Rogers Hikes Prices for Roaming Travel Passes Across Multiple Regions
Rogers has quietly bumped up the cost of its roaming travel passes, affecting travellers heading to Europe, Asia, and several other international regions. The changes, which appear to have rolled out this month, see some 30-day passes climbing by as much as $10 compared to rates observed by iPhone in Canada in December 2025.
The most notable change impacts the 30-day Europe pass, which has moved from $80 to $90.
A comparison of the current April 2026 rates against the company’s December 2025 pricing reveals a series of increases across several popular vacation categories:
Europe Passes
- Europe – 3 days: $30.00 (New option)
- Europe – 7 days: $55.00 (New option)
- Europe – 14 days: $70.00 (No change)
- Europe – 30 days: $90.00 (Increased from $80.00)
U.S. Passes
- US – 3 days: $25.00 (New option)
- US – 7 days: $50.00 (New option)
- US – 14 days: $60.00 (No change)
- US – 30 days: $80.00 (Increased from $70.00)
- US – Daily: $16.00 (No change)
Asia Passes
- Asia – 14 days: $70.00 (No change)
- Asia – 30 days: $90.00 (Increased from $80.00)
Caribbean & Mexico Passes
- Caribbean & Mexico – 7 days: $60.00 (New option)
- Caribbean & Mexico – 14 days: $70.00 (No change)
- Caribbean & Mexico – 30 days: $90.00 (Increased from $80.00)
International Passes
- International – 14 days: $100.00 (No change)
- International – 30 days: $120.00 (Increased from $110.00)
- International – Daily: $17.00 (No change)
Regional & Specialty Passes
- Africa – 14 days: $95.00 (New option)
- Africa – 30 days: $115.00 (New option)
- Oceania – 14 days: $70.00 (New option)
- Oceania – 30 days: $90.00 (New option)
- Central & South America – 14 days: $70.00 (New option)
- Central & South America – 30 days: $90.00 (New option)
- US, Mexico & Caribbean + Cruises – 10 days: $140.00 (New option)
- US, International + Cruises – 10 days: $160.00 (New option)
The price changes come as many Canadians prepare for spring and summer travel, making the cost of staying connected a larger part of the travel budget.
Recently, we’ve seen Freedom Mobile offer some aggressive global roaming plans priced from $40 per month, which included 50GB of monthly worldwide roaming data in 120 destinations. That’s hitting the bottom line for Rogers, Telus and Bell when it comes to revenue from data roaming. People who jump on these carrier roaming plans are those that cannot be bothered to get a global roaming plan or don’t know how to set up a travel eSIM, or just don’t care.
Paying your carrier’s roaming charges are expensive when compared to getting eSIM travel data or getting a global roaming plan from Freedom Mobile.
Thanks Tim!
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Bad way to gain customers especially when Freedom is leading in terms of Roaming availability.
Happy I have a plan that includes calling, texting and data to and from Canada and 64 other countries.
As a frequent overseas traveler for work, I buy roaming sim card, of Amazon for a fraction what these Canadian phone bandits want to charge.
You want to know the most maddening piece? Roaming is entirely “gravy” for the telecoms. They learned LONG ago that the system that they would need to put in place to calculate the delta in charge-backs to each other would cost more than the actual charge-backs, so they didn’t do it. Carriers don’t charge each other roaming. Your home carrier rubs their hands in glee as they get all of this free money.
Why on earth would anyone even use this anymore? Everyone needs to learn about local sims and also plans from Freedom etc