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AT&T 30 Day Unlimited Data US/Canada/Mexico Travel SIM US $58 (~AU $82) + Free Delivery @ Arieli Mobile

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This is the sim you want if you're going to America for a while, great coverage and speed.

I was going to go to a store in USA and buy one this deal saves me time and money. Normally $65 USD in store.

AT&T 4G LTE high speed network
Continental USA Coverage including Hawaii/Alaska/Puerto Rico
Canada coverage
Mexico coverage
FREE first (200 minutes) of International MOBILE and LANDLINE calling
Unlimited Calls & Text within USA
Unlimited International Texting to over 200 countries
USA Phone number
Works for 30 days after activation
NO Hotspot or tethering allowed
FREE International Shipping
Includes both MICRO + NANO sizes for all phones

Related Stores

arielimobile.com
arielimobile.com

closed Comments

  • Oh go on! Put vendor in title! You know you want to really.

  • +5

    T Mobile is only $30 for a tourist sim 2gb of data. 30 day exp. great if you rather enjoy your holiday than check Facebook.

    • +1

      I used a T mobile sim assuming that similar to Australia all carriers within the metro/populated areas are pretty much created equal. I was wrong. I experienced very poor T mobile coverage in many parts of Florida to the point of uselessness. ie/ You'd think all carriers would have good coverage throughout Disney World (in particular epcot T mobile was non existent) / Miami / Orlando etc. Check coverage maps before you try to save a few $$.

      • -1

        I drove from LA to Vegas then down through the Bible belt, all the way to Philly/New York/Vermont with T-mobile - it was fantastic.

    • +1

      T Mobile option worked well for me. Plus if you happen to be flying with Delta, you get free onboard wifi on domestics

    • The $30 (USD) isn't even 2gb anymore, its actually 10gb now (I just came back from Vegas last month). Even then when/if your 2gb runs out you can still use it, you just won't get LTE speeds, as it reverts back to 2G. Still ok if you just want it for booking an uber or lyft though. The unlimited LTE data plan is only $50(USD) now too (was $80 USD).

  • +1

    “NO Hotspot or tethering allowed”

    How would they know you’re hot spotting?

    • The setting to allow hotspot will be disabled on your phone.

    • +1

      Targeting ios user probably

    • The sim will restrict it.

    • Every phone tags tether traffic by default and the providers drop it in their firewall/gateway

      If you have an android phone that is rooted, you can edit build.prop to disable the tagging.

  • -1

    Lets see..
    4 reviews for this product. Each of them 1 day apart, and all of them over 2 months ago. Yeah, that doesn't look suspicious at all.

    Plus selecting the "Free Shipping" button doesn't actually work for me (in either Chrome or IE)

    AT&T will do the same plan for $55 with auto-pay discount (which you can cancel a few days later), although in fairness you will still need a SIM (99 cents from their website, $10 from a store)

    • +1

      Free shipping worked for me, paying by Paypal. Seems legit to me, you're paranoid.

    • I purchased through Ariel earlier this year. No problems at all.

  • AT&T have a 1Gb plan for US$35 and an 8Gb for US$50 both of which allow hot spot tethering

  • +1

    I was in US recently and bought a 30 day Lycamobile SIM, which is widely available at kiosks, small stores etc, so you do not need to find a T-mobile or AT&T shop. Lycamobile is a T-mobile reseller. SIM packet cost about USD28, which provided SIM, US calls and SMS, 1GB 4G data (then 3G), small amount of international calls. It was ok for a tourist visit. The kiosk can activate the SIM on the spot without any ID check complications. The kiosks also sell higher capability SIMs which cost a bit more.

    However: as jason101 noted, T-mobile coverage can be patchy. I also found that in Florida. Some cities have a service on a certain frequency and other cities do not. T-mobile has a good online coverage map checker down to city level. Also an AU phone might not have some frequencies used in an area.

    The US uses somewhat different frequencies/bands cf AU, so you should check what is used in the US and what your phone can use. Modern high end phones should be compatible enough. I had an older phone and the frequency situation in the US was one reason I chose Lycamobile/T-mobile, which still runs a 2G service I could rely on as a minimum. AT&T does not run 2G anymore.

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