The UAE says it has launched the world’s first commercial upper 6 GHz mobile network ecosystem. That claim matters because it links policy, operator testing, and commercial rollout in one clear push. This is not just another speed headline. It shows how Gulf telecom markets now move faster than many larger regions when regulators, operators, and vendors align around one network goal.
The launch in simple terms
The announcement came at the SAMENA Council Leaders’ Summit 2026. TDRA led the policy side, while du, e&, Huawei, Nokia, GSMA, HONOR, and Tozed joined the ecosystem launch. The goal is clear. The UAE wants to push 5G Advanced closer to peak 10Gbps performance and build early ground for 6G services.
In plain language, the upper 6 GHz band gives mobile networks more room to carry heavy traffic. That matters now because AI services, cloud tools, ultra-high definition video, and connected devices all push more data across networks every day. When operators get more mid-band spectrum, they can lift speed and capacity without relying only on dense site builds or fixed fibre lines.
What U6GHz actually is
U6GHz refers to the 6425 to 7125 MHz range, which the industry maps to 3GPP band n104. It sits in a useful middle ground. It carries more data than lower bands, yet it keeps better coverage traits than the very high frequency spectrum. That balance is why telecom groups keep calling the upper 6 GHz a key band for the next stage of mobile growth.
The speed claim also has context. SAMENA Council members said U6GHz can support peak downlink speeds up to 10Gbps and uplink speeds up to 1Gbps under 5G Advanced. That does not mean every user will see those numbers on day one. It means the band gives operators the technical headroom to build faster mobile broadband in dense and data-heavy areas.
The road to this launch
This launch did not appear overnight. e& ran its first 6 GHz trial in the UAE in 2022 with Huawei and framed the band as a practical answer to future 5G capacity needs. At that stage, the company focused on long-term spectrum value and on use cases such as immersive services, industrial systems, and fixed wireless broadband.
The next key step came in 2024. TDRA updated the national frequency plan and allocated the 600 MHz and 6 GHz bands for IMT services after WRC 23. That decision put the UAE among the earliest countries to free these bands for future mobile use. TDRA also said the actual operation would start in the 2025 to 2026 window.
Then came the field proof. In April 2025, e& said it reached up to 10Gbps using 6 GHz with commercial-grade equipment and extended 5G coverage beyond 6 km on 600 MHz. That test mattered because it tied headline speed to real deployment hardware instead of a lab-only setup. It also showed how the UAE wants to combine high capacity and broad coverage in one network plan.
What people and businesses get
For regular users, the near-term gain is simple. A stronger upper 6 GHz mobile layer can help operators deliver faster home wireless broadband, smoother 8K video, quicker large file downloads, and more stable performance in busy areas. The benefit grows in places where fibre does not reach every building or where mobile traffic spikes hard during peak hours.
For businesses, the value looks even stronger. High-capacity mid-band spectrum helps cloud apps, AI workloads, industrial sensors, smart city systems, and private wireless setups that need both speed and low delay. TDRA has linked the new band plan to smart city growth, Internet of Things services, and future digital infrastructure. GSMA also says mid-band 5G will drive the largest share of 5G’s economic value by 2030.
The industry signal is bigger than the launch
The UAE launch also sends a wider message to the telecom industry. The upper 6 GHz has spent years in spectrum debates between mobile and Wi Fi interests. WRC 23 gave Region 1 countries a path to use 6425 to 7125 MHz for IMT with protections for existing services. The UAE moved quickly after that decision. It did not wait for a slower global consensus to form.
GSMA has argued that the 6 GHz ecosystem now has enough momentum for commercial mobile use, and it points to trials in markets such as China, Germany, Brazil, and the UAE. That matters because spectrum policy alone never builds a network. Operators need radio gear, device support, and enough ecosystem scale to cut costs. The UAE now wants to prove that the upper 6 GHz has crossed that line.
The hard work starts now
The launch deserves attention, but the rollout will decide the real story. Consumer impact depends on how fast operators expand coverage, how many compatible devices reach stores, and how well networks hold performance outside controlled demos. Commercial launches often begin in limited zones before users feel a broad change across a country.
Even so, the UAE has built a credible runway. It started with early trials, matched them with spectrum policy, proved headline performance on commercial equipment, and then pushed the ecosystem into a public launch. That is a stronger play than a one-off lab record or a vague 6G promise. If operators keep execution tight, the UAE will hold a real first mover edge in the next phase of 5G Advanced connectivity.










