How do I know if my US phone will work overseas?

12/26/2013 8:09:06 PM

I understand you intend to use your phone with the original network provisioning of your operator (e.g. the original SIM card); if so, the question has two parts to it:

  • is the phone physically capable of connecting to a foreign network?

    • is the foreign network technology (e.g. GSM, UMTS, LTE, or sometimes cdmaOne/CDMA2000) supported by your phone?
    • are the frequencies for a given technology match?
  • is an agreement in place between your operator and the foreign operator, and whether it covers the technology and frequency combinations that you phone supports?

The network technology

Some technologies are backwards compatible with others, whereas others are incompatible with each other. The compatibility is denoted by a technology family of a single generation, and the frequency over which it is used.

For example, most people don’t realise that phones that only support GSM are incompatible with UMTS/HSPA-only networks, which do exist.

You need to figure out the technologies that your phone supports, and jot down the bands for each technology.

This is a list of some common standards, and some substandards that are all backwards compatible within each other:

  • GSM: GRPS, EDGE.
    • Popular GSM frequencies are 850MHz, 900MHz, 1800MHz and 1900MHz.
  • UMTS: W-CDMA, HSPA, HSDPA, HSUPA, HSPA+ etc.
    • Popular UMTS frequencies are 850MHz, 900MHz, 1700/2100MHz (that’s a single frequency, called AWS), 1900MHz, 2100MHz (not to be confused with 1700/2100MHz, which is a separate, and incompatible, frequency).
  • LTE.
    • It has so many slightly-different bands, that it became meaningless to use the MHz notation for each frequency, and most frequencies are referred to through some synthetic numbers from the LTE family of standards. Unlike GSM and UMTS, which support voice calls from the start, not all LTE networks may support voice calls (the responsibility may be delegated to the UMTS/GSM or the CDMA part of the network).
  • There’s also cdmaOne and CDMA2000 (1xRTT, EV-DO), these are actually distinct generations, but are backwards compatible with one another; they’re mostly popular only in US/Canada and Japan/Korea.
12/15/2013 3:23:36 AM

Cell phones run on two different types of networks: GSM and CDMA. These network types themselves are subdivided into various bands (e.g. GSM 850 MHz). Most recent phones will support a wide range of bands within one network type. GSM is predominant in most countries except the US, which uses both.

To verify that your current phone will work in another country, you first need to find out which bands your phone works on. This will be listed on the technical specifications, which you may be able to find online (if you can’t, try calling your carrier). You’ll then need to check which bands are used by carriers in the country you’re going to. Wikipedia is good for this—for example, here’s the list for Europe.

Data basically works the same way, although it is a bit more complicated. Basically, there are a number of different network technologies: HSDPA, HSUPA, HSPA, HSPA+, LTE (I’m not sure how complete this list is). The best way to do this is to check Wikipedia and work backwards (if their network supports, say, 1800 MHz LTE, you’ll want to check if your phone does).

In addition, if your phone has not been unlocked, you will be forced to keep using your current SIM. This seems to be what you’re planning to do, but I just want to emphasize that switching to a local SIM will not work, so if your carrier is willing to unlock your phone, do get that done.

The other thing to make sure to do is check with your carrier is that you do have international roaming enabled. If not, your phone basically won’t work outside of the US, and it’s a lot easier to get that enabled before you travel instead of trying to dial your carrier from abroad.

Credit:stackoverflow.com

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Hello,My name is Aparna Patel,I’m a Travel Blogger and Photographer who travel the world full-time with my hubby.I like to share my travel experience.

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