SIM cards and internet in Georgia: staying connected 2026
SIM cards and home internet in Georgia: the mobile operators, where to buy a SIM, tourist vs local plans, eSIM, and fast home fibre.
Georgia is an easy place to stay online: mobile data is cheap and fast, 4G covers the cities and most populated areas, and home fibre is among the cheapest in the region — one reason remote workers love the country. Here’s how to get connected.
Mobile operators
There are three networks: Magti, Silknet and Cellfie. Coverage and prices are broadly similar; Magti and Silknet generally have the widest reach, including mountain areas. All sell prepaid SIMs with generous data bundles.
Buying a SIM
Buy from an official operator store or the airport kiosks, and bring your passport (SIMs are registered). Staff in city stores usually speak some English or Russian. If you’re staying a while, ask for a local monthly plan rather than a short tourist package — the bundles are far better value.
eSIM — connected before you land
If your phone supports eSIM, you can arrive already online and switch to a local SIM later. A travel eSIM is the simplest option for the first days — you can set one up through the box below.
Home internet
Home internet is fibre: fast and inexpensive, with Magti and Silknet the main providers. A rented flat often has a connection already — ask the landlord; otherwise setup takes a few days. Free Wi-Fi in cafés and coworking spaces is widespread.
What to keep in mind
- Plans and prices change — check the current bundles on the operator’s site or app before topping up.
- You’ll often need a local number for bank apps and deliveries, so sort the SIM out early; see the bank account guide.
- Coverage is good in towns and on main roads but can drop in remote gorges and high mountains.
More on settling in is in the relocation guide; for a place to stay, see long-term rental.



