
18 Jun 2026
You've probably pulled that tiny chip out of your phone and thought will my data also be removed or deleted. Or what even is this thing, and what is stored on the chip card? SIM cards connect our devices to a specific network and maintain the connection.
Generally, the SIM card stores your phone number authentication key, IMSI, carrier info, and country code. Most people have no idea about it. I have seen people panic about losing their SIM because they thought their photos were on it.
In this guide, I will go through the details about what your SIM card actually has. And is your data stored on it or not?
A subscriber identity module, which you generally call a SIM. It is a small chip that actually tells your carrier's network who you are. Without it, your phone can't make calls, send texts, or use mobile data.
A mobile phone without a SIM is like a Wi-Fi tablet, basically. The SIM is what makes it a phone. These cards have gotten smaller over the years. The old mini SIM was chunky. Then came micro SIM. Now almost every phone uses a nano SIM, which is basically just the chip itself with a thin plastic border.
The modern mobile is now coming to the market with a digital SIM embedded, called eSIM. It is the most updated and advanced version of the traditional physical SIM cards.
Let's talk about the real issues that people generally confuse.
A SIM card stores data required for mobile network authentication and access. Be easy because it does not contain photos, browser history, or application-related information. It holds identifiers such as the IMSI, the ICCID, and authentication keys.
Here's what each of those actually means.
Your IMSI is basically your ID number on the network. Every SIM has one. It's unique to you, and it's what your carrier uses to confirm your account is real and active.
You can’t see this number. It works in the background every time you try to contact your friends. This number links your mobile account to your device, allowing the network to recognize who you are. It works when you make calls, send texts, or use data.
A SIM card stores your authentication key. The primary function of a SIM card is to authenticate your identity to the mobile carrier. And it uses two critical pieces of information: the IMSI and a secret cryptographic key.
This process happens in the background and ensures security. It prevents others from cloning your number and making calls on your account. You can say it as a password that your SIM and your carrier both know, and they check it every single time you connect.
Your phone number also lives on your SIM. Not on your actual phone. That's why when you move your SIM to a different device, your number comes with it. The number is tied to the SIM chip, not the hardware of your phone.
Your SIM stores the mobile country code that identifies where your number is registered. This is part of what makes roaming work when you travel. Your phone knows which networks to look for, and those networks know your home carrier.
All SIM cards store details about the service provider, such as its name, cellular network settings, and subscription type. This information is necessary for your phone to stay connected.
SIM cards can store contacts. But before you get excited, it's not like your full phone contacts list. SIM cards' storage capacity ranges from 8KB to 256KB, which totals up to about 250 contacts.
It has no space for email addresses, physical addresses, profile photos, birthdays, or personal notes. Storing contacts on a SIM is something people did in 2005. Most phones today, iPhones use iCloud to handle it. Android syncs to your Google account.
A small number of SMS text messages can be stored on a SIM. We're talking maybe 20 to 40 messages max. These are simple SMS, not iMessages, WhatsApp, or any app-based messaging.
Your SIM comes with a personal identification number (PIN). It is the code that locks your SIM so strangers can't use it. Enter the wrong PIN too many times, and the SIM locks completely. That's when you need the personal unblocking key (PUK) to get back in. These codes add an extra layer of protection to your mobile account and personal data.
The SIM is not a storage device. It's an identity chip. Once you get that, everything else clicks.
Android users:
Want to see SIM contacts?
iPhone users:
Most iPhones have nothing to import because Apple never used SIM storage in the first place. Your contacts were always in iCloud.
An eSIM is a digital SIM built directly into your phone. It is not like a physical chip or tiny card that falls on the floor and disappears. The SIM profile gets downloaded onto your device remotely within a few minutes.
What data does it hold? Like the physical SIM card, eSIM cards also hold similar data, such as IMSI, authentication key, phone number, and carrier settings.
With an eSIM, you can switch carriers without touching anything physical. You can hold multiple profiles on one device. It is useful if you travel and want a local data plan without swapping cards at the airport. It's just more flexible.
If you travel internationally and want to avoid roaming fees, Yaalo eSIM plans are worth using. You activate a local plan before you even land, and your phone connects automatically when you arrive.
No, removing the SIM card doesn’t delete data. The data in your mobile phone is stored in the cloud or on your device's internal storage. So, your photos, apps, and messages remain safe.
The only things that go with the SIM are your phone number, network credentials, and contacts or SMS you specifically saved on the SIM. Pulling out the SIM card from your device only loses cellular connection.
SIM cards use encryption algorithms to secure communication. These ensure that calls and messages remain private. The authentication process is genuinely secure, and cloning is seriously difficult with eSIM.
The real threat isn't someone hacking your SIM chip. It's SIM swapping, where a scammer calls your carrier, pretends to be you. They convince them to transfer your number to a new SIM card they control.
To protect yourself, you can set a SIM PIN. Use two-factor authentication on your important accounts. Be suspicious of any call from someone claiming to be your carrier asking to verify account details.
Your SIM holds your network identity; it includes IMSI, the authentication key, and your phone number. Contacts and messages technically fit too, if you intentionally store them on the SIM.
What it doesn't hold, photos, apps, chat messages, browsing history, stays on your phone or in the cloud. When you lose your SIM, and you lose your cellular connection only, the others data in your phone remains there.
Certainly not. If you're on an iPhone, contacts live in iCloud. Android users are almost always synced to Google. So, your contacts are fine.
Your phone number and carrier connection move to the other device you switch to. Calls and texts work normally on the new device.
Yes, eSIMs use a more advanced authentication process. Like a physical SIM card, it can't be removed or swapped without going through your carrier. It also stores the users' information digitally, which prevents unauthorized access to your data.

Nina Alexandra ●
18 Jun 2026
What Is Stored on a SIM Card? Data, Contacts & Network Info
SIM Card Guides© 2026 Yaalo.All Rights Reserved
© 2026 Yaalo.All Rights Reserved