
United States · city guide
Using an eSIM in Las Vegas
- From
- $13.99
- Networks
- T-Mobile
- Airport
- Harry Reid International
- Queue
- None
📷 David Vives / Pexels
Vegas is indoor America at maximum density, and its resorts have invested in cellular capacity the way they invest in everything: excessively. Your eSIM works in the casino depths, the Sphere, and the ride-share pickup labyrinths. The desert beyond (Grand Canyon runs, Death Valley) is a different, emptier story worth planning around.
Works in Las Vegas and all of United States
Saily, 5GB for 30 days at $13.99. One plan covers Las Vegas, day trips, and everywhere else in the country.
Check United States plansArriving at Harry Reid International (LAS)
LAS is minutes from the Strip and fully covered, your eSIM connects at the gate, which matters because the ride-share pickup garage is a multi-level app-coordination exercise that defeats the unconnected.
Mobile coverage in Las Vegas: what to expect
Excellent on the Strip, Downtown/Fremont, and inside every major resort, the casinos want you connected (to their apps). T-Mobile and AT&T both run huge capacity here. The desert day trips are the flip side: Red Rock Canyon keeps partial signal, but the Grand Canyon West road and Death Valley have long genuine blanks.
Las Vegas data tips from the ground
- Resort apps handle everything now, digital room keys, show tickets, restaurant waits, parking. A working phone is your Vegas wallet; the eSIM keeps it alive between casino Wi-Fi bubbles.
- Ride-share pickups at big resorts have designated levels that change, the app's live instructions are the only truth.
- Grand Canyon and Death Valley trips: download offline maps in the hotel, hours of the drive are off-grid on every carrier, by design of geography.
Plans that cover Las Vegas
eSIMs are sold per country, not per city, every plan below covers Las Vegas plus the rest of United States. Full comparison with infographics on the United States eSIM guide.
How much data do you need in Las Vegas?
Two taps, honest answer, based on real usage patterns, not upselling.
You'll use roughly 3GB in 7 days of normal use.
Best fit: Saily, 5GB / 30 days at $13.99
View this plan at SailyLas Vegas connectivity questions
Does data work inside the casinos and the Sphere?
Yes, resorts engineer indoor cellular aggressively (they need their apps to work). The Sphere has capacity for its full 18,000 crowd posting simultaneously, which is exactly what happens.
Is there signal on the drive to the Grand Canyon?
Partially, the I-11/US-93 corridor has coverage near towns, then long blanks. Grand Canyon West (Skywalk) has signal at the rim facilities; the South Rim (4.5 hours) has coverage in the village. Between: assume nothing.