real time on Estonian networks. No subscription, no expiry, no minimum bundle. One per-MB rate across 192 countries — same rate in Tallinn as on the road to Tartu.
How much will Roamzy actually cost on this trip?
An Estonian travel day uses around 1 GB: Maps and the Tallinn transit app, the Bolt ride-hail (founded in Tallinn — locals use it heavily), your bank app for card payments that are contactless almost everywhere, the camera-translator on Estonian signage, video calls home. Call it 1 GB/day:
| Trip length | Roamzy ($1.43/GB) | Tourist roaming pass | Airport local SIM |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 days | $4.30 | $15–40 | $10–25 + paperwork |
| 1 week | $10.00 | $25–55 | $15–30 + paperwork |
| 2 weeks | $20.00 | $35–90 (often two passes) | $20–35 + 30-day cap |
Competitor prices in columns 3 and 4 are 2025 ranges based on typical offerings; exact figures depend on your home carrier and the airport store you visit. Roamzy's rate in column 2 is our actual published rate from the pricing page.
A SIM at Tallinn airport runs the EU-standard kiosk flow: passport, registration, queue. The eSIM is attached on descent; the meter starts on an Estonian tower the moment you connect.
Where does Roamzy work in this country?
- Tallinn, Tartu, Pärnu, Narva — 5G in the cores, dense LTE
- The motorway and trunk-road grid — continuous LTE
- The Tartu rail line and other intercity routes — near-continuous signal
- The Estonian islands (Saaremaa, Hiiumaa) — solid LTE in the towns and along main roads, light thinning on the back roads
- Lahemaa National Park and other forest areas — LTE in the villages, weakening on the deep trail loops
- The Russian border zone (Narva area) — strong on the Estonian side; coverage drops the moment you cross
Estonia is small (about 45,000 km²) and well-covered. Outside the deep boreal forest, you'll rarely lose signal long enough to notice.
How do I install my Roamzy eSIM?
| Plug type | Voltage | Frequency | iOS | Android |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Type C, F | 230 V | 50 Hz | iPhone XS+ | Pixel 3+, Galaxy S20+ |
- Sign in to Roamzy via Telegram or Google
- Top up with a minimum of 20 USDT — stablecoins, no cards, no banks, no FX surcharges
- The QR code appears in the dashboard once payment confirms
- Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM → scan QR
- The counter starts the moment you land at TLL
Supported stablecoins, networks, and common iPhone/Android setup errors are in the FAQ.
What are Roamzy's honest limitations?
Three traps Roamzy doesn't have, because they were never built in.
- No welcome promo that bait-and-switches the second top-up. The rate on top-up #1 is the rate on top-up #20.
- No fine-print throttling. One rate, full speed — first GB and the hundredth both cost $0.0014/MB.
- No auto-renewal. Balance runs out, the eSIM stops. No background charge surfacing months later.
It's not a marketing gimmick — it's an engineering decision born from indifference to gimmicks. You can't make a tariff cheaper than no fine-print and no expiry — so we don't.
What if my trip continues to other countries?
Tallinn is a Baltic ferry hub. The eSIM hands over the moment you cross:
- Finland — two-hour ferry to Helsinki, same EU rate
- Poland — short flight via Warsaw or Riga
- If you want the underlying mechanics — how roaming actually gets priced and why it hurts