Frequently Asked Questions
What actually makes 5G different from 4G LTE?
5G introduces three core technical improvements over 4G LTE: significantly higher peak data speeds, in some cases multiple gigabits per second under ideal conditions compared to 4G’s typical tens to low hundreds of megabits per second; substantially lower latency, the delay between sending and receiving data, which matters for applications like gaming, video calls, and industrial automation where responsiveness is critical; and far greater device density support, allowing a single cell site to maintain reliable connections with a much larger number of simultaneous devices, which matters increasingly as IoT sensors and connected devices proliferate. These improvements come from a combination of new radio technology, additional spectrum bands made available for 5G use, and a redesigned network architecture that’s considerably more flexible and software-driven than 4G’s architecture was.
What’s the difference between low-band, mid-band, and high-band (mmWave) 5G?
Low-band 5G uses similar frequencies to 4G LTE, offering wide coverage area and good building penetration but speeds not dramatically faster than good 4G performance, making it most useful for extending broad geographic coverage rather than delivering 5G’s headline speed improvements. Mid-band 5G offers a more balanced tradeoff between coverage and speed, generally delivering meaningfully faster performance than 4G across a reasonably wide area, and has become the most common band used for mainstream 5G deployment in most markets globally. High-band 5G, often called mmWave, delivers by far the fastest possible speeds, but its very short range and poor ability to penetrate walls means it’s typically deployed only in dense, high-traffic urban areas like stadiums, rather than for broad area coverage.
What’s the difference between 5G NSA (non-standalone) and 5G SA (standalone)?
5G non-standalone, or NSA, runs 5G radio technology on top of an existing 4G core network, meaning certain control functions still rely on 4G infrastructure even though the actual data connection itself uses 5G radio technology; this was the faster, easier path many operators took for their initial 5G launches, since it could be deployed by upgrading existing 4G infrastructure rather than building an entirely new core network from scratch. 5G standalone, or SA, uses an entirely new, independently functioning 5G core network rather than relying on 4G at all, unlocking more of 5G’s distinctive advanced capabilities, including network slicing and the lowest possible latency, that NSA architecture generally can’t fully support. Many operators have been gradually transitioning from NSA to SA, though this migration has generally taken longer than initially anticipated.
How widespread is 5G coverage and adoption globally in 2026?
5G has become genuinely widespread rather than experimental. Global subscriptions surpassed 3.1 billion in early 2026, with another 162 million subscriptions added in just the first quarter of the year, reflecting continued strong growth even years after 5G’s initial 2019 commercial launch. Coverage varies considerably by region and band: low and mid-band 5G now reaches the substantial majority of the population in most major markets including the U.S., much of Europe, China, and South Korea, while high-band mmWave coverage remains considerably more limited and concentrated in dense urban areas given its short range. Adoption has progressed furthest in markets with aggressive early infrastructure investment, particularly China and South Korea, while other regions, especially parts of the developing world, continue working through earlier stages of 5G buildout.
What is ‘5G-Advanced,’ and how is it different from regular 5G?
5G-Advanced, sometimes marketed by certain vendors and operators, particularly in China, as 5.5G, refers to the next phase of 5G standards development beyond the original 2019 specification, formalized starting with 3GPP Release 18 and continuing through subsequent releases. It introduces capabilities including better support for reduced-capability IoT devices that don’t need full 5G performance, tighter integration with non-terrestrial satellite networks, more sophisticated AI-native network management built directly into the standard, and further uplink and capacity improvements beyond the original 5G specification. Rather than representing a completely new generation the way 5G itself was relative to 4G, 5G-Advanced is best understood as a substantial, ongoing evolution and refinement of the existing 5G standard, extending its useful commercial life well beyond what the original 2019 specification alone delivered.
Why do real-world 5G speeds vary so much between users and locations?
Real-world 5G speeds vary considerably because of the fundamental tradeoffs between different frequency bands: a user connected to low-band 5G in a rural area will experience meaningfully slower speeds than someone connected to mid-band 5G in a well-covered urban area, who in turn will experience slower speeds than someone briefly connected to high-band mmWave near a stadium or dense downtown location. Network congestion also plays a significant role, since a cell site serving many simultaneous users, particularly during peak usage periods, will generally deliver lower per-user speeds than the same site serving fewer users. Device capability matters too, since a phone’s specific modem chip determines which frequency bands and 5G features it can actually access, meaning even within the same coverage area, different devices can experience meaningfully different real-world performance.
Is 5G actually necessary, or is 4G still ‘good enough’ for most uses?
For many everyday tasks like browsing, messaging, and standard video streaming, 4G genuinely remains adequate, and many consumers report not noticing a dramatic difference in daily use compared to a well-performing 4G connection, which is part of why 5G monetization has proven harder than the industry initially expected. However, 5G’s advantages become considerably more apparent for specific use cases: dense urban areas with heavy simultaneous network usage benefit meaningfully from 5G’s greater capacity, fixed wireless access using 5G can deliver genuinely faster home broadband than many alternatives, and emerging applications like cloud gaming, AR and VR, and industrial automation benefit directly from 5G’s lower latency and higher reliability in ways 4G generally can’t match. Whether 5G feels necessary depends heavily on a specific user’s actual usage patterns and location rather than being a universal yes or no answer.
How does 5G relate to other technologies like network slicing, private networks, and FWA covered elsewhere in this reference?
5G is the foundational technology underlying many of the more specific capabilities covered elsewhere in this reference. Network slicing depends specifically on 5G standalone’s more flexible core network architecture to create multiple differentiated virtual networks on shared infrastructure. Private networks increasingly use 5G rather than 4G LTE as their core technology for new deployments, given 5G’s superior capacity and lower latency for industrial use cases. Fixed wireless access has become one of 5G’s clearest commercial monetization successes, using 5G’s speed and capacity to deliver home broadband as an alternative to cable or fiber. Open RAN’s disaggregated, multi-vendor approach to radio equipment is increasingly being applied specifically to 5G network deployments, making 5G the underlying connectivity layer most other categories in this reference build upon.