Can You Use an eSIM and a Physical SIM at the Same Time?
Yes — this is called Dual SIM, and it is one of the most powerful features of modern smartphones. You can keep your home number active on your physical SIM while the eSIM handles fast, local data abroad.
How dual SIM works
Your phone handles two SIM profiles simultaneously: your physical SIM (home carrier) and your eSIM (travel carrier). You assign each line a role:
- Calls & texts: your home SIM (so you never miss calls or two-factor auth messages) - Mobile data: your travel eSIM (local rates, fast speeds)
Both are active at the same time. You receive calls on your home number while data flows through the eSIM.
Set up dual SIM on iPhone
- 1Install your travel eSIM: Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM → scan QR.
- 2Settings → Cellular → Default Voice Line → select your home SIM.
- 3Settings → Cellular → Default for Cellular Data → select your travel eSIM.
- 4Settings → Cellular → tap your travel eSIM → Data Roaming: ON.
- 5Your home SIM handles calls; your eSIM handles data. Both active simultaneously.
Set up dual SIM on Android
- 1Install your travel eSIM via Settings → Connections → SIM Manager → Add eSIM (Samsung) or Settings → Network & Internet → SIMs (Pixel).
- 2In SIM Manager (Samsung) or SIMs settings (Pixel), set "Calls" to your home SIM.
- 3Set "Data" to your travel eSIM.
- 4Enable data roaming on the eSIM line.
What dual SIM cannot do
While both SIMs are active, you typically cannot receive calls on both simultaneously — a call on one line may go to voicemail while you are on a call on the other. Data can only flow through one line at a time. You switch which line is active for data in your settings (useful if your eSIM plan expires mid-trip).
Dual eSIM — two eSIMs, no physical SIM
iPhone 15, 16, Pixel 8/9, and some other 2023+ phones support two simultaneous eSIMs with no physical SIM required. You can store up to 8 eSIM profiles and activate any two at once. This is ideal if you travel frequently between two or more countries.