SignalRank

Nomad vs Amigo eSIM
— which eSIM is better?

Nomad and Amigo both target budget-conscious travellers with hotspot included and competitive pricing, but they get there differently. Nomad relies on direct Tier 1 carrier agreements in a defined set of markets; Amigo is a newer aggregator spreading across popular destinations with aggressive pricing.

Verdict

Nomad wins on network quality and validity where it operates; Amigo is worth checking for destinations outside Nomad's core markets, with the caveat of a less established support track record.

Head-to-head

CriteriaNomadAmigo
Coverage130+ countries100+ countries
Network modelDirect Tier 1 carrier agreementsPartnership aggregator
Hotspot/tetheringYes, includedYes on all plans
Typical price range$3–$35$8–$45
Plan validity7–30 days7–30 days

Network routing — what's actually different

Nomad's direct carrier agreements (Singtel/StarHub-routed access across parts of Asia, direct EU MNO deals, Du/Etisalat in the Middle East) mean it isn't reselling spare capacity — it has a guaranteed slice of network resources in those markets, which tends to show up as more consistent speeds. Amigo's partnership-aggregator model gives it flexibility to add countries quickly but without the same guaranteed-capacity relationships, so quality can vary more by destination.

Pick Nomad if...

Travellers visiting Nomad's core markets (Europe, Singapore, much of Southeast Asia, parts of the Middle East) who want the lowest price-per-GB with included hotspot.

Get Nomad

Pick Amigo if...

Travellers visiting a popular destination outside Nomad's footprint, where Amigo's broader-but-shallower coverage may be the only metered+hotspot option available.

Get Amigo

★ Affiliate disclosure: SignalRank earns a commission (10–40%) when you purchase through our links. The verdict above is based on coverage, network routing, and plan structure — commission rates do not affect it.

Nomad vs Amigo eSIM — frequently asked questions

Which is cheaper, Nomad or Amigo?

Nomad is generally cheaper per GB, starting from $3 versus Amigo's $8, but only in the markets Nomad directly serves. Outside those markets, Amigo's broader (if shallower) coverage may be the more relevant comparison.

Do both Nomad and Amigo include hotspot?

Yes — both include hotspot/tethering as standard, which makes either a reasonable choice if you need to connect a laptop alongside your phone.

Which has better network quality?

Nomad's direct Tier 1 carrier agreements generally produce more consistent speeds than Amigo's aggregator model, but this advantage only applies in the specific countries where Nomad has those direct agreements.

See how Nomad and Amigo perform in your destination

Coverage and speed vary by city — check real performance scores for a specific destination.

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