• TwitterFacebookGoogle PlusLinkedInRSS FeedEmail

Activate Vodafone Sim Card Italy

3/20/2018 
Sim Cards For Italy

Enjoy Rome and Milan but keep in touch with everyone back home with this prepaid Italy SIM Card. Including Vodafone and Wind. Your SIM can. Sim Card for Italy. I purchased a Vodafone SIM card this summer. They all have service staff who will help with the installation and activation.

TIM and Vodafone both have optional packages that include data roaming. Introducing Brad Mehldau Rapidshare Free. TIM has both a pay-as-you-go plan and a package.

If you need to use the internet every day for a week, or if you need more than a little data, the package, called TIM in Viaggio Pass, would be better. It gives you 500 mb to be used over 10 days, at a cost of €20. Vodafone has agreements with partners in other countries so their regular clients with certain plans can get internet at low prices in those countries. However, I think tourists in Italy are unlikely to have those plans.

Forother countries, Vodafone has 'Passport' plans that cost €3 per day. I'm not a Vodafone customer, so I may not be fully informed.

I don't see anything on the 3 website except a rather pricey option, called 3Easy Pass, which costs €0.244 cents per mb. Why is the TIM in Viaggio Pass option not suitable for when you're outside of Italy? Do you need more data than that? I find that if I use wifi whenever possible and keep data turned off except when I'm using it, 500 mb will easily last me for ten days. I use TIM in Viaggio Pass almost every time I travel outside of Italy. If I'm going for a very short visit I use the pay-as-you-go plan, TIM in Viaggio Full, instead.

There is a TIM Welcome Internet plan that costs the same as TIM Welcome (€20 plus €10 for the SIM card). It has no talk time, nor texts, but it has 5 GB of 4G data. I feel as though we've hijacked Mohammed's thread and haven't fully answered his questions. If you'll be using the SIM card mostly for tethering, the plans mentioned above are not the best for the purpose. The TIM Welcome Internet, which I mentioned in reponse number 4 is probably your best option. If you'll actually be using it in a phone, you might prefer this option, which has only 4 gb, but also has 100 minutes of talk time. The TIM for Visitors card can only be bought online, but you need to go to a TIM store to pick it up and activate it; bring your passport, which will need to be photocopied.

Aventino is correct; there is no phone store accessible to arrivals from outside the Schengen area at Fiumicino airport. You'd have to get the card in central Rome. There are several phone stores at Termini station, for example. The €20 for the plan may not include the cost of the SIM card. Usually that costs another €10. I haven't been able to find any specific details about the plan; often 'unlimited' is not really unlimited, because they slow your speeds down to 2G after a certain number of gb used. Sekaiju No Meikyuu Ost Rar Files.

I don't understand why these details are so hard to find on the 3 site. You should also check the coverage of the 3, which is the smallest provider in Italy, and doesn't have the extensive coverage of TIM and Vodafone.This would probably not be a problem in large cities, but if you'll be driving in the countryside and want to use your phone as a GPS device, it could be a big problem. In any case, it's not any different from the TIM Welcome Internet plan I mentioned above. That plan has 5 gb, but for all practical purposes, that's the same as unlimited.

It would be very difficult to use more than that. If you think you'll want to make calls, you can add a little credit to your SIM card (maybe €5 or €10), choose a basic calling plan.

Or you could use a plan that has both data and calls. The TIM for Visitors plan, for which I gave a link in number 6 above, is a good choice, because it has lots of data (4 gb, still hard to use up in a few weeks) and only a modest number of minutes. However, this plan is a special offer for the Milan Expo and will probably be available only through October. • How do I book Colosseum entry tickets? • What Rome attractions should I book in advance?

Download Avery Template 546818 there. • Do I need a guided tour of Rome or the Vatican? • Are the Hop On, Hop Off buses worthwhile? • To and from Fiumicino/Leonardo da Vinci airport (FCO), including night transportation • To and from Civitavecchia (Port) • To and from Ciampino airport (CIA) • Day trips from Rome: Pompeii, Naples, Sorrento, Capri and Amalfi Coast • What are some convenient neighborhoods to stay in? • Renting an apartment in Rome • August - what is really open and closed?