Review

Lyca Mobile Review: Why Budget Brands (and Lidl Connect) Are Smarter Than They Sound

Published

Rated 4.1 out of 54.1 / 5

A genuinely sound pick for cheap international calling and no-contract flexibility, not a downgrade from the bigger brands.

Best for: Newcomers who call family abroad often and want prepaid flexibility with no credit check or long contract.

Avoid if: You need a large data allowance for heavy streaming or hotspot use, compare data pricing against other budget brands first.

Pros

  • Same network coverage as premium brands
  • Strong international calling rates
  • No contract, no credit check
  • Easy multi-line setup for families

Cons

  • App/web-only customer support
  • Possible data deprioritisation at peak times
  • Data allowances less competitive than data-focused budget brands
Review methodology

Based on publicly available product positioning and typical expat use cases. Verify current tariffs, data allowances, and the specific host network directly with the provider before relying on this for a final decision.

Lyca Mobile is one of the best-known budget SIM brands worldwide, and it has built its name specifically on cheap international calling, which makes it a natural fit for Switzerland’s large expat and immigrant population who call home regularly.

Key takeaways

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What Lyca Mobile actually is

Lyca Mobile operates as a mobile virtual network operator (MVNO): it does not own towers, it resells capacity on an existing Swiss network. That matters because it means your actual call and data coverage is determined by the underlying network, not by the Lyca brand itself. Its main appeal has always been aggressive international calling rates and prepaid, no-contract flexibility, exactly the two things a newly arrived expat needs most.

Why “unknown” brands are actually a good choice

The single biggest misconception newcomers have is that a budget or unfamiliar brand means worse service. In Switzerland it almost never does, because budget brands are MVNOs riding on the same national networks as the premium names. The tower you connect to, the coverage in your building, the data speed, none of that changes based on which logo is on the SIM.

What you’re really paying less for is marketing, retail stores, and brand premium, not infrastructure. The trade-offs that do exist are real but narrow: customer support is usually app/web-only rather than in-store, and during network congestion some MVNOs deprioritise their traffic behind the parent network’s own customers. For most people, that is a minor cost for a meaningfully lower bill.

Lidl Connect: a strong option for expat families specifically

Lidl Connect (Lidl’s own mobile brand, sold through Lidl stores) is worth calling out separately because of how well it fits a family’s actual shopping and admin routine, not just its price. Topping up a prepaid plan at the same till where you’re already doing the weekly grocery shop removes an entire errand from your list, which matters more than it sounds like in your first few months.

  • No credit check or lengthy contract, useful if you don’t yet have a long Swiss credit history or a permanent permit
  • Easy to run multiple prepaid lines for a family (partner, older children) without separate contracts for each person
  • Top-ups available at a store you likely already visit weekly
  • No long-term commitment while you’re still deciding where you’ll settle long-term

Why prepaid budget can beat a “conventional” postpaid plan

A conventional postpaid contract from a national brand usually asks for a longer commitment and sometimes a credit check, exactly the two things a newcomer is least able to offer confidently in their first months. Prepaid budget brands remove both requirements, and because they run on the same networks, you are not trading away coverage to get that flexibility.

The right long-term move for many expats is to start prepaid and budget, and only move to a postpaid contract with a bigger brand later, once you actually know your usage patterns and whether you’ll stay in the same canton.

Honest verdict on Lyca Mobile specifically

For a newcomer whose priority is cheap, reliable calls back to family abroad plus enough data for maps and messaging, Lyca Mobile is a genuinely sound choice, not a compromise. If your priority is instead a strong data allowance for heavy streaming or hotspot use, it is worth comparing its data pricing specifically against Lidl Connect and other budget brands, data-heavy value is not always where an internationally-focused brand is strongest.

Frequently asked questions

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Our recommendation

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Editorial note: this content follows WiseSwiss's editorial policy. Reviews are scored independently of any commercial relationship. Read our editorial policy

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