FAQs - Roaming: Using a mobile phone in the EU
Will I be charged extra if I use my mobile phone in another EU country?
NO. The calls you make, the SMSs you send and receive, and the data you use while in
another EU country will be covered by your contract. You will be charged at the rates
set out in your tarrif plan, and your use will be deducted from the volumes in your
contract, exactly as if you were at home. However, your provider may limit the amount
of data you can use at your domestic tariff (see below).
Am I automatically allowed to roam in the EU at domestic prices, or do I have to do something to activate it?
NO. You don't need to do anything. Your operator should automatically give you access
to roaming in the EU at domestic prices.
I'm going to work in Hungary for 6 months. Can I use my German mobile phone while I'm there? Is this still considered roaming, or will I have to pay extra for my calls, texts and data?
As you're moving to Hungary for 6 months, you may want to consider buying a Hungarian
SIM card for your phone. The general rule is that as long as you spend more time at
home than abroad, or you use your mobile phone more at home than abroad, you pay your
standard domestic prices for your calls, texts and data services when you travel in
the EU. This is considered a fair use of roaming services.
In order to verify if this is the case, your operator may check your roaming time and consumption over the previous 4 months. If you've spent more time in another EU country than at home AND you've used mobile services more in another EU country than at home, your mobile operator might inform you that you are subject to charges if you continue to stay abroad.
If, within two weeks from the moment you receive the warning, you start using your phone more in your home country, you won't be charged. Otherwise, your operator may start applying the following charges to your roaming consumption from the day of the alert onwards:
In order to verify if this is the case, your operator may check your roaming time and consumption over the previous 4 months. If you've spent more time in another EU country than at home AND you've used mobile services more in another EU country than at home, your mobile operator might inform you that you are subject to charges if you continue to stay abroad.
If, within two weeks from the moment you receive the warning, you start using your phone more in your home country, you won't be charged. Otherwise, your operator may start applying the following charges to your roaming consumption from the day of the alert onwards:
- €0.019 per minute for voice calls (+ VAT)
- €0.003 per SMS (+ VAT)
- €1.30 per GB of data (+ VAT)
I live in Belgium and my daughter is going to Germany to study for 4 months. Are my calls to her also covered by the roaming rules?
NO. Calling another EU country from home is not roaming, so you are not covered by the
same rules. However, the charges for intra-EU calls (to mobiles and fixed-line phones)
and texts (SMSs) are also capped under EU rules. This means that when you call your
daughter in Germany, you'll be charged at a maximum of €0.019 a minute (+ VAT), and
when you send a text message it will cost you a maximum of €0.06 (+ VAT) per SMS.
My contract includes 3GB of data. Can I use all of this allowance when I go on holiday in the EU?
YES. Unless your mobile operator has explicitly told you that you have a roaming data
limit, you can use the full amount of data under your domestic contract when you go
to another EU country. Your operator can only apply a roaming data limit if you pay
less than €1.30 per GB.
In my contract I have unlimited voice calls, text messages and data at home. Are they also unlimited when I travel in the EU?
YES. Your calls and texts will also be unlimited when you travel in the EU, and, as your
contract includes unlimited data, your operator must provide you with a large volume
data when you are roaming. Your mobile operator should always tell you how much your
roaming data allowance is, but the exact amount you have depends on how much you pay
for your contract. It must be at least twice the volume obtained by dividing the price
of your mobile contract (excluding VAT) by €1.30 (the maximum price that your operator
has to pay the foreign operator for 1 GB of data when you use your phone in another
EU country).
Let's say you pay €13 (excluding VAT) for your mobile bundle with unlimited calls, SMS and data. When you roam in the EU, you get unlimited calls and SMS and at least 20 GB of data (2 x (€13 / €1.30) = 20).
If you go over your data allowance while roaming, you may have to pay an extra €1.30 per GB of data (+ VAT).
Let's say you pay €13 (excluding VAT) for your mobile bundle with unlimited calls, SMS and data. When you roam in the EU, you get unlimited calls and SMS and at least 20 GB of data (2 x (€13 / €1.30) = 20).
If you go over your data allowance while roaming, you may have to pay an extra €1.30 per GB of data (+ VAT).
I use a pre-paid card for my phone. Can I still use it while I'm in another EU country on holiday?
YES. You will pay exactly the same rates for calls and texts (SMS) when you travel in
the EU as you do in your home country. For data, if you pay per GB, and the price
you pay is less than €1.30 per GB, your operator may apply a roaming volume limit
for data. That limit should be at least the volume obtained by dividing the remaining
credit on your pre-paid card by €1.30 when you start using data roaming services.
For example, if you have €13 left on your SIM card when you start roaming, you will
have at least 10 GB of roaming data (€13 / €1.30 = 10).
I'm going on a week-long cruise around the Mediterranean. Will I be able to use my mobile phone on board at the same prices as I do at home?
YES, but be careful! As long as your mobile phone is connected to a terrestrial mobile
network (e.g. on rivers, lakes or along the coast) in an EU country you will be "roaming"
and therefore you can call, text and use data services at the same prices as you do
at home. However, EU roaming rules only apply to terrestrial mobile networks. So,
if, during your cruise, your mobile phone services are provided through other types
of radio networks, such as via the ship's satellite systems, your calls, texts and
data are not subject to the EU's binding price caps and you could be charged (a lot)
extra. If you want to avoid extra charges, it is safer to deactivate roaming on your
device or activate flight mode while you're at sea.
I live in Spain near the French border and my phone often connects to a French network instead of my Spanish one. Will this mean I use up my roaming limits?
NO. As long as your phone logs on to your domestic network once a day, you are considered
at home that day and not roaming. Your provider should explain to you how you can
avoid inadvertent roaming.
Last checked: 04/07/2025