In a world where Wi-Fi is flaky and physical SIM cards are one more thing to fumble with, HP’s answer is refreshingly simple: HP Go. This isn’t just a new feature. It’s a bold swipe at the old way of staying connected.
Launching in Spring 2025, HP Go is a zero-touch, multi-carrier 5G eSIM baked right into your device—no physical SIMs, no frantic searches for paperclips. Just power it on, complete the Windows setup, and you’re live. On the go? Your laptop is too.
HP Go supports big names—T-Mobile, AT&T, Verizon—right out of the box. It auto-connects to the strongest signal in your area, switching seamlessly between networks when needed. And if Wi-Fi drops while you’re working remotely? HP Go quietly hands things off to 5G. No alerts. No stress. Just connectivity that… works.
This isn’t some fancy travel SIM—HP Go is U.S.-only for now, but a global rollout is already on the roadmap for late 2026. The first device to get the treatment? The upcoming HP EliteBook 6 G1q, a Next Gen AI-powered PC that’s clearly being positioned as the future of professional mobility.
Zero-touch deployment means fewer headaches. Devices come factory-loaded with eSIM profiles, ready to activate the moment they boot up. Admins can remotely monitor data usage, enforce access controls, and stay ahead of potential risks—all without setting foot near a device. That’s not just efficient. It’s transformational.
With eSIM shipments globally crossing the half-billion mark, this isn’t just a passing trend. It’s a shift in how we connect. Physical SIM cards are becoming relics, and HP’s move is another nail in the coffin.
Sure, it’s just starting in the U.S. But if HP sticks the landing, don’t be surprised if this becomes the new standard worldwide. Because really—who wants to mess with tiny plastic cards in 2025?