Travel guide · Updated June 2026
How Much Does Internet Cost in France for Tourists? (2026)
This guide focuses on France internet cost for tourists and how much data you need. To choose a plan, use our best eSIM for France guide; for roaming comparisons, see roaming in France vs eSIM.
Data need
Paris weeks often fit 3-6 GB; train routes and hotspot need more.
Total cost
Multiply roaming daily fees by every travel day; eSIM is a one-off prepaid cost.
Wi-Fi support
Use hotel Wi-Fi for heavy downloads; mobile data is still needed outside.
Route matters
A Paris weekend and a multi-city France train trip do not use data the same way.
How much data do you need in France?
| Usage | Typical data | Note |
|---|---|---|
| Paris weekend | 2-4 GB | Maps, metro, messaging |
| One week in France | 3-6 GB | Paris + Lyon + Nice |
| Hotspot | 10-15+ GB | Laptop/video calls burn data fast |
Internet options for tourists
- Prepaid France eSIM: usually the most practical and predictable data option for short trips.
- Home roaming: works if your carrier includes affordable France data; otherwise daily fees add up.
- Physical prepaid SIM: can make sense if you need a French number or a longer stay.
- Wi-Fi: good for hotels and heavy downloads, but not enough by itself outside.
How to save money on France internet
- Multiply roaming daily fees by every travel day.
- Lower video quality and save heavy downloads for Wi-Fi.
- Do not choose a tiny bundle if you plan to use hotspot.
- Match validity to your trip length so you do not pay for unused days.
Make your France data cost predictable
Choose a France eSIM plan based on your trip length and data needs.
View France eSIM plansRelated guides
FAQ
For maps, metro apps, messaging, email, and light social use, many tourists fit 3-6 GB for a week in Paris. Add more if you use hotspot, stream video, upload lots of photos, or travel by train across France.
For short trips, a prepaid travel eSIM is often the cheapest practical option because you buy only the data and days you need. Hotel and public Wi-Fi can reduce mobile data use, but relying only on Wi-Fi is inconvenient for maps, transit, and tickets.
Often yes for visitors whose home plan does not include France. EU travelers may have fair-use roaming, but tourists from outside the EU often pay daily passes or pay-as-you-go rates. Compare the total cost for every travel day.
Yes. Laptop tethering, video calls, and sharing data with family can use several gigabytes quickly. If you expect hotspot use, choose a larger allowance or an unlimited-style plan with clear fair-use terms.