This guide will help you how to successfully SIM unlock Samsung Galaxy S6 and S6 Edge and use it with any GSM carrier worldwide.
Have you bought Galaxy S6 or S6 Edge device from a carrier such as T-Mobile, AT&T, Rogers, Fido, Telus, Koodo, Bell, Virgin, and so on, then it means that it is carrier-locked to that particular network until your contract expires with them? If you want to use it with any other carrier/ network, then you will be forced to unlock the Galaxy S6 SIM for it to work. Usually, a SIM for S6 Edge is locked because major carriers don’t want consumers to use the purchased devices with other carriers or networks. Now supposed you’ve bought your phone from T-Mobile but when you want to use it with AT&T it will ask for “SIM network unlock PIN’.
Now you’ve would have come across individual web pages that are showing or offering Free SIM unlock, to be honest, these tricks don’t work and therefore you should not waste your time. However, we do provide a permanent IMEI unlock solution that will unlock your phone so that you can use it anywhere worldwide with your choice of GSM network.
Why Use Our Unlock Services?
Unlock Instructions:
Once you get the unlock code from us for your phone, follow the step-by-step instructions below to unlock your phone.
Step 1: Insert the non-accepted SIM card into your phone and turn it on.
Step 2: The phone will display you the SIM network unlock PIN.
Step 3: Now enter the 8 digits unlock code and tap the Unlock button.
Step 4: You should now see the Network Unlock Successful message.
Step 5: Cheers!! Your Samsung Galaxy S6/ S6 Edge is now successfully sim unlocked.
Hello, I'm Imran Aftab, a tech enthusiast using Android, iOS, and Windows. Hardware expert for Gaming & Crypto mining rigs. I have been writing on tech since 2013, starting with ohguideme, then Androidcentral. I have written and published several guides and tutorials on how to root Android, flash custom ROM, recovery, and jailbreak iPhone, and have written several guides on how to bypass FRP. I also worked in a phone repair shop, so I have pretty good experience with mobile software and troubleshooting. So, all the guides you see here have been tested and confirmed to work.