Europe’s 5G Development: Progress Challenges and Future Prospects
Europe’s 5G Development: Progress Challenges and Future Prospects
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Europe’s 5G Development: Progress Challenges and Future Prospects
Three years ago, European 5G infrastructure lagged significantly behind other regions. Major cities struggled with basic 5G coverage, with signals frequently dropping to 4G or even older networks in tunnels and indoor spaces.
The continent’s telecommunications landscape appeared stagnant, showing little advancement from over a decade prior.
Fast forward to October 2025, and the picture has changed dramatically. Paris now offers consistent 5G coverage across most outdoor locations—from airports to city centers and exhibition halls.
However, coverage still drops to 4G in tunnels, and indoor venues like restaurants or basements often revert to HSPA+ or 2G networks.
This indicates that outdoor macro base stations are largely deployed, though indoor distributed antenna systems remain incomplete.

Network Deployment Accelerates
According to GSA’s latest data through August 2025, 361 operators across 134 countries and regions have launched commercial 5G networks globally, with 77 operators from 43 countries deploying 5G standalone (SA) networks—36 of these operators are in Europe.
The “true 5G” (5G SA) deployment in Europe showed slow growth in earlier years, trailing significantly behind the Asia-Pacific region. However, starting in 2022, European 5G SA adoption accelerated rapidly and now accounts for approximately half of all 5G SA networks worldwide.
Regional disparities within Europe remain pronounced. Northern and Southern European countries lead in deployment, with Denmark achieving 83.9% 5G coverage by H1 2025, Sweden reaching 77.8%, and Greece at 76.4%. Meanwhile, Western and Eastern European nations lag behind, with the UK at 45.2%, Hungary at 29.9%, and Belgium at just 11.9%.
5G FWA: Europe’s Killer Application
Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) emerges as 5G’s breakthrough application in Europe. GSMA Intelligence analysis predicts that seven of the top ten countries for 5G FWA growth over the next six years will be European: Austria, the UK, Bulgaria, Germany, Italy, Switzerland, and Poland.
Third-party consultancy forecasts indicate that from 2026 onward, Europe will surpass the Middle East and Africa to become the world’s third-largest 5G FWA market, trailing only India and North America.
Mobile Broadband Momentum
Beyond FWA, 5G Mobile Broadband (MBB) shows exceptional promise in Europe. Shipment projections suggest European 5G MBB will experience a 36% compound annual growth rate over the next six years—the fastest among all global regions excluding RedCap devices.
A Continent Poised for Revival
Europe’s 5G journey reflects broader economic challenges faced in recent years, from pandemic disruptions to geopolitical tensions. These factors contributed to a slower start in the 5G race’s initial phase.
Yet the continent’s trajectory demonstrates resilience rather than decline. With robust infrastructure foundations, regulatory frameworks, and renewed investment focus, Europe positions itself for a strong showing in 5G’s next chapter. The acceleration in network deployments, particularly SA networks, combined with strong FWA and MBB adoption forecasts, suggests the region is building momentum.
The disparity between ambitious long-term objectives and immediate implementation challenges remains evident. However, Europe’s telecommunications sector shows clear signs of catching up, leveraging its technological heritage and market sophistication to carve out a significant role in the global 5G landscape.
As coverage gaps close and indoor systems expand, European 5G infrastructure moves from foundational deployment toward comprehensive service delivery—transforming from aspiration into tangible connectivity that serves businesses and consumers across the continent.