It happens every day at Zurich Airport. Travelers land, switch on their phones, and 5 minutes later receive a text message from their home carrier: "Welcome to Switzerland. Data costs $2.05/MB."
Switzerland is NOT part of the EU Roaming Zone. Even if you have a "Europe Plan" from Vodafone, O2, or Orange, it likely stops working the moment you cross the Swiss border. For US travelers (AT&T, Verizon), the fees are even higher.
Before you decide to "just use your phone," look at these standard rates for 2026:
| Carrier / Country | Roaming Cost | The Risk |
|---|---|---|
| AT&T / Verizon (USA) | $10 - $15 / Day Pass | Cost per person! A family of 4 pays $60/day. |
| O2 / Vodafone (UK) | £2 - £6 / Day | Often capped speeds or limited data allowance. |
| T-Mobile (Germany) | Tiered Pricing | Switzerland is often in "Zone 2" (Paid Zone). |
Instead of paying your home carrier expensive fees, the smartest way to get mobile internet for tourists is to rent a local Swiss Router.
1. Signal Strength:
Our routers use professional modems. While smartphones lose signal inside the thick walls of Swiss trains (SBB) or high in the mountains (Jungfraujoch, Zermatt), our device keeps a steady 4G/LTE connection.
2. Group Savings:
Roaming passes are charged per phone. Our router is charged per group.