Opensignal is the independent global standard for analyzing consumer mobile experience. Our industry reports are the definitive guide to understanding the true experience consumers receive on wireless networks.
Opensignal is the independent global standard for analyzing consumer mobile experience. Our industry reports are the definitive guide to understanding the true experience consumers receive on wireless networks.
Yettel is the winner of the Download Speed Experience award outright, with an average overall download speed of 37 Mbps — 2.6 Mbps (7.5%) faster than second-placed Telekom and 6.2 times faster than last-placed DIGIMobil. Vodafone was in third place with users' average download speeds clocking in at 22.2 Mbps. On the other hand, Telekom secures the Upload Speed Experience award with the fastest average speed of 13.6 Mbps — 4.8 times faster than last-placed DIGIMobil's 2.8 Mbps.
When it comes to the quality of experience when streaming videos over the mobile internet, our users in Hungary did not see any statistically significant difference in their experience on Telekom and Yettel's network. Telekom and Yettel jointly win the Video Experience award with scores in the 58-60.3 point range and placed in the Good (55-65) category.
Telekom beats the competition in terms of the quality of experience while playing multiplayer mobile games and using over-the-top (OTT) voice services in Hungary. In Games Experience, Telekom wins the award with 78.7 points — a lead of 3.3 points over second-placed Yettel. The operator also wins the Voice App Experience award, but it was a close-run race, with less than 1.3 points separating the winner, Telekom, and second-placed Yettel.
Telekom wins both the Excellent Consistent Quality and Core Consistent Quality awards outright, with scores of 84.7% and 91.8%, respectively. Excellent Consistent Quality score reflects the percentage of users' tests on operator networks meeting the minimum recommended performance thresholds to watch HD video, complete group video conference calls and play games. Core Consistent Quality measures the percentage of users' tests that met the minimum recommended performance thresholds for lower performance applications, including SD video, voice calls and web browsing.
Our users on Telekom's network connected to 4G locations in 9.5 out of 100 locations they visited. This was the best result in Hungary; consequently, Telekom claims the 4G Coverage Experience award outright with a score of 9.5 points on a 10 point scale, 0.8 points ahead of second placed Yettel.
In Opensignal's latest Hungary Mobile Network Experience report, we analyze the overall experience of our users — and for the first time, we include two awards that quantify the consistency of the experience. For this report, we've analyzed the mobile network experience of Hungary's four national operators — DIGIMobil, Telekom, Vodafone and Yettel— in the 90 days starting on April 1, 2022, and ending on June 29, 2022, to see how they measure up.
A quick look at our results, and it's clear that Telkom is the market leader in Hungary in terms of mobile network experience as it wins six out of our nine awards outright — Games Experience, Voice App Experience, Upload Speed Experience, 4G Coverage Experience, Excellent Consistent Quality and Core Consistent Quality. By comparison, the challenger operator, Yettel, claims one award outright for Download Speed Experience and jointly wins the Video Experience award alongside Telekom. Meanwhile, DIGIMobil and Vodafone share the Availability award with statistically tied scores above 97%.
Regarding other interesting developments in Hungary, the National Media and Communications Authority (NMHH) has extended its mobile phone exchange support program 31 March 2023, to align with the 3G sunset target date. This program kicked off in February 2022 to support the 3G switch-off, under which owners of 3G or 2G devices can claim subsidies towards the cost of a new 4G or 5G smartphone.
While Telekom was the first operator to completely switch off its 3G network on 30 June 2022, both Yettel Hungary and Vodafone are phasing out their 3G services.
Opensignal’s Video Experience quantifies the quality of video streamed to mobile devices by measuring real-world video streams over an operator's networks. The metric is based on an International Telecommunication Union (ITU) approach, built upon detailed studies which have derived a relationship between technical parameters, including picture quality, video loading time and stall rate, with the perceived video experience as reported by real people. To calculate video experience, we are directly measuring video streams from end-user devices and using this ITU approach to quantify the overall video experience for each operator on a scale from 0 to 100. The videos tested include a mixture of resolutions — including Full HD (FHD) and 4K / Ultra HD (UHD) — and are streamed directly from the world’s largest video content providers.
In addition to Video Experience, we report on the following metrics related to video experience:
Opensignal’s Games Experience measures how mobile users experience real-time multiplayer mobile gaming on an operator’s network. Measured on a scale of 0-100, it analyzes how our users’ multiplayer mobile gaming experience is affected by mobile network conditions including latency, packet loss and jitter.
Games Experience quantifies the experience when playing real-time multiplayer mobile games on mobile devices connected to servers located around the world. The approach is built on several years of research quantifying the relationship between technical network parameters and the gaming experience as reported by real mobile users. These parameters include latency (round trip time), jitter (variability of latency) and packet loss (the proportion of data packets that never reach their destination). Additionally, it considers multiple genres of multiplayer mobile games to measure the average sensitivity to network conditions. The games tested include some of the most popular real-time multiplayer mobile games (such as Fortnite, Pro Evolution Soccer and Arena of Valor) played around the world.
Calculating Games Experience starts with measuring the end-to-end experience from users’ devices to internet end-points that host real games. The score is then measured on a scale from 0 to 100.
In addition to Games Experience, we report on the following metrics related to games experience:
Opensignal's Voice App Experience measures the quality of experience for over-the-top (OTT) voice services — mobile voice apps such as WhatsApp, Skype and Facebook Messenger — using a model derived from the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) approach for quantifying overall voice call quality and a series of calibrated technical parameters. This model characterizes the exact relationship between the technical measurements and perceived call quality. Voice App Experience for each operator is calculated on a scale from 0 to 100.
In addition to Voice App Experience, we report on the following metrics related to voice app experience:
Measured in Mbps, Download Speed Experience represents the typical everyday speeds a user experiences across an operator’s mobile data networks.
In addition to Download Speed Experience, we report on the following metrics related to download speeds:
Upload Speed Experience measures the average upload speeds for each operator observed by our users across their mobile data networks. Typically upload speeds are slower than download speeds, as current mobile broadband technologies focus resources on providing the best possible download speed for users consuming content on their devices. As mobile internet trends move away from downloading content to creating content and supporting real-time communications services, upload speeds are becoming more vital and new technologies are emerging that boost upstream capacity.
In addition to Upload Speed Experience, we report on five supporting metrics related to upload speeds:
Our availability metrics are not a measure of a network’s geographical extent. They won’t tell you whether you are likely to get a signal if you plan to visit a remote rural or nearly uninhabited region. Instead, they measure what proportion of time people have a network connection, in the places they most commonly frequent — something often missed by traditional coverage metrics. Looking at when users have a connection rather than where, provides us with a more precise reflection of the true user experience.
We also keep track of the instances that leave mobile users most frustrated: when there is no signal to connect to at all. The most common dead zones users struggle with occur indoors. As most of our availability data is collected indoors (as that’s where users spend most of their time), we’re particularly astute at detecting areas of zero signal.
Our availability metrics take a user-centric, time-based approach that complements the user-centric and geographical-based methodology used by our reach metrics.
Availability shows the proportion of time all Opensignal users on an operator’s network had either a 3G, 4G or 5G connection.
The coverage maps show the locations where we received measurements from users connecting with 3G or better mobile service. Each map provides an indication of the areas in which it is possible to obtain mobile service from that mobile operator.
4G Coverage Experience measures how mobile subscribers experience 4G coverage on an operator’s network. Measured on a scale of 0-10, it analyzes the locations where customers of a network operator received a 4G signal relative to the locations visited by users of all network operators.
In simple terms, 4G Coverage Experience measures the mobile coverage experience in all the locations that matter most to everyday users — i.e. all the places where they live, work and travel. It considers all the areas that Opensignal users visit, the portion of locations that 4G is available to them, and locations that more users visit have higher importance to them.
The coverage maps show the locations where we received measurements from users connecting with 3G or better mobile service. Each map provides an indication of the areas in which it is possible to obtain mobile service from that mobile operator.
Consistent Quality measures how often users’ experience on a network was sufficient to support common applications’ requirements. It measures download speed, upload speed, latency, jitter, packet loss, time to first byte and the percentage of tests attempted which did not succeed due to a connectivity issue on either the download or server response component.
Full details on how the Consistent Quality metrics — Excellent Consistent Quality and Core Consistent Quality — are calculated can be found here.
Excellent Consistent Quality is the percentage of users’ tests that met the minimum recommended performance thresholds to watch HD video, complete group video conference calls and play games.
Consistent Quality measures how often users’ experience on a network was sufficient to support common applications’ requirements. It measures download speed, upload speed, latency, jitter, packet loss, time to first byte and the percentage of tests attempted which did not succeed due to a connectivity issue on either the download or server response component.
Full details on how the Consistent Quality metrics — Excellent Consistent Quality and Core Consistent Quality — are calculated can be found here.
Core Consistent Quality is the percentage of users’ tests that met the minimum recommended performance thresholds for lower performance applications including SD video, voice calls and web browsing.
Collecting billions of individual measurements daily from over 100 million devices globally, Opensignal independently analyzes mobile user experience on every major network operator around the globe.
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For every metric we calculate statistical confidence intervals indicated on our graphs. When confidence intervals overlap, our measured results are too close to declare a winner. In those cases, we show a statistical draw. For this reason, some metrics have multiple operator winners.
In our bar graphs we represent confidence intervals as boundaries on either sides of graph bars.
In our supporting-metric charts we show confidence intervals as +/- numerical values.
Why confidence intervals are vital in analyzing mobile network experience