Germany works on schedules. Connectivity should match.
The DB Navigator app tells you the platform of your ICE to Munich five seconds before the announcement. The Lieferando driver pings the doorbell at 18:42 because the order said 18:40 and now it's late. A whole travel day in Germany runs on small, time-sensitive pings: the train, the museum slot, the table you booked, the bicycle you rented. None of that survives a SIM you bought at the airport an hour after you needed it.
Roamzy charges $1.43 per gigabyte in Germany. That's $0.0014 per megabyte, billed in real time as your phone uses data on German networks. No subscription. No expiry on the unused balance. No minimum bundle. One per-MB rate across 192 countries — that's the shape of the invoice, not a marketing line.
How much will Roamzy actually cost on this trip?
A typical visitor to Germany uses 0.5–1.5 GB per day: DB Navigator constantly, Maps in the city, FreeNow or Bolt for cabs, the camera-translator on a Speisekarte, Lieferando for evening dinner, contactless payments (Germany is finally card-friendly in cities, still partial in the countryside), the occasional video call. Call it 1 GB/day for the math:
| Trip length | Roamzy ($1.43/GB) | Tourist roaming pass | Airport local SIM |
|---|---|---|---|
| 3 days | $4.30 | $15–40 | $10–25 + ID at the counter |
| 1 week | $10.00 | $25–60 | $15–30 + paperwork |
| 2 weeks | $20.00 | $40–95 (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.
Airport SIM kiosks at FRA, MUC, BER, and DUS are well organized — show ID, fill the form, get a 30-day card. Half an hour, sometimes more in peak summer. The eSIM is already attached before you step out of the jet bridge.
Why is per-megabyte pricing simpler than packages?
A German trip already has small frictions: a Pfand bottle deposit you didn't know about, a card terminal that took your contactless on day one and refused on day three, ATMs that charge a fee unless you find your bank's partner. The data plan should not also be a problem.
Roamzy is built around that. No first-purchase promo. No fine-print throttling. No auto-renewal six months later. One rate, billed by the megabyte, balance carries.
Where does Roamzy work in this country?
Germany is one of the better-wired EU markets, though rural coverage trails its neighbors slightly. The shape on the ground:
- Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, Frankfurt, Cologne, Stuttgart — 5G in the centers, providers compete on quality
- Mid-size cities (Düsseldorf, Leipzig, Hannover, Nuremberg, Dresden) — solid LTE, 5G in central districts
- ICE intercity routes — near-continuous signal end to end; brief drops in tunnels
- Berlin U-Bahn and Munich U-Bahn — newer lines have signal underground; older sections drop briefly
- Black Forest, Bavarian Alps, the North Sea coast — workable in towns, weaker on hiking trails and forest roads
- Autobahn driving — continuous LTE on main routes, occasional drops in valleys
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 the eSIM 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 FRA, MUC, BER, DUS, or HAM
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 your 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 cost the same $0.0014/MB.
- No auto-renewal you forgot to cancel. Balance runs out, the eSIM stops.
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?
Germany sits at the heart of Europe and trips often spread out. Same Roamzy account, same logic at the border:
- France — TGV from Frankfurt to Paris, eSIM hands over without intervention
- Austria — overland from Munich, separate country rate
- Netherlands — frequent extension via Cologne or by ICE to Amsterdam
- If you want the underlying mechanics — how roaming actually gets priced and why it hurts