Which plug do you need?
Find out in 5 seconds whether you need a travel adapter โ for 80+ countries, all 15 plug types, voltage and frequency.
World map โ click a country
Hover the map and click your destination to jump straight to plug, voltage and adapter info.
Popular travel routes
Quick answers for the most-searched destinations from Europe.
Browse by region
Explore countries by continent.
Top countries
Quick access to the most-searched destinations.
15 plug types
From Schuko to Type O โ see at a glance which plug is used where.
Two flat parallel pins, ungrounded. Common in North/Central America and Japan.
Two flat pins plus a round grounding pin. Standard in the US and Canada.
The European plug without earth โ fits nearly every European socket.
Three round pins in a triangle. Primarily India.
Two round pins with a protruding earth pin. France and Belgium.
Schuko โ two round pins with side earth clips.
Three rectangular pins with a built-in fuse. UK, Ireland and former colonies.
Unique V-shaped or round pins. Only in Israel.
Two angled flat pins plus earth. Australia, China, Argentina.
Three round pins โ Swiss standard.
Two round pins plus a U-shaped earth pin. Danish standard.
Three round pins in a line. Italian standard.
Large variant of Type D. Mainly South Africa.
Three round pins in a triangle. Brazilian standard.
Three round pins โ Thai standard, also accepts Type C.
FAQ
Do I need a travel adapter for Thailand?+
From Europe: often no โ Thailand accepts Type C in many sockets. A universal adapter is still recommended for full coverage.
Which plug is used in Japan?+
Japan uses Type A and B with 100 V / 50โ60 Hz. From Europe you'll need an adapter and should check voltage compatibility.
Will my phone charger work everywhere?+
Almost all modern USB chargers are 100โ240 V compatible. You only need a plug adapter โ no voltage converter.
Difference between Type C, E and F?+
Type C is the ungrounded Europlug. Type E (France/Belgium) and Type F (Schuko) are grounded โ both accept Type C.