Major markets see declining 5G speeds and satisfaction
5G speeds continue to get slower, and there are signs that some customers are beginning to notice.
February 16, 2023
5G speeds continue to get slower, and there are signs that some customers are beginning to notice.
Figures published by Ookla on Wednesday showed that median 5G download speeds in several early adopter markets are down – in some cases significantly – over the last 12 months.
Norway recorded the biggest drop, with speeds slowing by 88.1 Mbps, followed by Sweden, which showed a decrease of 84.4 Mbps. However, with fairly high median speeds of 200.4 Mbps and 263.9 Mbps respectively, the drop off shouldn’t cause too many issues for end users.
However, it could cause problems for operators that had a lower median speed to begin with. The UK is a concern here, because while it saw a smaller decline of 38.3 Mbps, it leaves the median 5G speed at only 129.1 Mbps. Similarly, median speed in Spain sank by 31.7 Mbps to 94.1 Mbps.
Bucking the trend is the US, which saw 5G speed increase by 36.4 Mbps to a median of 138.9 Mbps.
The stats represent a continuation of the trend that Ookla illustrated in late 2021, when it reported that global median 5G download speed had fallen to 166.1 Mbps in the third quarter, a 13% year-on-year decline.
Ookla pointed to a few factors that are driving this trend.