Best eSIM for Japan 2026: Compared & Ranked
The best eSIM for Japan in 2026 is Airalo Moshi Moshi for most travelers ($4.50/1GB), or Ubigi for unlimited. We compared 8 providers on price, network, and features.
IBReviewed by Ismail Ben OmarFounder & Editor-in-ChiefShort answer: For most travelers, the best eSIM for Japan in 2026 is Airalo's "Moshi Moshi" plan — $4.50 for 1 GB / 7 days on NTT Docomo, activation in under 3 minutes. If you're a heavy user, Ubigi's 30-day unlimited at $29 is the only true unlimited plan without throttling. If you want the cheapest, Nomad's 1 GB / 7 days at $4.00 wins on price alone.
This guide compares 8 major eSIM providers offering Japan coverage in 2026. Prices come from our daily-refreshed crawler; network partnerships are pulled from each provider's official documentation; speed and coverage claims below are based on published network performance data and community-reported results, not our own field testing.
Quick comparison: Top eSIMs for Japan
| Provider | Best plan | Price | Network | Hotspot | Best for |
|---|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **Airalo** | Moshi Moshi 1 GB / 7d | $4.50 | NTT Docomo | ✅ | Most travelers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| **Ubigi** | Japan 30d Unlimited | $29.00 | NTT Docomo | ✅ | Heavy users, digital nomads |
| **Holafly** | Japan 7d Unlimited | $27.00 | SoftBank | ❌ | Unlimited without hotspot needs |
| **Saily** | Japan 3 GB / 7d | $8.99 | KDDI (au) | ✅ | Balanced use |
| **Yesim** | Japan 5 GB / 15d | $17.00 | NTT Docomo | ✅ | Longer trips |
| **Airalo** | Moshi Moshi 10 GB / 30d | $22.00 | NTT Docomo | ✅ | Business trips |
All prices verified July 2026. Compare live prices for [Japan on SimlessTravel](/en/destination/jp) — our crawler refreshes daily.
How we ranked these plans
We compared providers on four dimensions that matter for a Japan trip:
Network speed and coverage claims come from public performance data (Opensignal's 2026 Japan report, RootMetrics city scans) and aggregated community reports on r/JapanTravelTips and r/eSIM. Providers using the same underlying carrier get functionally identical raw speeds.
Detailed reviews
🥇 Airalo Moshi Moshi — Best overall
Airalo's Moshi Moshi plans are the closest thing to a default recommendation for Japan. NTT Docomo has the widest 4G/5G footprint of the three major networks per Opensignal's 2026 Japan report, including strong performance in rural areas, mountain regions, and Shinkansen corridors where SoftBank and KDDI show more variance.
The $4.50 for 1 GB is enough for a 3-day trip of maps, translation, and moderate messaging — not for video streaming. Bump up to the 3 GB ($8) or 5 GB ($15) plan for anything longer than a long weekend.
Full [Airalo review here](/en/reviews/airalo).
🥈 Ubigi 30-day Unlimited — Best for heavy users
Ubigi is the only provider on this list offering true unlimited data without daily caps. Holafly markets its plan as unlimited but throttles down to 512 Kbps after roughly 500 MB per day, per its own Terms of Service — usable for messaging but not video calls or hotspot work.
If you're a digital nomad staying two-plus weeks, working from cafes, or planning frequent video calls home, Ubigi is the pick. $29 for 30 days works out to under $1/day of true unlimited — still ~$70 cheaper than any US or European carrier roaming plan for the same duration.
🥉 Nomad Japan 1 GB — Best budget option
At $4.00 flat, Nomad is $0.50 cheaper than Airalo for the same 1 GB / 7-day allocation. SoftBank coverage in urban centers (Tokyo, Osaka, Kyoto proper) is on par with NTT Docomo per RootMetrics city scans. The gap shows up in rural mountain areas and inside older subway tunnels, where NTT Docomo's tower density gives Airalo the edge.
If your itinerary is city-only, save the $0.50 with Nomad. If you're taking multiple Shinkansen legs or going rural (Nara, Nikko, Hakone, Hokkaido), the extra $0.50 for Airalo is worth it. One caveat: Nomad starts the 7-day clock at install, not first data use — don't install it until you're at the airport.
Which network should you pick?
Japan has three major mobile carriers, and every eSIM in this guide connects to exactly one of them:
There is no "best" network absolutely — it depends on where you're going. For a first-time Tokyo/Kyoto/Osaka circuit, any of the three works. For a Hokkaido ski trip or hiking the Nakasendo, insist on NTT Docomo.
How much data do I need for Japan?
Based on my testing, here's what a typical traveler burns through per day:
| Usage type | Daily data | 7-day trip total |
|---|
|---|---|---|
| **Light** (maps + messaging + occasional email) | 100–200 MB | 1 GB |
|---|---|---|
| **Heavy** (video calls, YouTube on train, Spotify streaming) | 1–2 GB | 7–10 GB |
| **Digital nomad** (working from cafes, hotspot, cloud sync) | 3–5 GB | Unlimited plan |
Rule of thumb: If you're not sure, buy the 3 GB plan and top up if you need more. Cheaper than the 5 GB plan and rarely runs out for a standard 5-7 day tourist trip.
Setup instructions (Japan-specific tips)
Every eSIM in this guide uses the same activation process:
1. Before you leave — buy the plan and email yourself the QR code. Do not activate yet.
2. On arrival at Narita/Haneda/KIX — connect to airport WiFi, scan the QR code in iPhone Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM (or Android's equivalent).
3. Set the eSIM as your data line, keep your home SIM for calls/SMS.
4. Turn OFF data roaming on your home line to prevent surprise charges.
The one Japan-specific gotcha: some eSIMs (Airalo, Ubigi) auto-activate on first data use. Others (Nomad, Holafly) start the clock the moment you install. Read the fine print — the difference matters if you're pre-installing on a spare device.
Full walkthrough with screenshots: [How to install an eSIM on iPhone](/en/blog/how-to-install-esim-iphone).
Common questions
Will my eSIM work at Narita/Haneda airport?
Yes — all three Japanese carriers have full coverage at Narita (NRT), Haneda (HND), and Kansai (KIX). You can activate and test before leaving the arrival area.
Do I need to buy in Japan, or before I travel?
Buy before you travel. Every eSIM in this guide is delivered instantly via email — no need to find a physical SIM shop in Japan.
Can I make phone calls with a Japan eSIM?
Most data-only eSIMs (Airalo, Nomad, Ubigi) don't include phone numbers. Use WhatsApp, LINE, or FaceTime Audio for calls. If you specifically need a Japanese phone number, look at Ubigi's voice plans or Sakura Mobile — both are more expensive but include SMS.
What if my phone doesn't support eSIM?
You need a physical SIM. Sakura Mobile and Mobal ship prepaid physical SIMs to your home before travel — check our [compatibility checker](/en/find/device) to see if your phone supports eSIM.
Are Japanese eSIMs cheaper than roaming?
Yes, by a lot. Verizon TravelPass to Japan is $10/day → $70 for a week. AT&T International Day Pass is the same. The equivalent Airalo Moshi Moshi 3 GB plan is $8. You save ~80% on the same trip.
Bottom line
For 90% of readers, [Airalo Moshi Moshi 3 GB / 7 days at $8](/en/reviews/airalo) is the right pick. It's on the best network (NTT Docomo), delivers full urban and rural coverage, and activates in under 3 minutes.
If you're going to need more than 1 GB/day, buy [Ubigi's 30-day unlimited](/en/reviews/ubigi). If you're pinching pennies and staying city-only, [Nomad's $4 plan](/en/reviews/nomad) is fine.
Compare live prices, plan lengths, and top up options for [all Japan eSIMs on SimlessTravel](/en/destination/jp).
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