<h2>I Did Not Expect to Love Colombia's Cell Coverage This Much</h2>
<p>When I was planning my Bogota-Medellin-Cartagena triangle last year, I assumed cell coverage would be spotty. I was wrong. Colombia's mobile infrastructure has improved dramatically, and with the right eSIM, you will have solid 4G in every major city and most of the routes between them.</p>
<p>South America as a whole has come a long way. But it is also a continent of extremes — incredible coverage in cities, dead zones in the mountains, and some genuinely strange carrier situations at border crossings. Here is what I learned.</p>
<h2>Colombia: Bogota, Medellin, Cartagena</h2>
<p><strong>Coverage reality:</strong> Bogota has excellent 4G everywhere. I ran speed tests in La Candelaria, Chapinero, Zona T, and the airport — consistently 25-50 Mbps on Claro's network. Medellin is even better, particularly in El Poblado and Laureles, where I hit 60 Mbps multiple times. Cartagena's Old City has solid coverage, though it can dip in some of the thick-walled colonial buildings.</p>
<p><strong>Carrier situation:</strong> Claro (owned by America Movil) dominates Colombia with the widest coverage. Movistar is second. Most travel eSIMs route through Claro, which is the right choice.</p>
<p><strong>Between cities:</strong> The Bogota-to-Medellin route (whether you fly or take the bus) has decent coverage along major highways. If you are doing the popular Guatape day trip from Medellin, signal holds up fine. The Cocora Valley near Salento has patchy coverage once you start hiking, but the town itself is connected.</p>
<p><strong>What I wish I knew:</strong> Uber works perfectly in all three cities and is the safest way to get around. It runs on data, so having an eSIM means never being stranded trying to hail a street taxi. Also, many restaurants in Cartagena use QR code menus — another reason you want data on your phone.</p>
<h2>Peru: Lima, Cusco, Machu Picchu</h2>
<p>Peru is the most popular South American destination and also the trickiest for connectivity because of the altitude.</p>
<p><strong>Lima:</strong> Solid 4G throughout Miraflores, Barranco, and Centro. Claro and Movistar both perform well. Expect 20-40 Mbps in most areas. The food scene in Lima is world-class, and you will want data to look up restaurant recommendations on the fly — trust me, the ceviche at La Mar is worth finding.</p>
<p><strong>Cusco:</strong> Good 4G in the city center and San Blas neighborhood. At 3,400 meters elevation, your phone works fine but you might not. The Plaza de Armas area has consistent signal. Once you head out toward the Sacred Valley, coverage becomes intermittent. Ollantaytambo has basic coverage. Pisac market area is usually connected.</p>
<p><strong>Machu Picchu:</strong> Here is the honest truth — there is limited cell signal at the ruins themselves. You will get a weak signal at the entrance area and near the bus drop-off at Aguas Calientes (the town at the base). But once you are inside the ruins exploring? Minimal to zero signal. Download your maps and any reference materials over WiFi at your hotel in Aguas Calientes the night before.</p>
<p><strong>The altitude factor:</strong> This is something nobody talks about. At elevations above 3,000 meters, cell towers are fewer and farther between, and the thinner atmosphere actually affects signal propagation slightly. In Cusco and the Sacred Valley, expect slower connections and more dead spots compared to sea-level cities. This is not an eSIM issue — it is a physics issue that affects every phone on every carrier.</p>
<h2>The Rest of South America: Quick Hits</h2>
<p><strong>Argentina (Buenos Aires):</strong> Excellent 4G. Claro and Personal are the main carriers. Buenos Aires has coverage comparable to any European capital. Expect 30-60 Mbps in Palermo, San Telmo, and Recoleta. Patagonia is a different story — coverage is limited to towns along Route 40 and major tourist stops like El Calafate and Bariloche.</p>
<p><strong>Chile (Santiago, Valparaiso):</strong> Very good coverage. Entel and Claro are strong. Santiago's metro has cell coverage in most stations, which is a nice surprise. The Atacama Desert around San Pedro de Atacama has basic coverage in town, but expect nothing once you are out at the geysers or salt flats.</p>
<p><strong>Brazil (Rio, Sao Paulo):</strong> Great urban coverage on Claro or Vivo networks. 4G LTE is widespread. Just be smart about using your phone visibly on the street in certain areas of Rio — this is not a connectivity issue, it is a safety tip.</p>
<h2>Border Crossings and Regional Plans</h2>
<p>If you are doing the classic multi-country South American trip — say, Lima to La Paz to Santiago — a regional Latin America eSIM plan is the way to go. Switching eSIMs at every border is annoying and more expensive.</p>
<p>Regional plans typically cover: Colombia, Peru, Argentina, Chile, Brazil, Ecuador, Bolivia, Uruguay, Paraguay, and Mexico. One data pool, multiple countries, one price. Usually $15-25 for 5 GB with 30-day validity.</p>
<p>When you cross a border, your phone will automatically latch onto the strongest available carrier in the new country. Sometimes it takes a few minutes. If it does not connect automatically, toggle Airplane Mode on and off to force a network search.</p>
<h2>Practical Tips from the Road</h2>
<ul> <li><strong>Download offline maps for every city.</strong> Google Maps offline mode has saved me more times than I can count in South America. Do this over WiFi before leaving your hotel each morning.</li> <li><strong>WhatsApp is king.</strong> All of South America runs on WhatsApp. Restaurants, tour operators, taxi drivers, Airbnb hosts — everyone communicates via WhatsApp. Having data means you have access to your entire travel coordination ecosystem.</li> <li><strong>Uber/Cabify/DiDi work in most major cities.</strong> All require data. Having an eSIM makes ride-hailing seamless and way safer than street taxis.</li> <li><strong>3-5 GB is enough for most trips.</strong> I used 3.8 GB over 12 days in Colombia with moderate usage (maps, WhatsApp, social media, some photo uploads). Unless you are streaming video or sharing hotspot, 5 GB is plenty.</li> </ul>
<p>South America is one of those places where having reliable data transforms your experience. You go from nervous tourist checking a paper map to confident traveler navigating like a local. Get the eSIM before you fly.</p>