Awesome video! I would like to add that if you are a user of a portable Wi-Fi hotspot, you can purchase the SIM card and insert it into your hotspot. Then you can put your phone on airplane mode and enable Wi-Fi calling. By doing this you will be using the data from your SIM card package. I have done this all over the world, and it works wonders. Anyone in your travel party was access to your hotspot can use it, gust eliminating the need for multiple SIM cards as long as you're typically together.
Thanks! And good tip about the hotspot. I had a mention of a hotspot in an earlier draft, but my research led me to believe that if you didn’t own one but had to rent one, it got pretty pricey. Especially given that you can use a phone as a hotspot. Anne and I used to do that. I’d get a SIM and she’d share the connection when we were away from Wi-Fi. It’s not great if both of you want to stream something, but it’s fine for lower data hungry uses.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure - I purchased a couple hotspots so that my wife and I can both have one. They have been FANTASTIC and work worldwide. Setup is typically extremely easy, even easier than swapping a sim in a phone. I've paid between $20 and $50 for our hotspots. Once you set your phone to do WIFI CALLING (which includes texting) and AIRPLANE mode you now can use your phone just like you're in the US. Yes, you make/receive calls and texts over data WITHOUT getting charged by your mobile phone company. Sometimes we share our connection. But if we're apart she has hers and I have mine. If I'm with a group, I just let everyone connect.
That’s a great solution, especially for frequent travelers as you seem to be. The hotspot problem is that it’s expensive for one-time travelers, especially if they follow the advice I see online to rent one. The math doesn’t work.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure You can also use the hotspot function of your phone to provide the access to many other phones. Only one SIM and one regular (unlocked) phone is required. The drawback is of course the range of the hotspot is limited to 10-15 meters (but if you have an emergency or a lost buddy you can still re-enable the roaming and use the very expensive USA plan instead... of course for a very brief time!).
Thanks. I used a sim card from Vodafone (purchased in a store in Barcelona) for a trip to Spain last summer, and it worked great. I had read about buying an online data-only eSim in advance, which sounds very convenient, but the TIM tourist plan you mentioned seems like it's a better deal for my upcoming 22-day trip this summer, and it gives me a local phone number. Now I'm thinking I might get a very short data-only plan in advance, so my phone will have data from the time I first land, and then I can go find a TIM store any time during the first few days to get things set up for the rest of my time in Italy.
Our daughter is preparing to study abroad and the international phone service topic is very complicated! After watching your video, I understand everything that I didn't before. Loved the format of presenting the questions at the beginning of video and answering each one directly and succinctly. No technical jargon or confusing terminology , and I appreciate the data calculator. Your knowledge has provided me with a peace of mind and I have already shared this video. Thank-you both very much! :)
You guys are doing an awsome job !!! being from Canada; we still can apply all of your tips and using our available international phone packages Much appreciated 👍
Great tips. We use a portable hot spot. We bought this thru Tim. A one time cost of 50 euro. We purchase a SIM card for 15 euro and has 75 gig. That last for 30 days.
It’s a good solution for a frequent traveler, as you must be. I was going to mention mobile hotspots, but for one trip the cost of the hotspot makes the whole thing expensive. Especially if someone rents one. It’s at least as expensive as your €50 and there is nothing to use next time - though I see that solution recommended online. I can’t make the math work.
I must tell you, I am very apprehensive about letting anyone mess with my SIM card. There are a lot of SIM card scams where someone in a phone store gets your SIM and switches it out. It’s a possibility they can get you 4 digest pin and get access to it. Shopping in a foreign store and letting anyone there switch them out is risky. I think I’ll explore some of your other great tips on foreign phone usage. Thank you both! ❤
That was quite good! Looks like some phones support dual sims, so it may even be convenient to have both in there and flip as needed. Thanks for the info!
Thanks! Yes, there are phones that take two SIM cards. I don’t think they make them any more because I believe they don’t have eSIM as an option. You can have up to 9 eSIMs in an iPhone, if you had the need.
I seldom leave comments but after watching a couple of your videos, I just had to write to say THANK YOU!!! You answered all the questions I had and gave me helpful info on other things I hadn’t thought about. Going in 10 days for the first time and I am so excited. I love your advice to enjoy the vacation and not just check things off. Gracie and un grande abbraccio❤
An addition: having a residential contract with an Italian telephone operator, I can operate throughout Europe without additional charges because roaming in Europe is regulated. So this could be valid (but I don't know) also for temporary tourist contracts. Please clarify the point for the benefit of all, Thanks.
HELLO! Question- until we get to "TIM" store to have our phones connected like you spoke of. Upon arrival- (which is a crucial day of data and communication) what do you recomend? Should we call our carrier for 1 day of international data and communication or???
Get the international day pass set up with your carrier. Once it’s set up, you can just use your phone for $10/day. I’d do that for the first day until you get your Italian sim. Enjoy your trip!
Separate topic... I am going to Italy for the first time this summer for my daughters wedding. Do you have any advice on the best way to make payments in Euros? Are U.S. credit cards an acceptable form of payment? Are there better choices available? Any insight on this topic would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!
Hi. By far the easiest way to pay for most things is a US credit card. They’re accepted almost everywhere. Exceptions: American Express often not accepted, and you might find a small shop that wants cash. The key thing is to make sure your credit card has no foreign transaction fees. Those fees can add 1-2% to everything you buy. There are lots of cards available without the fees and if you don’t have one you can easily get a no annual fee card with this feature. As far as getting euro bills, the best way is with your US ATM or debit card. You’ll get a much better (like 6-7% better) exchange rate than at your bank, or worse of all at one of the many small places, at the airport or elsewhere, that offer currency exchange. Finally, the last money-saving tip is that Italians don’t tip like Americans. In a restaurant, they tip nothing at all, which is fine, or a small amount, a few euro. If the bill is, say €48, tip €2 or so if you want, but not 20% or €10. The key is that restaurant workers are paid a fair wage without tips, unlike the US where we pay their wages through tips. Your daughter’s wedding! What a perfect reason for a trip. Best wishes to her and to you and enjoy the trip!
Well , in italy we don t use to have a locked phone . It s usually linked to expensive plans and that s a bloodshed. Personally i buy it by amazon and all works 👍 the cheapest are iliad , ho and very mobile but not fit for travel abroad . Tim is the best option
Dumb question, sorry- If we go with a TIM plan at a store not in the airport, do we just use the US plan until we get to the store? I was thinking of an Airlo plan that’s cheap until we find a TIM store. Thoughts?
I’m not familiar with Airlo. It might be a great option. Another option, assuming that you’ve set up the international day plan with your US carrier, is to do the one-day $10 pass until you get the Italian SIM.
Great question we should have probably addressed, though not one with a simple answer. If you’re lucky, your bank will offer an email or an Authenticator option. If not, you may need to use your US line to get the text and incur the cost. (Read below to see how to make that easier.) However, I should mention that Anne will sometimes get texts to her US number without a fee as long as the phone is set as the active line but with the cellular off Strangely, it doesn’t work for me. So maybe it will work for you. I’ll be in Italy next week and I’ll experiment with it a bit more to try to get it to work. It used to be that you could get texts through a Google Voice number, but I don’t think that’s true anymore. Hasn’t worked for me, anyway, and a search indicates it no longer works. To prepare for the switching, ideally both your US SIM and Italy SIM are eSIMs. That way it’s easy to switch back and forth or even have both lines active. What I’d do is set up your US phone on eSIM before you go. That way, even if you need to use a physical SIM in Italy you’ll have the slot open and won’t need to switch cards back and forth and you’ll still have the switch line functionality. I hope this long answer is helpful.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure Unfortunately my "ancient" 4 model years back Galaxy S20 doesn't have eSim capability. I made another post of my plan to use my AT&T prepaid's travel plan that should work.
@tonyriddle5491 Old technology does impose some limits, unfortunately, but your solution seems like it’s just as good as an Italian plan, given your needs. Enjoy the trip!
This is why I'm taking my old phone for any Italian Sim...and leaving my new phone intact. I can use it on wifi with my VPN on my hosts wifi, I hope! I read a couple who ported to Google voice, but it sounds very complicated and you have to "disconnect" from your US provider about a week before! I've put all my bill paying on auto to take $ to pay the bill from my bank. So, any authentication will be more of certain signs in, if I need them.
Are you sticking with Verizon or thinking of an Italian SIM? The law says that a SIM needs to include data throughout the EU. I think for TIM it’s 15GB.
Hi. Since eSIMs have become common, I believe that you can get an eSIM for a tourist plan and can activate it online. Look at www.gruppotim.it/en/press-archive/market/2023/CS-TIM-eSIM-con-identita-digitale-EN.html
Tim 11.42 "Tim Tourist" Vodafone 12.25 "eSIM Europe" WindTre 13.05 "Tourist Pass Full" Tim,Wind,Vodafone are the major telcos in my country. There are others cheaper like Ho. Mobile , Coop Voce, Sky Mobile, Fastweb Mobile but I don't know if they have any plan for Intl tourists.
Thanks for pulling out this info. I wanted to include Iliad since I’ve heard good things from Italian friends, but they don’t seem to have a tourist plan. Probably true for the others you mention.
Congratz for the video. Anyway me I am Italian and I have Iliad. With Iliad you have unlimited sms and calls to Italian numbers and 120gb or more, depending on the plan that you choose that starts from 8€/month. The only thing that you need to do is to go to an Iliad store and follow the instruction of the machine (anyway there are some employees that can help you). The only thing you need to be careful is on the recharge method: since you are staying in Italy for a short amount of time, do not choose the automatic recharging method but the manual one: so you will not have to pay more months after your vacation ends
Certainly a better system for the user. Our system is rooted in the way cell phones were sold when they first came on the market. Agree to stay with a provider for 2-3 years in return for a lower cost on a phone. But our costs here are outrageous. I pay over $200 a month for 4 people. But it is cheaper to buy an iPhone here. I always buy unlocked.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure I pay €5.99 a month for unlimited phone calls in all Europe, 200 texts and 50 GB. My hubby €7.99, 200 texts, unlimited phone calls, 100GB!!
@@OurBigItalianAdventure I have an AT&T prepaid plan for my unlocked phone that costs $300 per year with 16GB data that rolls over any leftover gigs to the next month only. It has an international travel plan that costs $35 for 7 days with 5GB I was thinking of using on my 10 night trip to Italy this September, plus a one night layover in Frankfurt Germany. I would refill it for another 7 days, so $70 is not bad to keep my own number.
That sounds like a good approach. Keeping your US number is easier for a shorter trip, as long as you’re comfortable with the costs. It’s really a personal price/value/convenience trade-off. I should look into the AT&T prepaid option. Your plan sounds good. When my daughter was on our plan, we needed essentially unlimited data. But these days I’m sure 16GB would meet my mobile data needs. Thanks for the tip.
@@CKfromTasOZ no, TIM is Italian, calls to foreign countries from Italy and from an Italian phone would be charged, unless you have a special deal. If you have a let's say Spanish number instead the same calls would be free
@@OurBigItalianAdventure Yes, within Italy is not going to be a problem, I have an Italian SIM with VOdafone (which I use in Spain) that has unlimited minutes (and at the moment unlimited data traffic) for about 10 Euros per month. The problem for you is calls towards other countries, I speculate, in your case, the USA. To call your relatives, 200 min is more than enough, for a business phone, not necessarily. I speak for myself, having in the Italian phone unlimited minutes, which in roaming calls to all Zone 1 (EU + USA, but not Canada) just gives me a pace of mind as I do not keep track of my calls duration. That is, just me and my circumstances of course.
Sī, è un metodo buono. Non abbiamo focalizzato sul WhatsApp, perché la maggioranza dei visitatori al nostro canale sono americani, e in America poche persone lo usano. I text sms o iMessage sono l’app preferite.
Go Iliad and you solve all your problems. Easy, cheap, flexible and hassle-free. I do not understand all the complications you are presenting in this video.
The last time I checked, Iliad didn’t have tourist plan. A codice fiscale was needed to sign up. But that may have changed. We’ll check before we update the video.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure tourist plans are kind of irrelevant since Iliad is so flexible. As afar as the Codice Fiscale is concerned, there may be alternatives, like facial recognition, Passport number, etc. You may want to ask customer support online on Iliad website.
@@OurBigItalianAdventurecheck an Iliad point at most shopping malls. You get 180GB/month unlimited calls and sms. The have cheaper options if you don't need so many GB. You can recharge your sim at any sisal/tobaconist. So simple.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure you don't need a tourist plan since you pay by the month. You can suspend recharge for a year and your sim doesn't expire They are an excellent company no bad surprises. Tim is the worse together with Vodafone. They are thieves stay away
Awesome video! I would like to add that if you are a user of a portable Wi-Fi hotspot, you can purchase the SIM card and insert it into your hotspot. Then you can put your phone on airplane mode and enable Wi-Fi calling. By doing this you will be using the data from your SIM card package. I have done this all over the world, and it works wonders. Anyone in your travel party was access to your hotspot can use it, gust eliminating the need for multiple SIM cards as long as you're typically together.
Thanks! And good tip about the hotspot. I had a mention of a hotspot in an earlier draft, but my research led me to believe that if you didn’t own one but had to rent one, it got pretty pricey. Especially given that you can use a phone as a hotspot.
Anne and I used to do that. I’d get a SIM and she’d share the connection when we were away from Wi-Fi. It’s not great if both of you want to stream something, but it’s fine for lower data hungry uses.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure - I purchased a couple hotspots so that my wife and I can both have one. They have been FANTASTIC and work worldwide. Setup is typically extremely easy, even easier than swapping a sim in a phone. I've paid between $20 and $50 for our hotspots. Once you set your phone to do WIFI CALLING (which includes texting) and AIRPLANE mode you now can use your phone just like you're in the US. Yes, you make/receive calls and texts over data WITHOUT getting charged by your mobile phone company. Sometimes we share our connection. But if we're apart she has hers and I have mine. If I'm with a group, I just let everyone connect.
That’s a great solution, especially for frequent travelers as you seem to be. The hotspot problem is that it’s expensive for one-time travelers, especially if they follow the advice I see online to rent one. The math doesn’t work.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure You can also use the hotspot function of your phone to provide the access to many other phones.
Only one SIM and one regular (unlocked) phone is required.
The drawback is of course the range of the hotspot is limited to 10-15 meters (but if you have an emergency or a lost buddy you can still re-enable the roaming and use the very expensive USA plan instead... of course for a very brief time!).
@teslacoiler That’s a great solution for a group!
Thanks. I used a sim card from Vodafone (purchased in a store in Barcelona) for a trip to Spain last summer, and it worked great. I had read about buying an online data-only eSim in advance, which sounds very convenient, but the TIM tourist plan you mentioned seems like it's a better deal for my upcoming 22-day trip this summer, and it gives me a local phone number. Now I'm thinking I might get a very short data-only plan in advance, so my phone will have data from the time I first land, and then I can go find a TIM store any time during the first few days to get things set up for the rest of my time in Italy.
Interesting idea to do the short term data plan. Sounds like a good approach. Enjoy your trip!
Our daughter is preparing to study abroad and the international phone service topic is very complicated! After watching your video, I understand everything that I didn't before. Loved the format of presenting the questions at the beginning of video and answering each one directly and succinctly. No technical jargon or confusing terminology , and I appreciate the data calculator. Your knowledge has provided me with a peace of mind and I have already shared this video. Thank-you both very much! :)
You’re quite welcome! We’re glad it was helpful.
We've seen a few of your videos now and like them! You are well prepared, honest, and informative. Thank you!
😎
You can also use whatsapp to call! If the receivers do have whatsapp as well!
Impressive how good organised you are in your information! 👏👏👏👏
Yes. WhatsApp is great. Unfortunately most Americans never use it, so recommending it requires a long explanation.
You guys are doing an awsome job !!! being from Canada; we still can apply all of your tips and using our available international phone packages Much appreciated 👍
Thanks for the kind words. We’re glad it’s helpful.
Great tips. We use a portable hot spot. We bought this thru Tim. A one time cost of 50 euro. We purchase a SIM card for 15 euro and has 75 gig. That last for 30 days.
It’s a good solution for a frequent traveler, as you must be. I was going to mention mobile hotspots, but for one trip the cost of the hotspot makes the whole thing expensive. Especially if someone rents one. It’s at least as expensive as your €50 and there is nothing to use next time - though I see that solution recommended online. I can’t make the math work.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure agree
I always like it when someone agrees with me. It reassures me I’m not steering people wrong.
Thank you so much! It’s just what I needed. I love your advanced tips!
You’re welcome! Enjoy your trip.
I must tell you, I am very apprehensive about letting anyone mess with my SIM card. There are a lot of SIM card scams where someone in a phone store gets your SIM and switches it out. It’s a possibility they can get you 4 digest pin and get access to it. Shopping in a foreign store and letting anyone there switch them out is risky. I think I’ll explore some of your other great tips on foreign phone usage. Thank you both! ❤
You’re welcome. I’m glad there were a few tips that were helpful. Enjoy your trip!
That was quite good! Looks like some phones support dual sims, so it may even be convenient to have both in there and flip as needed. Thanks for the info!
Thanks! Yes, there are phones that take two SIM cards. I don’t think they make them any more because I believe they don’t have eSIM as an option. You can have up to 9 eSIMs in an iPhone, if you had the need.
I seldom leave comments but after watching a couple of your videos, I just had to write to say THANK YOU!!! You answered all the questions I had and gave me helpful info on other things I hadn’t thought about. Going in 10 days for the first time and I am so excited. I love your advice to enjoy the vacation and not just check things off. Gracie and un grande abbraccio❤
Thanks! We really appreciate it.
Enjoy your trip!
Most useful video on all TH-cam 😉 serious… I never had confidence to change my sim. I always used WiFi for decades. Thanks guys
Thanks! It’s a pretty simple approach to get better service and save some money.
Thanks! it's so nice of you to share this information! :)
You’re welcome! I hope it’s useful and you have a great trip.
Just found your channel. We are traveling to Italy in a few weeks and love how simple you make everything. Thank you for all your tips!!
Thanks! Glad that it’s helpful. Enjoy the trip!
You’ll have a great time. Check out our video about 10 hidden Rome sights if you haven’t already. You might get a few ideas.
Great video and so helpful. Had chosen TIM before seeing this. Had TIM SIM card and using same sim added 100gb for euro 15.
Glad to hear it!
Amazing! Thank you. I'm from Australia, so lots of the American information does not apply. But I got so much helpful information. Thank you so much.
Thanks! So about the US focus. We don’t know enough about other English-speaking countries to offer any advice or suggestions.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure I understand. 😀. Thank you again.
😎
Perfect information, thank you!! We will be in Italy for two months, this video has been very valuable.
Thank you! Have a great trip!
Really REALLY loved this video! What GREAT information. Planning a trip (1st timers) to Italy in OCT! You are both lovley Thank you so much !!
Thanks! So glad it was helpful. Enjoy your trip. It’s a great place to visit.
An addition: having a residential contract with an Italian telephone operator, I can operate throughout Europe without additional charges because roaming in Europe is regulated.
So this could be valid (but I don't know) also for temporary tourist contracts.
Please clarify the point for the benefit of all, Thanks.
Thanks,. When we do another similar video will include this information.
I travel to Italy a lot. So let me commend you for an excellent video.
Thanks! We appreciate the compliment.
HELLO! Question- until we get to "TIM" store to have our phones connected like you spoke of. Upon arrival- (which is a crucial day of data and communication) what do you recomend? Should we call our carrier for 1 day of international data and communication or???
Get the international day pass set up with your carrier. Once it’s set up, you can just use your phone for $10/day.
I’d do that for the first day until you get your Italian sim.
Enjoy your trip!
Separate topic... I am going to Italy for the first time this summer for my daughters wedding. Do you have any advice on the best way to make payments in Euros? Are U.S. credit cards an acceptable form of payment? Are there better choices available? Any insight on this topic would be greatly appreciated. Thank you!
Hi. By far the easiest way to pay for most things is a US credit card. They’re accepted almost everywhere. Exceptions: American Express often not accepted, and you might find a small shop that wants cash.
The key thing is to make sure your credit card has no foreign transaction fees. Those fees can add 1-2% to everything you buy. There are lots of cards available without the fees and if you don’t have one you can easily get a no annual fee card with this feature.
As far as getting euro bills, the best way is with your US ATM or debit card. You’ll get a much better (like 6-7% better) exchange rate than at your bank, or worse of all at one of the many small places, at the airport or elsewhere, that offer currency exchange.
Finally, the last money-saving tip is that Italians don’t tip like Americans. In a restaurant, they tip nothing at all, which is fine, or a small amount, a few euro. If the bill is, say €48, tip €2 or so if you want, but not 20% or €10. The key is that restaurant workers are paid a fair wage without tips, unlike the US where we pay their wages through tips.
Your daughter’s wedding! What a perfect reason for a trip. Best wishes to her and to you and enjoy the trip!
@@OurBigItalianAdventure Thank you! Much appreciated!!!!
You’re very welcome.
Have a wonderful trip!
Well done. This is very informative! Thank you!
Thanks! I’m glad it’s helpful.
Well , in italy we don t use to have a locked phone . It s usually linked to expensive plans and that s a bloodshed. Personally i buy it by amazon and all works 👍 the cheapest are iliad , ho and very mobile but not fit for travel abroad . Tim is the best option
Thanks! That’s valuable information.
Very helpful, thank you very much!
You’re welcome! Thanks.
Very in-depth information. Thank you!
Glad it was helpful!
Y'all are awesome!!! Thanks for these realistic tips.
😎
Dumb question, sorry- If we go with a TIM plan at a store not in the airport, do we just use the US plan until we get to the store? I was thinking of an Airlo plan that’s cheap until we find a TIM store. Thoughts?
I’m not familiar with Airlo. It might be a great option. Another option, assuming that you’ve set up the international day plan with your US carrier, is to do the one-day $10 pass until you get the Italian SIM.
Very informative and some very good information, thank you 👍🏻
Thanks! We appreciate it.
Very clear explanation!!
Thanks! Coming from a handle like @goodphone156, that’s quite a compliment.
What do you do for 2 factor Authentication for your bank or whatever back in the US if you have an Italian phone number.
Great question we should have probably addressed, though not one with a simple answer.
If you’re lucky, your bank will offer an email or an Authenticator option. If not, you may need to use your US line to get the text and incur the cost. (Read below to see how to make that easier.)
However, I should mention that Anne will sometimes get texts to her US number without a fee as long as the phone is set as the active line but with the cellular off Strangely, it doesn’t work for me. So maybe it will work for you. I’ll be in Italy next week and I’ll experiment with it a bit more to try to get it to work.
It used to be that you could get texts through a Google Voice number, but I don’t think that’s true anymore. Hasn’t worked for me, anyway, and a search indicates it no longer works.
To prepare for the switching, ideally both your US SIM and Italy SIM are eSIMs. That way it’s easy to switch back and forth or even have both lines active. What I’d do is set up your US phone on eSIM before you go. That way, even if you need to use a physical SIM in Italy you’ll have the slot open and won’t need to switch cards back and forth and you’ll still have the switch line functionality.
I hope this long answer is helpful.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure Unfortunately my "ancient" 4 model years back Galaxy S20 doesn't have eSim capability. I made another post of my plan to use my AT&T prepaid's travel plan that should work.
@tonyriddle5491 Old technology does impose some limits, unfortunately, but your solution seems like it’s just as good as an Italian plan, given your needs. Enjoy the trip!
This is why I'm taking my old phone for any Italian Sim...and leaving my new phone intact. I can use it on wifi with my VPN on my hosts wifi, I hope! I read a couple who ported to Google voice, but it sounds very complicated and you have to "disconnect" from your US provider about a week before! I've put all my bill paying on auto to take $ to pay the bill from my bank. So, any authentication will be more of certain signs in, if I need them.
At the store do they help with putting the SIM card in the phone?
Yes. That shouldn’t be a problem.
You guys are great 😃, thank you ☺️
Thanks! That’s quite the compliment.
So for WhatsApp, we can contact in US from Eataly but it’s easy
Yes.
We are going to be in Rome for a week the Paris for a week. We are on Verizon too.
Are you sticking with Verizon or thinking of an Italian SIM? The law says that a SIM needs to include data throughout the EU. I think for TIM it’s 15GB.
Very interesting but last years iPhones (15) don't have SIM slots anymore. So I guess the Tim Tourist plan is a no go for our 2025 trip. -Bill
Hi. Since eSIMs have become common, I believe that you can get an eSIM for a tourist plan and can activate it online. Look at www.gruppotim.it/en/press-archive/market/2023/CS-TIM-eSIM-con-identita-digitale-EN.html
Where are the locations and name of the Italian phone company?
Tim 11.42 "Tim Tourist"
Vodafone 12.25 "eSIM Europe"
WindTre 13.05 "Tourist Pass
Full"
Tim,Wind,Vodafone are the major telcos in my country.
There are others cheaper like Ho. Mobile , Coop Voce, Sky Mobile, Fastweb Mobile but I don't know if they have any plan for Intl tourists.
Thanks for pulling out this info.
I wanted to include Iliad since I’ve heard good things from Italian friends, but they don’t seem to have a tourist plan. Probably true for the others you mention.
Congratz for the video. Anyway me I am Italian and I have Iliad.
With Iliad you have unlimited sms and calls to Italian numbers and 120gb or more, depending on the plan that you choose that starts from 8€/month.
The only thing that you need to do is to go to an Iliad store and follow the instruction of the machine (anyway there are some employees that can help you). The only thing you need to be careful is on the recharge method: since you are staying in Italy for a short amount of time, do not choose the automatic recharging method but the manual one: so you will not have to pay more months after your vacation ends
Good advice.
Your videos are great.
Thanks! We really appreciate it.
Thank you
You’re welcome. Have a great trip.
Thank you!
You’re welcome. Enjoy your trip!
In Italy nobody has locked phone!! We are free to choose the phone company we want, change it every month..
Certainly a better system for the user. Our system is rooted in the way cell phones were sold when they first came on the market. Agree to stay with a provider for 2-3 years in return for a lower cost on a phone. But our costs here are outrageous. I pay over $200 a month for 4 people. But it is cheaper to buy an iPhone here. I always buy unlocked.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure I pay €5.99 a month for unlimited phone calls in all Europe, 200 texts and 50 GB. My hubby €7.99, 200 texts, unlimited phone calls, 100GB!!
@@OurBigItalianAdventure I have an AT&T prepaid plan for my unlocked phone that costs $300 per year with 16GB data that rolls over any leftover gigs to the next month only. It has an international travel plan that costs $35 for 7 days with 5GB I was thinking of using on my 10 night trip to Italy this September, plus a one night layover in Frankfurt Germany. I would refill it for another 7 days, so $70 is not bad to keep my own number.
That sounds like a good approach. Keeping your US number is easier for a shorter trip, as long as you’re comfortable with the costs. It’s really a personal price/value/convenience trade-off.
I should look into the AT&T prepaid option. Your plan sounds good. When my daughter was on our plan, we needed essentially unlimited data. But these days I’m sure 16GB would meet my mobile data needs. Thanks for the tip.
@M.C.K 111: Yes, our prices are crazy high.
Thanks
Glad you enjoyed it. Thanks.
the best thing would be to get a foreign (EU based) sim and stick it in the phone so you can call back to the US+ the rest of Europe for free
Yes. That’s a big advantage.
I think that's why they said to go to TIM......
@@CKfromTasOZ no, TIM is Italian, calls to foreign countries from Italy and from an Italian phone would be charged, unless you have a special deal. If you have a let's say Spanish number instead the same calls would be free
@thecaptain2000 The TIM plan we have includes minutes within Italy and 200 minutes a month to other countries.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure Yes, within Italy is not going to be a problem, I have an Italian SIM with VOdafone (which I use in Spain) that has unlimited minutes (and at the moment unlimited data traffic) for about 10 Euros per month. The problem for you is calls towards other countries, I speculate, in your case, the USA. To call your relatives, 200 min is more than enough, for a business phone, not necessarily. I speak for myself, having in the Italian phone unlimited minutes, which in roaming calls to all Zone 1 (EU + USA, but not Canada) just gives me a pace of mind as I do not keep track of my calls duration. That is, just me and my circumstances of course.
This has been bugging me! Thanks, folks!
Thanks!
No call no problem! Is WhatsApp call through data. Asian uses this method every day so that we do not rely on our telco high charges in voice call.
Yes. That’s why it’s important to have a data connection.
con whattsapp puoi fare tutto chiamate, videochiamate e messaggi, quindi basta acquistare un pacchetto dati e risolvi tutto
Sī, è un metodo buono. Non abbiamo focalizzato sul WhatsApp, perché la maggioranza dei visitatori al nostro canale sono americani, e in America poche persone lo usano. I text sms o iMessage sono l’app preferite.
In italy, you use your phone with the keypad.
BA DUM TSSSSS
👍
Go Iliad and you solve all your problems. Easy, cheap, flexible and hassle-free. I do not understand all the complications you are presenting in this video.
The last time I checked, Iliad didn’t have tourist plan. A codice fiscale was needed to sign up. But that may have changed. We’ll check before we update the video.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure tourist plans are kind of irrelevant since Iliad is so flexible. As afar as the Codice Fiscale is concerned, there may be alternatives, like facial recognition, Passport number, etc. You may want to ask customer support online on Iliad website.
@yeshetsogyalling Yes. We will research it for our next video.
These tips are all wrong in Italy.
Hi. Can you let me know which are wrong and why?
@@OurBigItalianAdventurecheck an Iliad point at most shopping malls. You get 180GB/month unlimited calls and sms. The have cheaper options if you don't need so many GB. You can recharge your sim at any sisal/tobaconist. So simple.
Yes, Iliad can be a good choice but they don’t seem to offer a tourist plan. I’ve heard good things about their service from my Italian friends.
@@OurBigItalianAdventure you don't need a tourist plan since you pay by the month. You can suspend recharge for a year and your sim doesn't expire
They are an excellent company no bad surprises. Tim is the worse together with Vodafone. They are thieves stay away
Thanks for the info.
THANK YOU!
You’re most welcome!
thank you!
Glad it was useful.