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    Home5G & BeyondPrivate 5G nets will grow faster than public 5G, peaking in 2027

    Private 5G nets will grow faster than public 5G, peaking in 2027

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    RAN Research predicts private 5G networks will generate $19.3 billion (€16.25 billion) in equipment sales at their height.

    Private 5G network deployments will surge over the next few years faster even than public 5G, reaching a peak in 2027 when they will generate $19.3 billion in equipment sales, before subsiding after that as saturation approaches.

    Enterprise Wi-Fi

    There will be a similar boom in deployment of enterprise Wi-Fi networks around the latest 6E standard offering greater capacity and performance than the current generation, closer to 5G.

    However, that Wi-Fi growth will be confined largely to North America and Europe, and will peak earlier in 2024, after which an increasing number of sites will swing to 5G for more demanding use cases.



    These are key findings of the latest report, Private Networks Driving Opportunities in 5G and WiFi from RAN Research, the wireless forecasting arm of Rethink Technology Research.

    The forecast drills down into regions and vertical industry sectors, identifying manufacturing as a major driver for private enterprise 5G in line with the industry 4.0 revolution, but with strong growth across the board.

    Healthcare, transportation, energy and government stand out as other sectors where deployments of private 5G and WiFi 6E will take off faster than the average.

    Spectacular 5G growth

    Cumulative growth in private 5G will be spectacular, with 26.6 million networks deployed around the world by 2028, up from 1.1 million in 2021.

    This growth will occur in all regions but will be especially striking in four countries leading the private 5G field now, the US, Germany, China and Japan.

    Don’t forget 4G

    While 5G will account for the lion’s share of the growth over the whole forecast period, there will still be a significant number of 4G private networks being deployed over the next few years.

    Similarly, on the WiFi front, the last generation 5 is dominant at present but it will be the latest 6E that takes over during the forecast period and offers an alternative to 5G for some of the emerging cases.

    There will also be a revival of heterogenous networks combining WiFi and cellular under these two latest generations, as new AI based techniques finally deliver the smooth handover that has proved elusive for so long. 

    Private 5G networks will attract more new players into the mobile arena. Operators face competition not just from new service providers but also enterprises themselves bypassing them to build their own networks.  

    The established technology providers themselves face a challenge from new providers coming in on the back of Open RAN.