If your eSIM is not working in a hotel, the cause is usually weak indoor signal, thick building materials, unstable 5G, wrong roaming settings, overloaded local networks, or poor room location — not the eSIM itself.
This is one of the most common travel complaints. Many users have great signal outdoors, then lose coverage once inside a hotel room.
The eSIM itself is rarely the issue. Hotels often create difficult radio environments.
You may notice:
- works outside, fails in room
- No Service in hotel basement
- slow data on upper floors
- bars visible but unusable internet
- better signal in lobby than room
This guide explains exactly why your eSIM is not working in a hotel, how to improve coverage fast, and the smartest hotel connectivity setup.
Quick answer: Move near a window, switch to LTE, enable roaming, try another carrier manually, and use hotel Wi-Fi when available.
1. Hotel buildings block signal
This is the #1 cause.
Hotels often use materials that weaken mobile signals:
- concrete walls
- steel frames
- energy-efficient glass
- multiple floors
- thick insulation
This is why lobby signal may be better than inside rooms.
2. Your room location matters
Some rooms have worse coverage:
- interior-facing rooms
- low basement floors
- end-of-hallway rooms
- rooms behind elevator shafts
Fix:
- Move near window
- Step into hallway or balcony
3. 5G may be weaker indoors than LTE
Many hotel environments perform better on LTE.
Fix:
- Set Preferred Network to LTE / 4G
4. Roaming is OFF
Many travel eSIM plans need roaming ON to use partner hotel-area networks.
Fix:
- Select the eSIM
- Turn Data Roaming ON
Helpful reading: Do You Need Roaming for eSIM?
5. Network congestion around tourist hotels
Popular resorts and city hotels may have overloaded nearby towers.
This is common during evenings and check-in hours.
Fix:
- Try LTE
- Move floors
- Use Wi-Fi
6. Automatic network selected weaker carrier
Your travel eSIM may connect to a weaker roaming partner indoors.
Fix:
- Turn Automatic Network Selection OFF
- Try another local carrier manually
7. Hotel Wi-Fi may be the better option
Many hotels provide stronger indoor internet than mobile data.
Use it for:
- video calls
- downloads
- streaming
- work tasks
8. Battery Saver worsens weak signal performance
Low power mode may slow reconnection or background data.
Fix:
- Disable Battery Saver temporarily
Best setup for hotel stays
- eSIM ON
- Roaming ON
- Preferred Network = LTE
- Hotel Wi-Fi saved
- Wi-Fi Calling enabled if supported
How to improve signal quickly
- Move near window
- Try lobby or outside entrance
- Switch to LTE
- Try another carrier
Fast 60-Second Fix Checklist
- Move near window
- Switch to LTE
- Roaming ON
- Use hotel Wi-Fi
- Try another carrier
- Disable battery saver
eSIM vs physical SIM in hotels
Important: eSIM is not weaker than a physical SIM card.
If another guest has better signal, it is usually because of:
- different carrier
- better room location
- different device antenna
Common traveler mistakes
Blaming the eSIM
Usually it is building interference.
Ignoring hotel Wi-Fi
Often the easiest solution.
Forcing 5G indoors
LTE is often better.
Never testing lobby signal
Helpful comparison step.
When to contact support
Contact support if:
- the eSIM also fails outdoors
- multiple carriers fail
- settings are correct but no service anywhere
Helpful page: Contact Support
Final Thoughts
If your eSIM is not working in a hotel, the issue is usually the building environment, room placement, or network congestion — not the eSIM itself.
Use LTE, move near windows, try another carrier, and rely on hotel Wi-Fi when available.
Need dependable travel data? Browse travel eSIM plans before your trip.
FAQ
Why does my eSIM work outside but not in the hotel room?
Walls, glass, and building materials often weaken signal indoors.
Should I use LTE in hotels?
Yes. LTE often performs better indoors than weak 5G.
Can hotel Wi-Fi be better than mobile data?
Yes. Often much better indoors.
Does room location matter?
Yes. Some rooms have much weaker coverage than others.
Is eSIM weaker than a SIM card in hotels?
No. Coverage depends on carrier and building conditions.

