Worldcitisim

How Hotels Across the Caribbean Are Earning Extra Revenue With Guest eSIM Programs

Why Island-Hopping Travelers Need a Regional eSIM in the Caribbean

The Caribbean received 32 million stayover arrivals and 34 million cruise passengers in 2024 — a record year driven by post-pandemic demand and expanded airlift from North America and Europe. Caribbean tourism is defined by island-hopping: Dominican Republic → Puerto Rico → USVI, Jamaica → Cayman Islands → Mexico (Cancún), Barbados → St. Lucia → Grenada. Each island is a different country (or territory) with different carriers, different SIM requirements, and different roaming zones. A regional Caribbean eSIM covers 20+ islands and surrounding mainland destinations with one plan — no new SIM at each port.

Caribbean travel requires mobile data for logistics that don't exist in other regions. Inter-island ferry schedules change daily and are only available online (not posted at docks). Snorkeling, diving, and catamaran tour bookings happen via WhatsApp. Google Maps navigates island roads that lack street signs (directions are by landmark — "turn at the blue church"). Uber/Lyft exist only in Puerto Rico and parts of the DR — everywhere else requires phone-based taxi coordination. Hurricane and weather tracking apps are essential during storm season (June-November). Cruise passengers with 6-10 hour port stops need instant land-based data — buying a local SIM for a single island stop makes no sense.

Coverage varies dramatically. Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic have 4G/5G networks. Jamaica has strong coverage in Kingston and Montego Bay but gaps in the Blue Mountains. Smaller islands (St. Lucia, Grenada, Dominica, St. Kitts) have limited infrastructure — single carriers, satellite backhaul, coverage that drops between coastal towns. The Bahamas' 700 islands mean coverage exists on Nassau and Paradise Island but not on most Out Islands. Aruba, Curaçao, and Bonaire have solid Dutch-invested infrastructure.


What Your Guests Are Paying for Roaming in the Caribbean

The Caribbean is the most expensive roaming region for North American travelers:

American Visitors (20+ million — dominant market)

AT&T charges $12/day in most Caribbean countries. Verizon charges $10/day. T-Mobile includes some Caribbean countries as domestic (USVI, Puerto Rico) but charges $5-15/day elsewhere. The complication: each island has a different rate tier. A 10-day island-hopping trip across 3 countries costs $100-180 depending on which islands and which carrier.

Canadian Visitors (4+ million — winter escape market)

Rogers charges CAD 14/day. Bell charges CAD 15/day. Telus charges CAD 16/day. Canadian snowbirds are the Caribbean's longest-staying segment — 2-4 week winter visits at CAD 14-16/day add up to CAD 196-448 ($145-330 USD). Multi-island trips (Cuba → Jamaica → DR) multiply the cost.

British Visitors (2.5+ million — former colonies)

EE charges GBP 6.85/day (Rest of World). Vodafone UK charges GBP 6.85/day. Jamaica, Barbados, Trinidad, Bahamas, and the Eastern Caribbean are historically British — but UK carriers charge premium Rest of World rates. A 10-day Caribbean holiday costs GBP 69.

European Visitors (3+ million combined — Netherlands, France, Germany)

Dutch visitors to Aruba/Curaçao/Bonaire face non-EU roaming despite the islands being Dutch territories (special municipality status creates roaming grey zones). French visitors to Guadeloupe/Martinique get EU roaming — but the moment they hop to a non-French island (Dominica, St. Lucia), Rest of World rates apply. The island-by-island roaming patchwork is uniquely confusing in the Caribbean.

Cruise Passengers (34 million/year)

Cruise ship WiFi costs $15-25/day and doesn't work on land. Passengers making 3-5 port stops across different islands need land-based data for navigation, restaurant finding, and excursion coordination at each stop. A regional eSIM covers every port — one activation before the cruise, connectivity at every island.

The Local SIM Problem

Each Caribbean island requires a separate SIM. Digicel and Flow (formerly LIME) are the main carriers, but plans and availability vary by island. Airport SIM stores are inconsistent — some islands have them, many don't. Small island airports (Dominica, St. Kitts, Grenada) have no SIM vendors at all. A 4-island cruise would require 4 SIMs — or more realistically, zero SIMs and expensive roaming. A regional eSIM eliminates the per-island SIM hunt.


The Caribbean's Hotel Market — Regional Scale

The Caribbean has approximately 350,000 hotel rooms across 8,000+ properties. Dominican Republic leads with 85,000+ rooms (75% occupancy — all-inclusive model), Jamaica 35,000+ rooms (68% occupancy), Puerto Rico 15,000 rooms (72% occupancy), Bahamas 16,000+ rooms (65% occupancy), Cuba 60,000+ rooms (58% occupancy), and the Eastern Caribbean (Barbados, St. Lucia, Grenada, OECS) combined 30,000+ rooms. ADR ranges from $80 (Dominican Republic all-inclusive rate) to $500+ (St. Barts, Anguilla). The market spans mega all-inclusives (Punta Cana, Cancún), boutique island resorts, villa rentals, and cruise-adjacent city hotels.

Multi-island eSIM conversion is highest at properties that serve island-hoppers and cruise port stops. Punta Cana all-inclusives where guests also visit Puerto Rico. Jamaica hotels where guests continue to Cayman Islands or Cuba. Barbados properties serving the Eastern Caribbean sailing circuit. Properties near cruise terminals (San Juan, Nassau, Cozumel, St. Thomas) have the highest volume opportunity — 34 million cruise passengers with 6-10 hour port stops needing instant connectivity.


The Problem With Hotel WiFi (And Why Guests Want Their Own Data)

Caribbean resort WiFi is notoriously limited. All-inclusive properties in Punta Cana and Jamaica throttle speeds or charge extra for "premium" WiFi packages. Island bandwidth is constrained by submarine cable capacity — shared across the entire island. Smaller islands (Dominica, Nevis, Tobago) share satellite or single-cable connections across all properties. Hurricane-damaged infrastructure means inconsistent service in storm season. Villa and vacation rental WiFi depends on individual owner investment.

But Caribbean tourism happens on the water and between islands. Guests take catamarans to snorkeling sites, book diving excursions via WhatsApp, ferry between islands (St. Thomas → St. John, Barbuda → Antigua), navigate island roads by landmark (no street signs on most smaller islands), check surf and weather conditions hourly, coordinate airport pickups on islands where taxis don't queue, and track hurricane alerts during storm season. Cruise passengers need instant data at each port — 6 hours to navigate a new island without GPS is the difference between finding the waterfall hike and spending the entire stop in the port area. Your hotel WiFi covers the room — the boat trips, island drives, and port-day navigation require cellular.


How the Worldcitisim Hotel Partner Program Works

The partner program is designed for hotels, resorts, and vacation rentals across the Caribbean that want to earn commission — without any operational complexity.

Zero Setup Cost

Nothing to buy, install, or maintain. Partner link and materials provided.

How Guests Activate

Under five minutes. No app, no card, no front-desk involvement.

Your Commission Structure

Average purchase ~$26 (regional Caribbean plans). Commissions tracked automatically. Monthly payouts.

See what your guests receive: Caribbean eSIM Guide


Revenue Calculator for Your Property

Small Boutique Resort or Guesthouse (10 rooms)

~30 international guests purchase per month at $26. $117/month — $1,404/year.

Medium Hotel or Resort (30 rooms)

~75 guests per month. $293/month, or $3,510/year.

Large All-Inclusive or Cruise-Port Property (100+ rooms)

200+ purchases per month. $780/month — $9,360/year.


What Makes This Different


How to Get Started

Step 1: Apply at worldcitisim.com/affiliate (2 minutes). Step 2: Partner link, QR cards, templates, dashboard within 24 hours. Step 3: Share with guests.


FAQs — Caribbean Hotel eSIM Partner Program

Does it cost anything?

No. Zero cost, zero fees, no minimums.

What do guests receive?

Digital eSIM with data across 20+ Caribbean islands and surrounding mainland. ~$26 average for regional plans. QR code install — no SIM card, no store visit. Connects to Digicel, Flow, or local carrier networks with 4G/LTE speeds where available.

Does it work for cruise passengers making port stops?

Yes — and this is the ideal use case. Cruise passengers activate the eSIM once before departure and have connectivity at every port stop across the Caribbean. No buying a local SIM for each 6-hour island visit. The regional plan covers all major cruise ports.

Why not just use the resort's WiFi?

Resort WiFi covers the property. But Caribbean tourism happens on the water and between islands — snorkeling trips, island drives, ferry crossings, waterfall hikes, and beach-bar hopping all require cellular. Cruise passengers need land-based data at each port. The eSIM is for everything outside the hotel.

Is there a contract?

No contract, no lock-in, no exclusivity.

Materials in Spanish and French?

Yes — English, Spanish (Dominican Republic, Cuba, Puerto Rico), French (Guadeloupe, Martinique, Haiti), Dutch (Aruba, Curaçao), and German. Reflects the Caribbean's multilingual visitor base.


Start Earning From Guest Connectivity Today

Your guests are already buying data — from carrier roaming at $10-16/day per island, from cruise WiFi that doesn't work on land, from local SIM hunts at airports that don't have SIM stores. American visitors pay $100-180 across island-hopping trips. Canadian snowbirds pay CAD 196-448 over multi-week winter stays. British visitors pay GBP 69 for 10 days. 34 million cruise passengers need instant port-day data. The regional eSIM replaces all of that with one QR code — and your property earns commission on every island covered.

Zero cost. Zero risk. Apply now: worldcitisim.com/affiliate

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