If your eSIM is not working after Low Power Mode, the most common reasons are mobile data restrictions, delayed network reconnection, disabled background services, weak roaming refresh, data saver conflicts, or temporary modem glitches after battery saving mode ends.
This is a common travel problem. Users enable Low Power Mode to save battery during flights, long sightseeing days, train travel, or while using maps abroad.
Then after turning it OFF, the eSIM may seem slow, disconnected, or unable to load apps.
The good news: in most cases, your eSIM is completely fine. The issue is usually battery-saving restrictions or delayed reconnection.
Quick answer: Turn Low Power Mode OFF, restart mobile data, enable roaming, check that your eSIM is selected for data, and restart the phone if needed.
1. Low Power Mode Limited Mobile Activity
This is the #1 reason.
Battery saver modes often reduce:
- background data
- automatic sync
- network scanning
- app refresh
- radio performance behavior
When disabled, the phone may need time to restore normal network behavior.
Fix:
- Turn Low Power Mode OFF
- Wait 1–2 minutes
2. Mobile Data Did Not Refresh
Some devices keep a stale data session after battery-saving mode.
Fix:
- Turn Mobile Data OFF
- Turn Mobile Data ON again
3. Data Roaming Is OFF
Many travel eSIM plans require roaming ON abroad.
Fix:
- Select your eSIM
- Turn Data Roaming ON
Helpful guides:
4. Wrong SIM Is Selected for Data
Dual SIM devices may switch priorities after battery optimizations.
Fix:
- Select the travel eSIM for mobile data
Helpful guide:
5. Background App Restrictions Continue
Maps, chat apps, Uber, or email may appear broken even when the eSIM works.
Fix:
- Disable battery optimization for key apps
6. Weak Signal + Power Saving Combination
Low Power Mode in poor coverage areas can delay reconnecting to stronger towers.
Fix:
- Move outdoors
- Try near a window
7. Network Selection Is Stuck
The phone may remain attached to a weak network after battery saver mode.
Fix:
- Toggle Airplane Mode ON/OFF
- Try manual network selection
8. VPN or Private DNS Conflict
Some VPN apps reconnect badly after power-saving states.
Fix:
- Disable VPN temporarily
9. Device Needs Full Restart
A reboot often restores the modem immediately.
Fix:
- Restart the phone
10. Data Saver Is Still Enabled
Some users turn on both Low Power Mode and Data Saver.
Fix:
- Disable Data Saver temporarily
Best Setup After Low Power Mode
- Low Power Mode OFF
- Mobile Data ON
- Roaming ON
- eSIM selected for data
- Strong signal
How to Fix on iPhone
- Settings > Battery
- Low Power Mode OFF
- Settings > Cellular
- Cellular Data = eSIM
How to Fix on Android
- Settings > Battery
- Battery Saver OFF
- Settings > SIM Manager
- Preferred Data SIM = eSIM
Fast 60-Second Fix Checklist
- Turn battery saver OFF
- Toggle mobile data
- Turn roaming ON
- Select eSIM for data
- Toggle airplane mode
- Restart phone
Common Traveler Mistakes
Thinking the eSIM is broken
Usually it is only battery-saving restrictions.
Using weak coverage areas
Signal may be the real issue.
Ignoring roaming settings
Very common abroad.
Leaving Data Saver enabled
Can slow or block apps.
When to Contact Support
Contact support if:
- the eSIM never reconnects after restart
- you always lose data after Low Power Mode
- manual network selection fails
Helpful page: Contact Support
Final Thoughts
If your eSIM is not working after Low Power Mode, the issue is usually battery-saving restrictions, stale data sessions, or reconnection delays — not a broken eSIM.
Disable battery saver, refresh mobile data, and restart if needed.
Need reliable travel connectivity with better battery life? Browse travel eSIM plans before your next trip.
FAQ
Can Low Power Mode disable eSIM?
No. It usually limits background activity and may delay reconnection.
Why do I have signal but no internet?
The data session may need refresh after battery-saving mode.
Should I turn roaming ON?
Yes. Many travel eSIM plans require roaming abroad.
Should I restart the phone?
Yes. Restarting often solves the issue quickly.
Is my eSIM broken?
No. Usually it is a temporary battery-mode related issue.

