Introduction
The global rollout of 5G Advanced -formally 3GPP Release 18 -is underway in 2026, and it represents a more meaningful upgrade from standard 5G than marketing materials from carriers would suggest. Beyond raw speed, 5G Advanced brings new capabilities for AI-assisted network management, extended coverage, and a class of latency improvements that open new applications in industrial automation, gaming, and remote medicine.
To understand why 5G Advanced matters, it helps to recognize what standard 5G -released as 3GPP Release 15 in 2019 -was actually optimized for. The first wave of 5G was primarily about capacity and peak speed: delivering multi-gigabit theoretical maximums in ideal conditions and handling the density of connected devices that increasingly characterizes urban environments. What it was not fully optimized for was latency consistency, uplink performance, and the intelligence to manage complex heterogeneous networks.
5G Advanced addresses all of these gaps, and the practical implications are significant for a range of use cases that were theoretical under standard 5G but are becoming operational today.
What's Actually New in 5G Advanced
5G Advanced introduces three headline improvements over Release 15/16 5G. First, network-side AI: base stations now run machine learning models that dynamically allocate spectrum, predict congestion, and pre-position data closer to users -reducing effective latency even at distance from towers. This is not a minor software update; it requires new base station hardware with dedicated inference chips alongside the radio processing units.
Second, improved uplink speeds through Coherent Joint Transmission, which allows multiple towers to coordinate and serve a single device simultaneously. For the standard consumer downloading content, uplink performance seems secondary -but for the growing population of users who live-stream, upload large files, participate in cloud gaming, and send high-resolution video calls, uplink is increasingly the bottleneck. Coherent Joint Transmission can increase uplink throughput by up to 40% in dense environments.
Third, RedCap (Reduced Capability) devices -a new device class enabling ultra-long battery life IoT sensors to connect to the 5G network without requiring full smartphone-grade radios. RedCap enables the truly massive IoT connectivity that smart city infrastructure, agricultural monitoring, and industrial sensing require -billions of low-power devices reporting data continuously without cellular infrastructure updates.
Coverage in 2026
As of Q1 2026, T-Mobile leads 5G Advanced deployment in the US with coverage in over 200 cities. Verizon and AT&T are in mid-rollout across major metros. T-Mobile’s advantage comes from its early investment in mid-band spectrum -the 2.5GHz band from the Sprint merger -which provides the optimal balance of coverage range and throughput for 5G Advanced’s AI-assisted scheduling to operate most effectively.
Globally, South Korea, Japan, and the UAE have the densest 5G Advanced coverage, with Ericsson and Nokia both reporting accelerating installation rates. SK Telecom and KT Corporation in South Korea have deployed 5G Advanced across the major metropolitan areas with a level of density that provides genuine 5G Advanced performance rather than the ‘connected but not really benefiting’ experience that sparse deployment creates.
Rural coverage remains the persistent challenge. 5G Advanced’s higher frequency bands deliver peak speeds in dense urban environments but do not penetrate building materials or travel long distances as well as older 4G LTE bands, keeping rural 5G improvements incremental. The RedCap device class addresses this for IoT applications, but rural consumers’ smartphone connectivity continues to be primarily served by 4G LTE infrastructure with 5G as a supplement rather than a replacement.
European deployment is ahead of most expectations following the rapid auction of Release 18-compatible spectrum in Germany, France, and the UK. China’s three major carriers -China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicom -have the most aggressive nationwide 5G Advanced rollout timelines globally, with coverage targets that dwarf the US and European deployments in absolute terms.
Real-World Speed and Latency
In covered urban areas, 5G Advanced delivers median download speeds of 500–800 Mbps and peak speeds exceeding 3 Gbps in ideal conditions. These numbers represent meaningful improvements over the 200–400 Mbps median that standard 5G delivers in well-covered areas.
More practically relevant: latency under AI-assisted network management regularly hits 5–8ms in the real world, compared to 20–40ms for standard 5G. This is a meaningful difference for cloud gaming, video calls, and real-time industrial control. At 5ms round-trip latency, remote control of physical equipment becomes practical -a surgeon can manipulate a robotic surgical system from across the hospital; a field technician can receive real-time guidance from an expert reviewing a live video feed.
Upload performance improvements are particularly notable for content creators. A smartphone photographer uploading 4K RAW files to cloud storage, a social media creator streaming at 4K resolution, and a field journalist sending broadcast-quality footage from a live event all benefit from 5G Advanced’s uplink improvements in ways that standard 5G could not reliably deliver in congested environments.
For the average consumer browsing social media or streaming video, the difference between Release 15 5G and 5G Advanced may be imperceptible day-to-day. The gains are most evident in congested environments -stadiums, transit hubs, dense office buildings -where the AI scheduling genuinely improves consistency.
Which Phones Support 5G Advanced
5G Advanced requires a modem that supports Release 18 specifications. The good news is that all smartphones released in 2024 and 2025 with flagship-tier modems support 5G Advanced capabilities, as modem manufacturers began incorporating Release 18 support before carrier rollouts began.
The Snapdragon 8 Elite and 8 Gen 3 modems, the Apple A17 Pro and A18 Pro, and Samsung’s Exynos 2500 all support 5G Advanced. Mid-range devices using Snapdragon 7s Gen 3 and MediaTek Dimensity 9300 are more variable in their Release 18 support -check with your carrier’s device compatibility list for specific model confirmation.
Importantly, 5G Advanced benefits require carrier activation -having a compatible device does not automatically enable 5G Advanced features if the carrier has not enabled them on your plan or in your coverage area. Most carriers are activating 5G Advanced features automatically for customers on their highest-tier unlimited plans, with rollout to mid-tier plans following on an area-by-area basis.
Conclusion
5G Advanced is a real step forward, particularly for latency-sensitive applications and IoT deployments. For consumers, the practical benefits are most evident in congested urban areas. If you’re due for a phone upgrade, new devices with Release 18 modems will future-proof your hardware -but don’t rush to replace a working device solely for 5G Advanced.
The broader significance of 5G Advanced lies less in the consumer experience upgrade and more in the new category of applications it enables: XR, remote medicine, industrial automation, and massive IoT. These applications will create value in the economy and society in ways that appear in productivity statistics and healthcare outcomes rather than speed test numbers.

