Orange Spain in Japan: Roaming vs eSIM (2026)

An Orange Spain customer heading to Japan? Your plan covers the European Union, but the archipelago sits in the World zone, where every megabyte is pricey if you don't plan ahead. Orange offers travel passes and add-ons to cap the bill, but is that really the best option against a dedicated data eSIM? This guide compares, numbers in hand, Orange Spain roaming and a Japan eSIM on the criteria that matter on a trip: real price, gigabytes, speed, tethering and activation.

Orange Spain in Japan

TL;DR — In Japan, Orange Spain roaming is expensive for little data, outside the included EU zone. A PlanJapan data eSIM offers 10 to 50 GB dedicated for a fraction of the cost, with unlimited hotspot. Save up to 80% while keeping your Orange number for calls.

→ See the Japan eSIM

Orange Spain roaming in Japan: how it works

With Orange Spain, your plan includes use in Spain and the European Union, but Japan falls outside that zone. There, two situations: either you activate a travel pass or add-on before leaving, or your data switches to the out-of-bundle rate, billed at a high price that can spike your bill in a single afternoon of browsing. The travel pass is the safety net Orange provides to avoid the nasty surprise.

In practice, these passes are capped data buckets, valid for a set number of days, that you activate from your account area or the My Orange app before leaving. For the World zone that includes Japan, the volumes offered stay modest, and the per-gigabyte price is nothing like that of a locally bought eSIM. Once the bucket is used up, you fall back to the out-of-bundle rate unless you buy another pass.

The classic Japan trap: people underestimate their usage. Between Google Maps running constantly, Google Translate in front of a menu, restaurant searches and social media, you easily pass 1 GB a day. A pass sized for a few hundred megabytes melts in half a day. Always check the exact volume and rate in your Orange app before you leave, as the offers change regularly.

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Pro tip — Before you go, turn off automatic app updates and photo backup while roaming. These two alone can empty a roaming pass without you noticing.

The real math for a two-week trip

The travel pass looks reasonable as long as you look at it in isolation. The problem shows up when you put it against real Japanese usage over time. A typical trip runs 10 to 16 days: Tokyo, a stop in Nikko or Takayama, then Kyoto, Nara and Osaka via the Shinkansen. You use your phone every day, and the real need is around 10 to 20 GB for two weeks.

Here's the ballpark cost of covering a 14-day trip, Orange Spain roaming versus a dedicated data eSIM:

Option Data Indicative price Fits 2 weeks?
Orange roaming pass (small bucket)A few hundred MBHigh per GBNo, buy it several times
Orange out-of-bundleBy the MBVery highAvoid at all costs
PlanJapan eSIM 50 GB50 GB dedicatedOne-time, from $16.99Yes, with room to spare

The logic is obvious: with a roaming pass, you pay a lot for little data and risk having to buy more mid-trip. A 50 GB eSIM gives you headroom for two weeks of Maps, social media and light evening streaming, with no counter to watch and no out-of-bundle fear. Our full eSIM vs roaming in Japan guide breaks down every scenario. To compare Spanish carriers, also read our Movistar in Japan and Vodafone Spain in Japan analyses.

"A roaming pass sells you a little expensive data; an eSIM gives you enough to cover the whole trip."

Let's be fair: Orange roaming has a genuine upside. You change nothing, your Spanish number stays active, your calls and texts work with zero setup. For a 24 or 48-hour stopover with very light use, activating a small pass can be enough. But as soon as the trip runs a few days and you genuinely plan to use the internet, the eSIM becomes far more rational. Our Japan eSIM price guide gives you the numbers.

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The PlanJapan eSIM: what you get instead

A PlanJapan eSIM is a virtual SIM card, data only, that you install in a few minutes on a compatible iPhone or Android. It doesn't replace your Orange line: it runs alongside it through dual SIM. Your Orange number stays on your main SIM for calls and texts, and the eSIM handles all your mobile data in Japan.

In practice, you buy your plan before you leave, you get a QR code by email, you install it, and you activate the eSIM when you land at Narita or Haneda airport. The moment you touch down, your phone connects to the partner network — NTT Docomo or SoftBank depending on the plan — and Google Maps works while you find the train into Tokyo. No physical card to fumble with, no shop to track down.

The catalogue is simple: classic data plans of 10, 20 or 50 GB valid for 30 days after activation, and unlimited plans from 10 to 30 days for heavy users. No Japanese number, no traditional calls over the network — but WhatsApp, iMessage, Signal and Telegram all work fine through your Orange number that stays on your line. That's the standard way to stay reachable without paying roaming.

Key takeaway

  • The eSIM is data only: it complements your Orange line, it doesn't replace it.
  • You keep your Orange number for calls and texts through dual SIM.
  • Install via QR code, activate at the airport, no physical card.

Speed, coverage and hotspot: the technical match-up

On paper, roaming and the eSIM use Japanese networks. The difference is in the details. With Orange roaming, your carrier resells access to a partner network, and the speed can be throttled below a local eSIM's, especially once part of the bucket is used. You also depend on Orange's roaming agreements, not necessarily the best network available on the ground.

A PlanJapan eSIM runs on NTT Docomo's infrastructure, which covers more than 99% of inhabited territory, or on SoftBank. In cities, you get smooth 4G/5G for streaming and browsing. On the Shinkansen between Tokyo and Kyoto, the connection stays stable across most of the route, with a few drops in tunnels — behaviour that's identical regardless of how you connect.

99.9% NTT Docomo coverage
50 GB largest eSIM plan
5 min eSIM activation

The real deciding factor is tethering. With an unlimited PlanJapan eSIM, hotspot is unlimited: you connect your laptop, your tablet or someone's phone with no dedicated cap. With an Orange roaming pass, tethering draws from your small bucket and drains it even faster. For a remote worker or a couple sharing a connection, the unlimited eSIM changes everything.

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Heads up — Once the roaming pass is used up, Orange falls back to the per-megabyte out-of-bundle rate. In Japan, a few hours of browsing at that rate can exceed the total cost of your trip on an eSIM. Switch off data roaming if you no longer have an active pass.

Which PlanJapan plan to pick based on trip length

The right plan depends on how long you stay and how you use data. Here are our recommendations so you neither overpay nor run out:

Plan Ideal length Profile
10 GB5 days or lessShort trip, measured use (Maps, transit, messaging)
20 GBAround 1 weekStandard use (social media, Maps, apps)
50 GB10 days or moreLong trip or heavy use (light streaming, occasional hotspot)
Unlimited10 days or moreNever watch your data: streaming, continuous hotspot, remote work

For most travellers spending two weeks between Tokyo, Kyoto and Osaka, 50 GB comfortably covers Google Maps, social media and a little evening streaming at the hotel. If you plan to tether continuously or binge shows on the Shinkansen, the unlimited plan is the worry-free choice. Our roundup of the best eSIMs for Japan helps you choose between data and unlimited.

One activation point to know: for classic data plans, you can buy your eSIM up to six months before departure and activate it freely within 180 days. For unlimited plans, buy within the month before you go, since the activation window is 30 days. Our guide on when to activate your Japan eSIM covers every scenario.

Keeping your Orange number and installing the eSIM

The number-one worry for travellers: "If I use an eSIM, do I lose my Orange number?" No. Thanks to dual SIM, your Orange line stays active to receive calls and texts — including bank verification codes — while the PlanJapan eSIM handles data. Just turn off data roaming on your Orange line so you don't trigger a pass or out-of-bundle charge by accident.

1
Buy your eSIM before departure

Pick your plan, get the QR code by email within minutes.

2
Install the QR code

Settings → Cellular → Add eSIM. Do it calmly at home in Spain, on Wi-Fi.

3
Turn off roaming on your Orange line

Switch off data roaming on your Orange SIM to avoid passes and out-of-bundle charges.

4
Activate on arrival in Japan

At Narita or Haneda, select the eSIM as your data line. The connection comes up in seconds.

This dual-SIM setup is exactly what our dual SIM eSIM Japan guide recommends. And for the practical details on landing, see our dedicated article on activating at Narita and Haneda airport. In a few minutes, you're connected for the whole trip, with no roaming-pass counter to watch.

FAQ — Orange Spain, roaming and the eSIM in Japan

Does Orange Spain roaming work in Japan?

Yes, but Japan is outside the included EU zone: you need to activate a travel pass or add-on, otherwise data switches to the out-of-bundle rate, much more expensive. The pass gives you a limited bucket for a set duration. Check the exact volume and price in your Orange app before you leave.

How much data do you need for two weeks in Japan?

Plan for around 10 to 20 GB for two weeks with normal use: Google Maps running constantly, social media, translation and a little streaming. That's well beyond what a classic roaming pass offers, which is why a dedicated 20 or 50 GB eSIM makes sense for the trip.

Does an eSIM replace my Orange line?

No. The PlanJapan eSIM is data only and runs alongside your Orange line through dual SIM. You keep your number for calls and texts, and the eSIM handles data in Japan. Just turn off data roaming on your main line.

Can I keep my Orange number active in Japan?

Yes. Your number stays reachable for calls and texts as long as your Orange SIM is active, even without data roaming. You'll still receive bank verification codes and messages. For internet calls, WhatsApp, iMessage or Signal work on your usual number.

Does the eSIM allow tethering?

Yes, tethering (hotspot) is available on most phones with a PlanJapan eSIM, with no dedicated data cap on the unlimited plans. It's a clear advantage over roaming, where tethering drains your small bucket even faster.

When should I buy and activate my eSIM for Japan?

For a classic data plan, buy up to six months ahead and activate within 180 days, ideally when you land at the airport. For an unlimited plan, buy within the month before departure, since the activation window is 30 days. Always activate once in Japan to make the most of the validity.

Is Orange roaming sometimes more convenient?

Yes, for a very short stopover (one or two days) with very light use, activating a small pass avoids any installation and keeps your line as is. Beyond a few days of real use, the gap in price and volume with an eSIM becomes hard to ignore.

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