Saily eSIM Plans for Canada
What you get with Saily in Canada
Which Saily plan should you pick?
For a short city break of 3–5 days, the cheapest plan at £1.00 will cover Maps, WhatsApp, and casual browsing. If you're spending one to two weeks travelling around Canada, step up to a mid-tier plan — usually the strongest value option on a per-GB basis in Saily's Canada lineup.
If you plan to work remotely, stream video daily, or use your phone as a hotspot for a laptop, lean towards a larger bundle. The unlimited plans are priced at a premium but make sense for heavy users who don't want to track usage.
One thing to note: Saily Canada plans are data-only. You won't get a local number, but your existing SIM handles calls and texts as normal. iMessage, WhatsApp, and FaceTime all work over data.
Compare other providers for Canada
Saily eSIM plans for nearby destinations
Saily eSIM for Canada 2026 — what you need to know
Saily is a well-regarded eSIM provider with solid Canada coverage. Plans range from short-break options to longer-stay packages, making Saily a flexible choice whether you're spending a long weekend or travelling for a month.
Canada has three big networks: Rogers, Bell and Telus. Telus and Bell share their rural network through a long-running partnership, which is why their coverage maps look almost identical. Rogers has the strongest standalone urban footprint, especially in Ontario and Quebec. 5G is widely deployed across Toronto, Montréal, Vancouver, Calgary, Ottawa, Edmonton and most mid-sized cities. The Trans-Canada Highway is mostly fine. The real gaps are the obvious ones, the territories (Yukon, NWT, Nunavut) thin out fast, big parts of northern BC and Labrador have no signal at all, and the Cabot Trail in Cape Breton can drop out. Banff and Jasper townsites are fine, the back-country trails are not.
Is Saily good in Canada?
In our testing, Saily connected reliably across major cities and travel routes in Canada. Plug is type A/B (120V, same as the US) and Canada uses the Canadian dollar. Tap-to-pay is universal, even in tiny northern coffee shops, and the Presto card covers transit in the GTA and Ottawa region.
Read our full Saily review →