IPad Cellular Now Works With AT&T’s $3 Day Pass, No Account Needed

What You Need to Know
- AT&T offers 24-hour unlimited cellular data for $3 with first day free, no existing account required.
- Setup occurs entirely through iPad settings menu without app download or prior data connection needed.
- AT&T targets prepaid market segment lost to MVNOs and T-Mobile by converting trial users to paid customers.
- Service expanding to 5G laptops, drones, and smartwatches, targeting occasional-use professionals needing temporary connectivity.
AT&T is selling 24-hour unlimited cellular data for $3, no existing AT&T account required, and the first day is free. That last detail is the one worth sitting with: a carrier is essentially letting you audition its network against your current one, on any compatible eSIM iPad, with no friction and no commitment.
The setup runs entirely through the iPad’s settings menu, no app download, no Wi-Fi needed to get started. That matters because the scenario where you most need this is exactly the scenario where you have no connection to begin with. Activation without a prior data connection is a small but real design choice.
AT&T has been losing ground in the prepaid and no-contract segment to MVNOs and T-Mobile’s own prepaid brands for years. A carrier-direct, no-contract day pass priced at $3 is less about generating revenue per pass and more about getting people onto AT&T’s network who would otherwise never consider it, with the hope that some convert.
Expansion Plans
The current limitation is hardware: only eSIM-capable iPads qualify right now. AT&T says 5G laptops, drones, and smartwatches are coming, which is a broader ambition than a simple tablet perk.
The drone inclusion is the odd one out on that list. Consumer drones with cellular connectivity are a niche market, but commercial drone operators who need temporary data coverage for a specific job are exactly the kind of user who would pay $3 rather than manage a monthly line. That suggests AT&T is thinking about occasional-use professionals, not just travelers at airports.
At $3 a day, the math only works against a monthly plan if you need connectivity fewer than roughly ten days a month. For most iPad owners who carry the cellular model as a backup, that threshold is probably realistic.
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