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Practical · Connectivity · Reviewed 2026-04-25

India SIM

Indian SIM card — what to buy and where to buy it

India runs three big mobile networks. All three sell tourist SIMs. The choice that matters most isn't which network — it's where you buy it. Airport kiosk, city store, or hotel-recommended retailer all work; the trade-off is speed versus price.

The three networks

  • Jio

    Broadest 4G/5G footprint, especially outside metros. Best default if you're heading to Ladakh, Spiti, or the Northeast hill states. Activation flow is decent. Tourist plans run 28-90 days.

  • Airtel

    Comparable to Jio in cities, slightly more polished customer service. Coverage in remote NE / high-Himalaya is patchier. Their tourist-counter staff at major airports tend to be the most efficient.

  • Vi (Vodafone Idea)

    Fine in cities, weaker outside. Pick this only if Jio and Airtel are sold out at your kiosk — rare.

Where to buy

Airport kiosk on arrival.Fastest, most expensive. The networks all have counters at Delhi T3, Mumbai T2, Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, Kochi, Goa, and most other international gates. 5-15 minutes start to finish. You'll pay roughly 2x the city-store price for the same plan, but you walk out with data. Worth it for the first 28 days.

Official network store in a city. Best plan range, lowest price. Find the official-branded store (Airtel Stores, Jio Stores, etc.) — not a phone-repair shop with a poster. Documentation takes 30-60 minutes. Bring your passport, visa-stamped passport page, and one Indian address (your hotel works).

Hotel-recommended retailer. Cheapest. Slower because the retailer often relays paperwork to the formal channel. Acceptable if you have time; skip if you arrived after 8pm.

What plans actually give you

A standard 28-day pre-paid plan from any of the three offers 1.5-2 GB of data per day plus unlimited calls within India and 100 SMS. That's plenty for navigation, ride-share apps, and video calls. If you're working remotely, look at the 3 GB/day variants. International calls and SMS are a separate top-up — and expensive.

What catches people out

  • • Activation OTP fails because the airport tower is patchy — wait until you're in a hotel before completing setup.
  • • Passport-name mismatch between visa and SIM form (extra middle name etc.) — fix on the form, not later.
  • • Pre-paid plans are calendar-based — they expire even if you didn't use the data.
  • • Some apps (banking, ride-share) require an Indian number for OTP — get the SIM in your first 24 hours.
  • • Jio in particular blocks WhatsApp calling on some plans — verify with the kiosk before paying.