Arrival Pack
Mobile phone being set up with an Oman SIM card

A local SIM card is one of the fastest ways to make your first days in Oman easier. It affects navigation, banking messages, delivery coordination, app setup, and basic peace of mind.

The right choice depends less on brand loyalty and more on how quickly you need to be connected, how much data you use, and whether you want the easiest short-term setup or a more settled long-term plan.

Getting a SIM card is one of the very first things you’ll do after landing in Muscat — probably within your first hour, right there at the airport arrivals hall. All three operators have counters before you even reach the taxi rank. Here’s the short version of what we’d tell a friend picking us up from the airport: grab an Ooredoo prepaid for now, and sort out a proper plan once your residency card comes through.

Our Honest Recommendation

The Three Operators Compared — How They Actually Differ

FeatureOoredooOmantelVodafone Oman
Market share~46%~51% (state-owned)Third operator
Urban coverageExcellentExcellentGood
Rural/wadi coverageVery goodBestLimited
5GYesYes (strongest, 2300 MHz)Yes (700 MHz, urban)
eSIMYesYesCheck availability
Prepaid fromOMR 2 (Mousbak)OMR 2 (Hayyak)OMR 2
Airport counterYesYesYes

Ooredoo — Our Pick for Most Expats

For most expats living mainly in Muscat, Ooredoo is usually the easiest starting choice. Coverage is excellent, plans are slightly more affordable than Omantel, and the Ooredoo Talk app provides legal VoIP calls to 200+ international destinations — a feature unique in Oman that most expats don’t know exists.

Monthly postpaid plans: OMR 4–25. Starter Mousbak prepaid: OMR 2 including 500MB/10 days.

Omantel — Best Coverage Nationwide

Omantel is the state-owned operator with the largest network. If you travel outside Muscat — wadis, mountains, rural areas — Omantel’s coverage is unmatched. 5G on 2300 MHz scored 4/5 in coverage awards. Prepaid ‘Hayyak’ from OMR 2.

Vodafone Oman — Best for Urban Budget

Launched January 2021. Competitive budget plans. Coverage outside cities is limited — avoid if you visit wadis or drive between cities regularly.

How to Get Your SIM Card Set Up

New arrivals with just a passport get a prepaid SIM at the airport. All three operators have counters in Muscat International Airport arrivals. Once you have your residence card, upgrade to postpaid.

Also available at: Omantel/Ooredoo stores, LuLu Hypermarket, Ooredoo self-service kiosks in malls.

Prepaid vs Postpaid

Prepaid: passport sufficient, limited plans, top-up based. Postpaid: requires residence card, better data allowances, monthly billing. Most expats switch to postpaid within 30 days.

eSIM Options

Both Omantel and Ooredoo offer eSIM for compatible iPhones and Androids. Useful if your phone supports dual SIM — keep your home country eSIM active for the transition period.

VoIP and WhatsApp Calls — The Oman Reality

WhatsApp and Skype voice calls to telephone lines are technically blocked in Oman. The Ooredoo Talk app is the official legal workaround — most expats don’t know it exists and use risky VPN alternatives. Oman mobile data speed: ranked 40th globally at 135 Mbps median download.

A Few Things We Wish We’d Known

Related: Utilities Setup | Bank Account | Visa Guide | Arrival Pack

Frequently Asked Questions

Which SIM card should I buy at Muscat airport?
For most new arrivals, an Ooredoo prepaid SIM is the simplest first choice.

Do I need a residence card for postpaid?
Usually yes. A passport is generally enough for prepaid, but postpaid normally needs your residence card.

Which operator is best outside Muscat?
Omantel is usually the safer choice for remote-area coverage.

Should I stay prepaid or switch later?
Most expats start prepaid, then move to postpaid once their residence card is ready.