Private Network Check Readiness - TeckNexus Solutions

India’s 5G Subscriber Base to Hit 300M by Mar 2025 with Reliance Jio and Airtel’s Aggressive Rollout

The adoption of 5G services in India's subscriber base is expected to boost data consumption as they upgrade to higher data packages to access faster speeds. This increase in data usage is anticipated to result in higher average revenue per user (ARPU) and better return metrics for telecommunication companies (telcos).
Jio and Airtel expanding 5G to New Cities

300 million wireless users in India will be using 5G services by March 2025

CRISIL’s report states that as Reliance Jio continues to deploy its 5G network throughout India, it is expected that around one-third or approximately 300 million wireless users in the country will be using 5G services by March 2025, compared to an estimated 20-25 million as of March 2023. However, the remaining two-thirds of users are expected to continue using 4G. The report also predicts that 5G subscribers will boost data consumption and lead to higher average revenue per user and return metrics for telecom companies.


Indian telecom companies have been actively rolling out 5G networks and have entered more than 300 cities since October 2022. Reliance Jio has already launched 5G services in 277 cities, deploying over 40,000 sites and nearly 250,000 cells in the 700 Mhz and 3,500 Mhz bands. Chairman of Reliance Jio Infocomm, Akash M Ambani, has announced plans to expand their 5G network to more cities, towns, and talukas across various states and union territories with the aim to cover every town, taluka, and tehsil in the country by December 2023. In February, he also highlighted the potential of 5G in facilitating ease of living.

In addition, Bharti Airtel has reported crossing the milestone of 10 million unique 5G users on its network. The company has also announced plans to cover every town and important rural areas with its 5G services by the end of March 2024.

Moving Closer to the Wide-Scale Adoption of 5G Technology

The CRISIL report indicates that the mass adoption of 5G technology will accelerate when retail use cases become available. The report explains that although there are numerous use cases for 5G, including smart classrooms, precision farming, and intelligent transport systems, adoption is dependent on a substantial improvement in network infrastructure, which will take several years to occur.

The adoption of 5G services in India would primarily depend on the tariffs offered by telecom companies and the penetration of 5G-enabled devices among users, according to a CRISIL report. Currently, only about 30-35% of the annual shipment of 150-170 million smartphones in India are 5G enabled. Although the share of 5G smartphones shipments is expected to increase gradually, the high cost of the gadget compared to a 4G phone may limit overall adoption to approximately 300 million users by fiscal 2025, stated Naveen Vaidyanathan, Director, CRISIL Ratings.

In contrast, the adoption of 4G services was quicker than that of 5G, with approximately 60% of data users migrating within two years of its launch. This was made possible by 4G’s improved speeds over 3G and lower tariffs. 

“5G has the potential to hasten the adoption of over-the-top streaming services and online gaming, which would further drive up data demand. As a result, the average data usage per subscriber per month is expected to increase from the current level of around 20 GB to approximately 28-30 GB by fiscal year 2025,” said Rounak Agarwal, Team Leader at CRISIL Ratings.

CRISIL predicts that the adoption of 5G will increase the average revenue per user (ARPU) to around Rs 250 in the medium term, which will in turn drive up the return on capital employed (RoCE) in the telecom sector to 12-14% as compared to the current modest 6-8%. This growth will be facilitated by investments of Rs 2-2.5 lakh crore planned for 5G networks over the medium term.


Recent Content

India’s rejection of Nokia’s 5G network slicing patent highlights a growing legal battle over telecom IP. Nokia’s appeal challenges India’s strict stance on software patents, while global competitors like Huawei and Ericsson dominate the 5G patent race. This decision may reshape vendor strategies, investment priorities, and legal precedents in next-gen telecom.
Qualcomm teams up with Lenskart to introduce AI-driven smart glasses to India, leveraging Snapdragon XR platforms for immersive AR, VR, and MR experiences. With over 100 devices already powered by Snapdragon XR and a strong push for localized innovation, Qualcomm is betting big on spatial computing as the next phase of everyday tech.
Europe’s 5G progress is accelerating but unevenly. Denmark, Sweden, and Spain lead with strong 5G availability and SA deployment, driven by early spectrum allocation and targeted policy. Meanwhile, the UK, Belgium, and Hungary trail due to regulatory delays, infrastructure bottlenecks, and weak investment. With the Digital Decade 2030 goal in sight, aligning on policy, spectrum, and subsidies will be key to closing the EU’s internal 5G divide.
Many fiber rollouts stumble before trenching begins, not in the field, but in flawed planning rooms. This article uncovers why approved designs collapse under real-world conditions, how disconnected inventories and outdated GIS layers set projects up for failure, and why simulation, permitting, and collaboration must start early. Learn how telecom teams can replace static spreadsheets with live intelligence—and why VC4’s Service2Create rewrites the rules of fiber network planning.
Charter Communications warns of a 200% increase in targeted fiber attacks across Missouri in 2025, calling them acts of domestic terrorism. With 148 outages already reported, these incidents have crippled emergency services, hospitals, and financial systems—raising alarm over national infrastructure vulnerabilities and sparking legislative debate.
At the Emirates Great Britain Sail Grand Prix in Portsmouth, Ericsson and BT combined private 5G and public 5G Standalone (SA) to enable real-time boat telemetry, low-latency video for broadcast, and immersive AR/VR fan experiences. The hybrid network, featuring Ericsson Private 5G and BT’s 5G SA slicing, created a fully connected race ecosystem spanning multiple sites and the F50 fleet.
Whitepaper
Explore the Private Network Edition of 5G Magazine, your guide to the latest in private 5G/LTE and CBRS networks. This edition spotlights 11 award categories including private 5G/LTE leader, neutral host leader, and rising startups. It features insights from industry leaders like Jason Wallin of John Deere and an analysis...
Whitepaper
Discover the potential of mobile networks in modern warfare through our extensive whitepaper. Dive into its strategic significance, understand its security risks, and gain insights on optimizing mobile networks in critical situations. An essential guide for defense planners and cybersecurity enthusiasts....

It seems we can't find what you're looking for.

Download Magazine

With Subscription

Subscribe To Our Newsletter

Private Network Awards 2025 - TeckNexus
Scroll to Top

Private Network Awards

Recognizing excellence in 5G, LTE, CBRS, and connected industries. Nominate your project and gain industry-wide recognition.
Early Bird Deadline: Sept 5, 2025 | Final Deadline: Sept 30, 2025