Buying a cell phone abroad & using it in other countries later
September 23, 2008 11:23 PM
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If I buy a cheap, pay-as-you-go cell phone in Guatemala to use while I'm traveling there, can I then use it in other countries I visit later - and which ones? Is it as simple as replacing a SIM card every time?
Basically, how does the whole multi-country cell phone thing work? I'm thinking more calling locally, but calling back home would be nice too. (I'm a Verizon customer, ignorant of these mysteries.)
posted by gottabefunky to technology (4 comments total)
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However, T-Mobile and AT&T are GSM, so tri- or quad-band phones from them work ANYwhere. I stepped off the plane in Germany, and the phone just worked. ($1/minute, but still, worked.) Also worked in St. Maarten, Spain, Portugal and Italy. And Taiwan.
Point being, you're probably going to hit up pre-paid SIMs in each of the places you're traveling. That'll work just fine for local calls, from the country you're in, TO the country you're in. Anything international will be pricey, so beware.
But yeah, your current Verizon phone will almost certainly NOT work. That's not what you're asking, so the short answer is to buy a tri- or quad-band phone (look up what GSM frequency each country uses to figure out which, based on the countries you're traveling to.)
Then determine if maybe you want to use local SIMs in each location, or a roaming, expensive SIM. That's dependent entirely on the calling situation. You can always swap SIMs repeatedly and such, though. I have a German prepaid SIM that still has a few Euros on it. It worked in Germany, but it works here in the states too, on my phone. It's just "roaming" for the account, so using it would chew through Euros fast.
posted by disillusioned at 12:21 AM on September 24, 2008