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5G FWA Speed and Latency

What speeds can you realistically expect from 5G FWA? We look at real-world throughput, latency figures and what affects performance.

What speeds can you realistically expect?

Marketing speed claims for 5G are based on peak theoretical performance under optimal conditions. Real-world FWA speeds depend on a combination of factors that vary by location, time of day, and hardware quality.

The main variables

Distance and signal quality: Closer to the mast with stronger signal means more data can be transferred per second. Signal quality (SINR) matters as much as raw signal strength: a strong but noisy signal performs worse than a slightly weaker but clean one.

Frequency band: Mid-band n78 at 3.5 GHz delivers far more capacity per unit of time than low-band n28 at 700 MHz. The physics of spectrum mean higher frequency bands carry more data but cover less distance.

Network congestion: A 5G cell site has finite capacity shared among all connected users. A site serving a dense residential area at 6 PM on a weekday will be more congested than the same site at 2 AM. Peak-time performance can be 30-50% below off-peak performance on busy urban sites.

CPE quality and positioning: A well-positioned outdoor CPE with 4×4 MIMO captures more signal energy than an indoor unit on a shelf. The antenna configuration directly affects throughput.

Realistic speed expectations by scenario

Scenario Expected downstream Expected upstream
Urban, indoor CPE, strong n78 100-300 Mbps 20-60 Mbps
Urban, outdoor CPE, strong n78 200-600 Mbps 30-100 Mbps
Suburban, indoor CPE, moderate n78 50-150 Mbps 15-40 Mbps
Suburban, outdoor CPE, moderate n78 100-300 Mbps 20-60 Mbps
Rural, outdoor CPE, 700 MHz n28 30-100 Mbps 10-25 Mbps

Latency

Latency on 5G SA (Standalone) is typically 10-20 ms round trip to a UK server. 5G NSA adds some overhead from the 4G core, typically resulting in 20-40 ms. Both are adequate for all standard broadband applications.

FTTP full-fibre latency is typically 5-10 ms. The difference between 15 ms and 8 ms is imperceptible in normal broadband use. It becomes relevant only in specific contexts: competitive online gaming, financial trading systems, and real-time industrial control.

How to test your connection

Use Ookla Speedtest or Fast.com for standard throughput tests. Run tests at different times of day to build a picture of congestion impact. For latency testing, a continuous ping to a reliable UK server (ping bbc.co.uk -t on Windows) will show both average latency and variability over time. Jitter (variation in latency) is as important as average latency for real-time applications.

PG

Peter Green

Independent IoT and cellular connectivity writer. 25 years in telecoms and M2M. No vendor affiliation.
petergreen.xyz