1877 MHz – Frequency Band & Applications

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Frequency
1877 MHz
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Range
1851–1880 MHz
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Band Group
1800 MHz Cellular (DCS / Band 3)

🌐 Summary

The 1877 MHz allocation is part of the 1800 MHz Cellular (DCS / Band 3) spectrum. This range is used worldwide for critical applications that keep our communications and infrastructure running smoothly. On this page we highlight how each band is applied in real systems, from regulatory assignments to everyday devices. Our goal is to make spectrum data clear and practical for engineers, regulators, and enthusiasts alike.

Key uses of this band include: Frequency 1851-1880 MHz has regional allocation differences. EUROPE/ASIA/AFRICA: Band 3 (DCS-1800) downlink – base stations transmit, paired with 1710-1785 MHz uplink. AMERICAS: Band 2/25 (PCS 1900) uplink – mobile devices transmit, paired with 1930-1990 MHz downlink. Same frequencies, opposite directions. Both support 2G/3G/4G/5G. Critical to understand regional context for regulatory compliance and device compatibility..

DCS-1800 / Band 3 downlink upper portion (Europe, Asia, Africa, Middle East). NOTE: In Americas (US/Canada/Latin America), this same frequency range is used as Band 2/25 UPLINK (1850-1910 MHz UL paired with 1930-1990 MHz DL). Regional allocation differences are critical for regulatory compliance.

1851 to 1880 MHz  Cellular (DCS-1800 / IMT uplink) (Mobitex)
1851 to 1880 MHz Cellular (DCS-1800 / IMT uplink) (Mobitex)

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πŸ“‘ Band & Geometry key

Field Value
Wavelength (m) 0.15971894405967
Waveforms BPSK(1), BOC(1,1), MBOC – per system specs
Antenna Form Factor (Typical) BS: panel/sector; UE: internal PIFA/monopole
Band Family DCS-1800 (Band 3 downlink 1805-1880 MHz)
Band L‑Band
Primary Common Name DCS-1800 / Band 3 Downlink (Europe/Asia/Africa); Band 2 Uplink in Americas
FSPL @ 1 km [dB] 97.92
FSPL @ 10 km [dB] 117.92
Fresnel Radius @ 1 km (m) 6.319
Band Group 1800 MHz Cellular (DCS / Band 3)
Tax Band Family Cellular (DCS-1800 / IMT uplink)
Tax Band Class 1851 to 1880 MHz Cellular (DCS-1800 / IMT uplink) (Mobitex)

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🧩 Applications & Usage

Field Value
Primary Application Regional cellular: Band 3 (DCS-1800) base station downlink in Europe/Asia/Africa; Band 2/25 (PCS 1900) mobile device uplink in Americas. Same frequencies, opposite transmission directions.
Lower Neighbor Use Band 3 Downlink (1805–1850 MHz)
Upper Neighbor Use AWS Downlink (2110–2180 MHz)
Typical Services Devices Base stations: macro/micro/small cells; UE: GSM/LTE/5G smartphones (Band 3 receive)
Market Common Devices Base stations (transmit); LTE/5G smartphones, IoT modules (receive)
Refarming Use DCS-1800 being refarmed for LTE/5G NR
Device Ecosystem Size Very large – billions of Band 3 devices globally
Device Hotspots (MHz) 1865 (center of upper Band 3 DL)
Device Category Cellular base stations (eNodeB, gNB transmit); UE (smartphones, tablets receive)
Typical Use Cases Mobile broadband downlink (2G/3G/4G/5G), voice services, video streaming, IoT
Modulation (Device) QPSK/16QAM/64QAM/256QAM (uplink varies by system/config)
Channel Width (Device) [kHz] GSM: 200 kHz; LTE: 1400-20000 kHz; NR: 5000-100000 kHz
Device Region Profiles Band 3 (DCS-1800 DL): Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East, Africa, parts of Latin America. Band 2 (PCS 1900 UL): United States, Canada, Mexico, Caribbean, parts of Latin America. International phones support both bands.
Per-Region EIRP Or Duty (Device) Base station: 43-49 dBm (macro); regional power variations
Allocation Relevance (Device) High relevance globally – one of the most important cellular bands. Band 3 devices for Europe/Asia/Africa downlink reception. Band 2 devices for Americas uplink transmission. Multi-band devices support both.
Adjacent-Band Collision Risks (Device) Adjacent channel interference; guard band prevents uplink interference
Example Devices Or Skus International phones support both: iPhone 15 (Band 2 & 3), Samsung Galaxy S24 (Band 2 & 3), Pixel 8 (Band 2 & 3). Regional devices may support only local band (Band 3 in Europe/Asia, Band 2 in Americas).
Common Protocols DCS-1800, UMTS-1800, LTE Band 3, 5G NR n3

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πŸ—’οΈ Notes

Field Value
Receiver Selectivity Notes UE receiver adjacent channel selectivity (ACS): β‰₯33 dB (LTE Band 3); blocking per 3GPP TS 36.101
Interference Notes Regional allocation differences create unique interference scenarios. Band 3 regions: out-of-band emissions from base stations. Band 2 regions: emissions from mobile devices. Cross-border areas between different allocation regions require special coordination.
Compatibility Risk Notes 0
Notes DCS-1800 / Band 3 downlink upper portion (Europe, Asia, Africa, Middle East). NOTE: In Americas (US/Canada/Latin America), this same frequency range is used as Band 2/25 UPLINK (1850-1910 MHz UL paired with 1930-1990 MHz DL). Regional allocation differences are critical for regulatory compliance.
Propagation Notes Good indoor penetration at 1.8 GHz; better than higher frequencies

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βš™οΈ Technical Rules

Field Value
Lower Band Frequency Limit 1851
Upper Band Frequency Limit 1880
EIRP Indoor Limits Base station: 24-37 dBm (small cells); UE receives (no UE transmit in DL)
EIRP Outdoor Limits Base station: 43-49 dBm (macro cells); 61 dBm EIRP with antenna gain
PSD Limit Not applicable – receive-only band
Emission Mask Class receive-only band (no transmitters)
Guardband Minimum [kHz] N/A – receive-only band
Typical Bandwidths 12.5 kHz–5 MHz (system‑dependent)
Autocalculated Bandlimits 0
Typical Bandwidths (Estimated) 12.5 kHz–5 MHz (system‑dependent)
Max EIRP [dBm] Base station: 43-49 dBm (macro); regional power variations
Power Source Or Duty Profile (Typical) BS: continuous AC; UE: battery (3-5 days typical)
Channelization Plan 3GPP channel raster per national IMT band plan (FDD); paired with 1930–1995 MHz downlink where allocated
Channelization GSM: 200 kHz channels; LTE: 1.4-20 MHz; 5G NR: flexible numerology 5-100 MHz
Guard Band Requirement 1785-1805 MHz guard band between uplink and downlink
OOB Emission Limit [dBm/MHz] Strict OOBE < –60 dBm/MHz to protect adjacent channels
Spurious Emission Limit (dBm) ≀ βˆ’60 dBm/MHz (strict protection standard)
RX Blocking Min [dBm] UE blocking: -43 dBm (in-band); -15 dBm (out-of-band) per 3GPP
Duplexing FDD downlink (Base β†’ UE)
Duplexing Information Downlink (space‑to‑Earth)
Uplink Pairing Paired with 1710–1785 MHz uplink (Band 3); duplex gap 1785-1805 MHz
Downlink Pairing
Paired Band Info Paired downlink typically 1930–1995 MHz (PCS/Band 3), region-dependent
Max EIRP [dBm] N/A – receive-only band
Channelization Block Size Operator carriers (kHz–MHz)
3GPP Band Number
Example 3GPP Bands Band 3 (DCS-1800: DL 1805-1880, UL 1710-1785 MHz)
LTE Uplink Bands Paired with Band 3 UL (1710-1785 MHz)
LTE Downlink Bands Band 3 (1805-1880 MHz DL) – upper portion
NR Uplink Bands Paired with n3 UL (1710-1785 MHz)
NR Downlink Bands n3 (1805-1880 MHz DL) – upper portion
Guard Bands Band-edge emission masks and adjacent-block coordination apply (region-specific)
Protocol Or Standard 3GPP GSM/UMTS/LTE/5G NR (uplink), region-dependent deployments

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🌎 Country Overrides

Field Value
Tax Service Category Mobile (IMT)
Tax License Type Licensed IMT spectrum (DCS-1800 / Band 3 uplink), region-specific allocations
Tax Regions Widely used for cellular uplink in many regions (PCS/IMT); exact blocks vary by country and operator
ITU Region 1 (Europe, Africa, Middle East (west of Persian Gulf), Western Russia & Mongolia) Mobile / Fixed
ITU Region 2 (North America, South America, Central America, Caribbean, Greenland, Eastern Pacific Islands (Americas region)) Mobile / Fixed
ITU Region 3 (Asia, Australia, Pacific Islands, Oceania, Indian Subcontinent, East Asia & Southeast Asia) Mobile / Fixed
License Type Licensed / auctioned (region‑specific)
Primary Application Regional cellular: Band 3 (DCS-1800) base station downlink in Europe/Asia/Africa; Band 2/25 (PCS 1900) mobile device uplink in Americas. Same frequencies, opposite transmission directions.
Primary Services Mobile broadband downlink, voice services, IoT
Spurious Emission [dBm] ≀ βˆ’60 dBm/MHz (strict protection standard)
Lower Neighbor Use Band 3 Downlink (1805–1850 MHz)
Upper Neighbor Use AWS Downlink (2110–2180 MHz)
Licensing Model Licensed (MNOs); Band 3 widely deployed outside North America
Typical Services Devices Base stations: macro/micro/small cells; UE: GSM/LTE/5G smartphones (Band 3 receive)
US FCC Alloc MOBILE (primary); FIXED – PCS bands (Band 3 not widely deployed in US)–

CA IC Alloc MOBILE (primary); FIXED – DCS-1800–

UK Ofcom Alloc MOBILE (primary) – DCS-1800–

US Ref 3GPP TS 36.101 (Band 3); ETSI EN 301 502 (DCS-1800)
Typical Bandwidths 12.5 kHz–5 MHz (system‑dependent)
Market Licensing Model Licensed spectrum – mobile operators. Band 3 regions (Europe/Asia/Africa): DCS-1800 downlink licenses. Band 2 regions (Americas): PCS 1900 uplink licenses. License terms and allocations vary by country and regulatory authority.
Market Common Devices Base stations (transmit); LTE/5G smartphones, IoT modules (receive)
Fresnel Radius (1st, 1 km) [m] 6.319
Typical Bandwidths (Estimated) 12.5 kHz–5 MHz (system‑dependent)
Auction Status Auctioned in various countries; some legacy GSM assignments
Refarming Use DCS-1800 being refarmed for LTE/5G NR
Typical Site Spacing km N/A – space segment with global footprint. / N/A – space segment with global footprint.
Device Ecosystem Size Very large – billions of Band 3 devices globally
Traffic Load Share High – Band 3 carries significant mobile data traffic
Device Hotspots (MHz) 1865 (center of upper Band 3 DL)
Device Category Cellular base stations (eNodeB, gNB transmit); UE (smartphones, tablets receive)
Typical Use Cases Mobile broadband downlink (2G/3G/4G/5G), voice services, video streaming, IoT
Typical Center Frequencies [MHz] 1865 (center of 1851-1880 range)
Rule Part (Fcc Or Region) ETSI EN 301 502 (Europe); regional variations
Modulation (Device) QPSK/16QAM/64QAM/256QAM (uplink varies by system/config)
Channel Width (Device) [kHz] GSM: 200 kHz; LTE: 1400-20000 kHz; NR: 5000-100000 kHz
Device Region Profiles Band 3 (DCS-1800 DL): Europe, Asia-Pacific, Middle East, Africa, parts of Latin America. Band 2 (PCS 1900 UL): United States, Canada, Mexico, Caribbean, parts of Latin America. International phones support both bands.
Per-Region EIRP Or Duty (Device) Base station: 43-49 dBm (macro); regional power variations
Allocation Relevance (Device) High relevance globally – one of the most important cellular bands. Band 3 devices for Europe/Asia/Africa downlink reception. Band 2 devices for Americas uplink transmission. Multi-band devices support both.
Adjacent-Band Collision Risks (Device) Adjacent channel interference; guard band prevents uplink interference
Example Devices Or Skus International phones support both: iPhone 15 (Band 2 & 3), Samsung Galaxy S24 (Band 2 & 3), Pixel 8 (Band 2 & 3). Regional devices may support only local band (Band 3 in Europe/Asia, Band 2 in Americas).
Antenna Form Factor (Typical) BS: panel/sector; UE: internal PIFA/monopole
Power Source Or Duty Profile (Typical) BS: continuous AC; UE: battery (3-5 days typical)

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πŸ›‘οΈ Regulatory & Neighbors

Field Value
Lower Band Frequency Limit 1851
Upper Band Frequency Limit 1880
Rx Blocking Min dBm UE blocking: -43 dBm (in-band); -15 dBm (out-of-band) per 3GPP
Lower Neighbor Use Band 3 Downlink (1805–1850 MHz)
Upper Neighbor Use AWS Downlink (2110–2180 MHz)
Lower Neighbor Band Mobile Downlink (Band 3)
Lower Neighbor Range 1805–1850 MHz
Upper Neighbor Label AWS / Band 66 Downlink
Upper Neighbor Range 2110–2180 MHz
Adjacent-Band Collision Risks (Device) Adjacent channel interference; guard band prevents uplink interference
Real-World Range (Indoor/Outdoor) Urban: 0.5-2 km; Suburban: 2-10 km; Rural: up to 35 km
US FCC Alloc MOBILE (primary); FIXED – PCS bands (Band 3 not widely deployed in US)MOBILE (primary); FIXED – PCS bands (Band 3 not widely deployed in US)

CA IC Alloc MOBILE (primary); FIXED – DCS-1800MOBILE (primary); FIXED – DCS-1800

UK Ofcom Alloc MOBILE (primary) – DCS-1800MOBILE (primary) – DCS-1800

Regulatory References US: 3GPP TS 36.101 (Band 3); ETSI EN 301 502 (DCS-1800); CA: 3GPP TS 36.101 (Band 3); ISED Canada SRSP; UK: Ofcom IR 2000; 3GPP TS 36.101 (Band 3); ETSI EN 301 502
Global Harmonization REGIONAL DIFFERENCES: Europe/Asia/Africa use as Band 3 downlink (1805-1880 DL, paired with 1710-1785 UL). Americas use as Band 2/25 uplink (1850-1910 UL, paired with 1930-1990 DL). NOT harmonized globally – same frequencies serve opposite directions in different regions.
Crossborder Coordination Critical between regions using different allocations. Europe/Asia (Band 3 DL) borders with Americas (Band 2 UL) require careful coordination due to opposite transmission directions. Also important within Band 3 regions for operator coordination.
Sharing Mechanism Licensed exclusive use per operator
Auction Status Auctioned in various countries; some legacy GSM assignments
Guard Or Pair FDD uplink; paired with 1930–1995 MHz downlink (PCS/Band 3), region-dependent

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πŸ“ˆ Market & Measurements

Field Value
Noise Floor Thermal noise floor ~-174 dBm/Hz + device noise figure
Interference Cases Adjacent channel interference between operators; guard band at 1785-1805 MHz prevents uplink interference
Lower Neighbor Range 1805–1850 MHz
Upper Neighbor Range 2110–2180 MHz
Interference Notes Regional allocation differences create unique interference scenarios. Band 3 regions: out-of-band emissions from base stations. Band 2 regions: emissions from mobile devices. Cross-border areas between different allocation regions require special coordination.
Market Licensing Model Licensed spectrum – mobile operators. Band 3 regions (Europe/Asia/Africa): DCS-1800 downlink licenses. Band 2 regions (Americas): PCS 1900 uplink licenses. License terms and allocations vary by country and regulatory authority.
Market Commercial Value Very high – Band 3 widely deployed cellular downlink globally
Market Common Devices Base stations (transmit); LTE/5G smartphones, IoT modules (receive)
Market Deployment Density Very high in Europe/Asia/Africa – dense cellular deployments
Noise Floor (Estimated) Thermal noise floor ~-174 dBm/Hz + device noise figure
Market Commercial Value (Estimated) Very high – Band 3 widely deployed cellular downlink globally
Ecosystem Maturity Mature – Band 3 deployed since 1990s/2000s
Indoor Penetration Good – 1.8 GHz provides better penetration than 2.6 GHz+
Known Interference Adjacent channel interference between operators
Device Ecosystem Size Very large – billions of Band 3 devices globally
Real-World Range (Indoor/Outdoor) Urban: 0.5-2 km; Suburban: 2-10 km; Rural: up to 35 km
Antenna Form Factor (Typical) BS: panel/sector; UE: internal PIFA/monopole
Ecosystem Maturity Mature – Band 3 deployed since 1990s/2000s
Device Ecosystem Size Very large – billions of Band 3 devices globally
Chipset Availability Universal support from major vendors: Qualcomm, MediaTek, Samsung, Apple. Modern chipsets support both Band 2 (Americas) and Band 3 (Europe/Asia/Africa) to enable global roaming.
Operator Deployments Band 3 (Europe/Asia/Africa): hundreds of operators in 150+ countries. Band 2 (Americas): AT&T, Verizon, T-Mobile, Rogers, Telcel, etc. Same frequencies support different operators regionally.
Technology Generations Deployed GSM (2G, legacy), UMTS (3G, legacy), LTE (4G), 5G NR (where refarmed), region-dependent
Roaming Support International roaming requires multi-band support. Travelers from Band 3 regions (Europe/Asia) to Band 2 regions (Americas) and vice versa need phones supporting both bands. Most modern smartphones are multi-band capable.
Traffic Load Share High – Band 3 carries significant mobile data traffic
Indoor Penetration Good – 1.8 GHz provides better penetration than 2.6 GHz+
Known Interference Adjacent channel interference between operators
Occupancy Very high – dense cellular deployments in Europe, Asia, Africa
Occupancy Bucket Pct Very High (>80%) – heavily utilized Band 3 downlink
Latency Profile LTE: 10-20 ms round-trip; 5G NR: <10 ms
Common Channels Or Profiles GSM: 200 kHz; LTE: 5/10/15/20 MHz; 5G NR: flexible
Security Features SIM/USIM authentication with encrypted air interface (GSM/LTE/NR), operator-configured
Lbt Or Fhss Requirement N/A – licensed exclusive use
Popularity (Installed Base) Very high – billions of Band 3 devices globally
Coexistence Tips Coordinate with adjacent operators; manage out-of-band emissions
Latency Class LTE: 10-20 ms; 5G NR: <10 ms
Device Hotspots (Scoped &&AMP; Tagged) Band 3 DL carriers; operator-specific assignments

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