Chunghwa Telecom eSIM: A Local Operator Answer to Travel eSIMs
Taiwan has never been a hard place to get connected. But travel connectivity has changed. Visitors now expect something faster and less physical. They do not always want to swap SIM cards, carry a pocket Wi-Fi router, or hunt for Wi-Fi just to message their hotel. That is where Chunghwa Telecom’s eSIM offer becomes interesting.
Chunghwa Telecom is positioning its prepaid tourist connectivity around a clear promise: unlimited 5G/4G internet, local network access, and an official operator experience. The eSIM simply makes that experience more modern for compatible phones.
What travelers get
Chunghwa Telecom’s tourist prepaid offer includes 5G/4G prepaid SIM card and eSIM options for visitors to Taiwan. The main selling points are unlimited mobile internet, free CHT Wi-Fi access around Taiwan, shareable data, voice credits, and daily package choices depending on the length of stay.
You use it for Google Maps, train routes, LINE messages, taxi apps, bookings, translation, and small details that decide whether the day feels easy or annoying.
The biggest practical advantage is that Chunghwa Telecom is not a reseller sitting between you and the network. It is the network. For travelers who care about stability and local support, that is a strong reason to consider an operator eSIM instead of the cheapest global travel eSIM found five minutes before boarding.
5G/4G Prepaid SIM Card & eSIM
Chunghwa Telecom’s tourist day-pass options combine high-quality mobile internet with voice credit for visitors traveling around Taiwan.
Setup is simple, with a few details
The setup flow is familiar. On iPhone, users go to Settings, select Cellular, add a cellular plan, scan the QR code, enter the confirmation code, and complete the setup. On Android, the process follows the usual route through Network & internet, Mobile Network, and downloading a SIM instead of using a physical one.
One small detail is useful: Chunghwa Telecom lists “0000” as the confirmation code in its setup instructions. That helps, because many travelers get nervous when an eSIM installation suddenly asks for one more code.
The company also says eSIM can be downloaded using free airport Wi-Fi or with help from store staff via CHT Wi-Fi. That is realistic. eSIM sounds fully digital, but in real life people arrive tired, with low battery, and sometimes with a phone that refuses to behave like the tutorial.
Compatibility still needs checking. Chunghwa Telecom lists support for iPhone XS, XR and later models with iOS 12.2 or later, compatible iPads, and Google Pixel 4 and later models. It also warns that some iPhone models sold in China are not compatible with eSIM.
The catch
For many visitors, Chunghwa Telecom eSIM will feel reassuring because it is official, local, and backed by customer service. But it is not necessarily the smoothest option for every traveler.
The tourist prepaid page says products can only be purchased using NTD cash, and Chunghwa Telecom’s eSIM Q&A says travelers from abroad should contact a business office or outlet and prepare identification documents. So this is not always the same experience as buying a travel eSIM online in two minutes from home.
READ MORE: Chunghwa Telecom Chair Warns Over Cheap Travel eSIM Risks
There is also the issue of recovery. If you delete the eSIM profile by mistake, the plan itself is not automatically cancelled, and re-application after cancellation can require a NT$300 fee and processing at direct selling stores in Taiwan. From a traveler’s view, that is less forgiving than many app-based eSIM platforms.
This is why Chunghwa Telecom eSIM should be seen as a premium local connectivity option, not a universal replacement for every travel eSIM. If you want official Taiwan network access, voice credits, and local support, it fits well. If you want to buy before departure, pay by card, avoid counters, and manage everything in an app, providers such as Airalo, Nomad eSIM, Ubigi, Saily, GigSky, or Yesim may feel easier.
Why this matters
For years, travel eSIM brands won because they made roaming feel outdated. They simplified buying, activation, and country switching. Now local operators are answering with their own eSIM options, but with a different strength: direct network ownership, local support, and sometimes voice capability.
Taiwan is a good example because the destination has strong mobile infrastructure and many tech-aware visitors. A traveler arriving for Computex, a cycling trip, a family visit, or a food-focused week in Taipei does not want to test connectivity. They want it to work.
Chunghwa Telecom’s offer feels strongest for travelers who value reliability over maximum pre-trip convenience. It is not trying to be the flashiest app in the travel eSIM market. It is trying to be the official, dependable Taiwan option.
Final thoughts
Chunghwa Telecom eSIM is a smart choice for travelers who want local Taiwan connectivity from the operator itself, especially if they are comfortable buying or confirming details on arrival and want unlimited 5G/4G access with CHT Wi-Fi included.
But it also shows where operator eSIMs still need work. The buying journey should become more digital, card-friendly, and easier to manage remotely. Travel eSIM companies have raised expectations, and local operators cannot ignore that forever.
The best answer is not “operator eSIM or travel eSIM.” It is matching the product to the trip. For Taiwan-only travel where reliability and local support matter, Chunghwa Telecom deserves serious attention. For multi-country Asian trips, last-minute online purchases, or app-first travelers, a specialist travel eSIM may still be the easier fit.

