# Budget travel tips for Belgium

> Belgium can be affordable with a little planning — public transport, local food and a cheap eSIM instead of roaming.

Belgium can be affordable with a little planning — public transport, local food and a cheap eSIM instead of roaming.

## Stay online while you explore

For maps, bookings, translation and Instagram photos, a MerrSIM eSIM for Belgium (from €1.49, 10 GB €8.99) keeps you online from the start — no roaming, no physical SIM.

[MerrSIM — eSIM Belgium](https://merrsim.com/destinations/esim-plans-for-belgium)

## Activation in a few minutes

Do the install before departure, while on WiFi. Open your phone settings, choose to add an eSIM and scan the QR code you received by email. Label the profile “Belgium” so it is easy to spot. When you land, set the eSIM as your data line and switch on data roaming for it — that is normal for travel eSIMs and adds no fees, because the plan is prepaid. Within seconds you are online, with no need to hunt for public WiFi.

## Coverage and 5G speed in Belgium

The eSIM connects to the main local operators, so you get the same coverage as a local, including 4G/LTE and 5G where available. In the cities and tourist areas of Belgium the signal is strong and stable; in very remote villages or mountains it can weaken, as with any operator. Hotspot is included, so you can share the connection with your laptop or a travel companion at no extra cost.

## Tips to save data

A few small habits make your gigabytes last in Belgium. Download Google Maps offline before you head out, set video quality to “Auto” or 480p, and turn off background app refresh. Use hotel WiFi for big updates and high-resolution photo uploads. With these steps, even a modest plan covers the whole trip, and your hotspot stays free for the moments you really need it.

## How much data you really need

For normal use — maps, messaging, social media and the odd video — budget about 300–700 MB a day. A light traveller is fine with 3–5 GB for a week, while anyone doing video calls, streaming or laptop hotspot will want 10–20 GB. In Belgium, download offline maps and use hotel WiFi for big downloads; that way a 10 GB plan comfortably lasts two weeks. If you run out, you buy a new plan in the app with no waiting.

## No registration, no shop queue

Many EU countries require identity verification for local SIM cards, which means a queue, a shop and sometimes even a local address. A travel eSIM skips all of that: it is sold as an international data service, with no passport and no contract. You have it ready before you set off for Belgium, so you land and are online immediately — no time wasted at the airport and no risk of surprise roaming bills.

## FAQ

### How do I stay online in Belgium?
Get a MerrSIM eSIM for Belgium from €1.49 (10 GB €8.99), activate by QR before departure and connect automatically.


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Author: Etnik Beqiri  
Published: 2026-05-29  
Source: https://merrsim.com/en/blog/buxhet-belgium-en
