Studying in France: which mobile plan should you choose?

Our ranking of French mobile plans and travel eSIMs, tested for international students.

⏳Read Time:

16 minutes

📅 Last Updated:

02.07.2026

🔎 Our Recap

No time for the full thing? Here's the gist for picking a mobile plan in France:

Our top 3: Lebara (FR/EN, eSIM, great value), Free (France's most popular operator — excellent value, but a French-only website), Syma (low prices, English site). Go for an eSIM: pick a provider with an eSIM so you can get online from day one. With a physical SIM, it gets posted to you — which means you need a French address first. Our take on travel eSIMs: GoMoWorld, Airalo, Roamless and Saily offer flexible eSIMs covering lots of destinations. Great for short trips, but far pricier than a French plan — and you get no French number, so no texts and no normal calls, everything runs over the internet (WhatsApp and the like), which makes paperwork trickier. We only recommend them for short stays 😉 What's new in 2026: SFR, one of France's four big operators, has just been sold, and its customers and brands will be split between the remaining players (Free, Orange, Bouygues). That could affect MVNOs like Lebara and Syma, which run on the SFR network. We'll update this comparison as soon as we know more.

Just landed in France and not sure which mobile plan to go for? It's a crowded market, and most of the websites are — unfortunately — in French only. Don't worry, we've done the digging for you! 👌

Good to know:want the bigger picture on French mobile plans and every operator out there? We've got a full guide on the topic too.

How did we build this comparison?

Our criteria

As always, we ranked the best options for international students by asking ourselves one simple question: what would we tell a close friend arriving in France for the first time?

To compare mobile providers, we looked at four things:

  • Price: we don't quote exact rates — with all the promos, they change constantly — but we place each provider in a price bracket.
  • English access: website, app, customer support. A big deal for international students, most of whom don't speak French (yet).
  • Reputation: Trustpilot score, number of reviews, and what our own community tells us.
  • Hands-on testing: we've used most of these operators ourselves for months.

A 100% independent take

To be clear: nobody pays us to rank a provider 1st, 2nd or 3rd. We give you the same advice we'd give a friend, plain and simple.

And if you'd rather see every operator on the market instead of a shortlist, head to our main guide to student mobile plans, or grab our PDF guide further down the page 😉

The best mobile plans for international students compared

Here's our top 3 French mobile plans for international students in 2026. We've thrown in Orange and Sosh as well: Orange because it has the best network in France, and Sosh — its budget brand — for the great prices it offers on that same network. Neither cracks our top 3, but both are worth a look.

OperatorNetworkEnglish website & supporteSIMPrice rangeTrustpilot
Lebara 🥇SFRYes (FR + EN)YesVery affordable4.8/5
Free 🥈FreeFrench onlyYesAffordable (broadband + mobile bundle)2.7/5 (see note)
Syma 🥉SFRYes (FR + EN, partial)NoVery affordable3.5/5
OrangeOrangePartial (expat offers)YesHigher1.7/5 (see note)
SoshOrangeFrench onlyYesAffordable3.5/5

A word on the Trustpilot scores

Two scores caught us off guard: Free (2.7/5) and Orange (1.7/5). For Free, it's the classic big-operator trap — across nearly 30,000 reviews, sheer volume drags the average down (billing disputes, long hold times), even though our own experience has been very good and our community rates it 4.6/5. Orange was an even bigger surprise: it's known for solid support and the best network in the country, so if anything, its weak point is price, not service.

There's also a built-in bias with this kind of essential service. When everything just works, people rarely bother leaving a glowing review — it feels normal, the way running water or electricity does. Compare that to a restaurant, where great service makes you want to rave about it: here, the good experiences go unmentioned while the bad ones pile up the moment something slips (a delay at a busy time, a billing hiccup).

So take these scores with a pinch of salt. If an operator made our table, it's because we'd happily recommend it: our own experience and the feedback we hear are still positive, and these are among the best options out there for an international student.

🥇 Lebara

Lebara is our top pick for an international student in France. Why?

  • Website and support in both English and French: you can browse, sign up and ask questions in English — a rarity in France.
  • eSIM available: you can be up and running minutes after you land, with no wait for a SIM to arrive in the post.
  • Rock-bottom prices: entry plans around €5–6/month with loads of data (double-check when you sign up — promos come and go).
  • Trustpilot 4.8/5 across more than 9,000 reviews — rock solid.

The one catch: Lebara runs on the SFR network, which is currently being bought out (more on that below). Worth keeping an eye on.

🥈 Free

Free blew up the French market fifteen years ago and never looked back. It's also our top pick for home internet, and the broadband + mobile bundle is hard to beat.

  • Good coverage, even outside big cities: where its own network thins out, Free piggybacks on Orange's.
  • eSIM available.
  • €2 plan (2h of calls, unlimited texts, ~50 MB of data) to stay reachable on a shoestring, plus the Free 5G plan at around €19.99/month (€9.99 if you have a Freebox).
  • Freebox + mobile bundle: get a Freebox and your mobile plan drops to €9.99. See our home internet and utilities guide.

Why not #1? The website is French-only, which can be a real wall if you arrive without the language.

🥉 Syma

Syma is great value for money: entry plans around €5–6/month, about €7.99 for 20 GB.

  • English interface via a language switcher (the URL stays the same, so it's only partial — but perfectly usable).
  • Very low prices, in the same range as Lebara.
  • Runs on the SFR network (same caveat as Lebara about the ongoing sale).

Why 3rd and not 2nd? Mainly because Syma has no eSIM — you'll have to wait for a physical SIM in the post, which is a real pain when you've just arrived and don't have a French address yet. Otherwise it's neck and neck with Free: pick Free if you speak French, Syma if you only speak English.

What about Orange / Sosh?

They're in the table above, just not in our top 3. Here's why:

  • Orange: the historic operator, with the best network in France, especially out in the countryside (ARCEP data). The flip side: prices are noticeably steeper. If you live somewhere remote and coverage is your number-one concern, Orange is worth a look.
  • Sosh: Orange's budget brand. Same Orange network, far cheaper, and a better Trustpilot score — but the website is French-only.

For the full line-up (Bouygues and the rest), see our main student mobile plan guide.

The community's top pick

For your SIM card, our top reco is Lebara

Plans starting at €5.99/month, with an eSIM so you can stay connected from day 1.

📌9,126 reviews · Excellent

Travel eSIMs: handy, but often overpriced

Travel eSIMs (data only, no French number) are handy if you travel a lot, or if you're only in France for a few weeks. Here are the 4 main players:

Travel eSIMTypeFrance coveragePrice rangeTrustpilot
GoMoWorldData onlyYes~€20 for 50 GB3.9/5
AiraloData onlyYes (Orange network)~€21 for 20 GB4.0/5
RoamlessData onlyYes~€21 for 20 GB4.5/5
SailyData onlyYes (Europe plan)~€28 for 20 GB4.7/5

Our honest take on travel eSIMs

Travel eSIMs were a genuinely great deal 3–4 years ago, back when they were rarer and standard plans didn't include them. These days, they're a bit pricey for what you get.

  • Worth it if you're already used to them, or for a very short stay (a two-week summer school, say).
  • For a longer stay (a semester, a full year), the cost adds up fast — and you won't have a French number to receive texts (just WhatsApp and the like), which is a real headache for paperwork.
Our advice:for a study stay, go with a regular French provider (Lebara, Free) instead — they now offer eSIMs at far better prices. Plenty of data in France and across the EU, sometimes for a third of what a travel eSIM costs.

French plans already include data you can use across the whole European Economic Area at home rates ("roam like at home"). So if you nip off to Barcelona or Berlin for the weekend, you'll stay connected 😉

2026: how the SFR sale could affect your choice

Big news: in June 2026, the joint deal to acquire SFR was signed. Bouygues, Free and Orange are carving up the assets (pending competition-authority approval, with the deal expected to close in late 2027).

Why does this matter to you? Because Lebara and Syma run on the SFR network. Sooner or later, they'll have to move to a different one.

Two ways it could go:

  • They move to Orange (the best national network): great news for quality.
  • They move elsewhere: we'll look at each case and update this ranking to match the new lay of the land.

In the near term (the 2026 and 2027 school years), nothing changes for you as a subscriber. But it's worth watching, and we'll update this as soon as there's news.

French SIM Card & Top Plans

Our complete guide to French mobile plans

No spam, just useful stuff.

Our recommendation, by profile

Here's what we'd suggest depending on your situation. This also serves as our conclusion, so we'll keep the repetition to a minimum.

  • 🥇 Just arrived and don't speak French yet? Lebara. English website and support, an eSIM you can switch on in minutes, very low prices — everything you need to get connected from day one without the admin stress.
  • 🛜 Getting a home internet box too? Free, no question. The Freebox + mobile bundle at €9.99 is unbeatable. See our home internet guide for students for how to pair the two.
  • ⛰️ Living somewhere rural or mountainous (the Alps, the Pyrenees, a remote stretch of coast)? Free is a safe bet even off the beaten track (it leans on Orange's network where its own runs thin). For the very best coverage, look at Sosh — same Orange network, far cheaper than Orange itself.
  • 📆 Short trip, or no time to set up a proper plan? A Saily or Airalo eSIM will do the trick. But for a stay of several months, switch to a French plan — your wallet will thank you.

Two things to remember: get a French eSIM you can activate without an address, so you're reachable right away, and go for value (Lebara out front, Free and Syma close behind). Travel eSIMs are for short stays or weekend trips outside the EU.

Sources

Frequently

Asked Questions

Answers to the questions we get most often about mobile plans for international students in France

SIM card or eSIM: which one should I pick on arrival?

If your phone supports eSIM, go for it: you'll be connected in minutes, with nothing to wait for in the post. Lebara and Free both have easy-to-activate eSIMs. A physical SIM still makes sense if your phone doesn't do eSIM, or if you want to pop it into another device 😉

Do I need a French bank account to get a mobile plan?

Most plans with monthly direct debit require a French IBAN (SEPA). You can get one for free, for instance with N26. For the very first payment, or for prepaid offers, an international card or PayPal is often enough.

Does my French plan work elsewhere in Europe?

Yes. Since 2017, French mobile plans work across the whole EU and EEA at the same conditions as in France ("roam like at home"). Part of your data allowance can be used in Europe: handy for a weekend in Barcelona or Berlin at no extra cost. Just check your plan's "Europe" data cap.

Is a travel eSIM enough for a full study stay in France?

For a few weeks (summer school, short exchange), yes. For a multi-month study stay, no: you won't have a French number to receive bank, CAF or OFII SMS, and the cost adds up fast. A French plan with eSIM works out much cheaper and gives you a real local number 😉

How do I keep my number if I switch providers?

You use your RIO code (Relevé d'Identité Opérateur), which is free and obtained by dialling 3179 from your line. You give it to your new provider when you sign up, and they handle the transfer. Your number is ported within a few days, with no significant downtime.

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