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Samsung and OnePlus 5G phones: 6 things you need to know now

Why you won't get the full 5G experience right away.

Jessica Dolcourt Senior Director, Commerce & Content Operations
Jessica Dolcourt is a passionate content strategist and veteran leader of CNET coverage. As Senior Director of Commerce & Content Operations, she leads a number of teams, including Commerce, How-To and Performance Optimization. Her CNET career began in 2006, testing desktop and mobile software for Download.com and CNET, including the first iPhone and Android apps and operating systems. She continued to review, report on and write a wide range of commentary and analysis on all things phones, with an emphasis on iPhone and Samsung. Jessica was one of the first people in the world to test, review and report on foldable phones and 5G wireless speeds. Jessica began leading CNET's How-To section for tips and FAQs in 2019, guiding coverage of topics ranging from personal finance to phones and home. She holds an MA with Distinction from the University of Warwick (UK).
Expertise Content strategy, team leadership, audience engagement, iPhone, Samsung, Android, iOS, tips and FAQs.
Shara Tibken Former managing editor
Shara Tibken was a managing editor at CNET News, overseeing a team covering tech policy, EU tech, mobile and the digital divide. She previously covered mobile as a senior reporter at CNET and also wrote for Dow Jones Newswires and The Wall Street Journal. Shara is a native Midwesterner who still prefers "pop" over "soda."
Jessica Dolcourt
Shara Tibken
7 min read
Qualcomm

5G  phones and networks are almost here, promising amazing feats like downloading entire TV seasons in minutes, and enabling cities full of driverless cars that talk to each other in real time. But the reality is that early 5G phones and networks won't transform the way we use our phones and other devices overnight. Your carrier's 5G service will roll out slowly, devices and service plans are sure to cost you, and it isn't clear exactly how fast those speeds will run straight out the gate.

So while the 5G future is inevitably on its way -- and coming fast -- it could get off to a rickety start. Here's what you will and won't get as 5G rolls out.

5G Android phones, not iPhone, will arrive early next year

The race is on to be the first company with a 5G phone. Samsung , OnePlus and Motorola attended Qualcomm's conference to talk up their plans to launch devices early next year. And Qualcomm provided a long list of other handset makers working on 5G -- including Google, LG , Vivo and ZTE.

Watch this: Apple waiting on a 5G phone, Qualcomm's ultrasonic fingerprint scanner

Samsung said it will have a phone for Verizon, AT&T and other networks in the first half of the year and at least one more later in 2019. And OnePlus' upcoming 5G device for UK carrier EE will be the first smartphone in Europe to use the new Snapdragon 855 chipset. In August, Motorola revealed that in early 2019 it will release a 5G "Mod," or module, that attaches to the back of the Moto Z3. The Mod will let it run on Verizon's 5G network.

By the 2019 holidays, every Android company working with Qualcomm on a phone for the US market will launch a flagship that has 5G, Qualcomm president Cristiano Amon told CNET. "Every Android vendor is working on 5G right now," he predicted.

One company that may not have 5G next year is Apple . The company previously relied on Qualcomm for the wireless chips for its devices, but it's worked with Intel over the past couple of years because of a patent licensing battle with Qualcomm. Reports have said Apple won't offer a 5G iPhone until 2020.

qualcomm-5g-prototype-phone

Qualcomm's 5G reference device will inspire phonemakers to follow suit.

Jessica Dolcourt/CNET

5G phone speeds will be fast, but maybe not as fast as you hope

Speeds of 10 to 100 times faster than today's 4G LTE is a wide window. Although carriers swear that the results will be obvious the second you start using a 5G phone, don't expect to get to 100 right away.

Coverage could be spotty as networks spark up in one city at a time. If you're one of the early adopters, initial speeds might roar to life, but if people buy 5G phones faster than the carriers can build out the networks, your connection could slow as the networks swell to capacity.

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Motorola's 5G Mod, in prototype form.

Juan Garzon/CNET

Even over time, the theoretical speeds could outstrip real-world speeds depending on network conditions wherever you are.

Remember, too, that 5G isn't just about phones. It'll also connect millions, if not billions, of other devices, like traffic sensors, healthcare equipment, smart home appliances and hotspots. That could put a tremendous amount of demand for instantaneous access on a network.

Prepare to pay up for 5G phones

But a 5G phone is going to cost you. Handset makers and operators tend to get quiet when talking about pricing for 5G phones and service plans. But it's all but certain they'll use the new technology as an opportunity to boost prices.

Watch this: Here's what Google Lens can do with Snapdragon 855 and 5G

During Qualcomm's conference, partners like Verizon, AT&T and Samsung were cagey about what they'll charge customers for 5G. None of them definitively said prices will go up, but there's little doubt that they will.

"I don't think you can think about it as we think about pricing today," said Kevin Petersen, AT&T's senior vice president of wireless product marketing. "That paradigm has to shift."

Nicki Palmer, Verizon chief network engineering officer and head of wireless networks, told CNET in an interview that her company "believes customers will pay for utility and value. There will be that, no doubt, in 5G."

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Qualcomm's Snapdragon 855 chip will be in many of 2019's 5G phones.

Jessica Dolcourt/CNET

But she added that the cost per gigabyte of data in 5G "is a fraction of 4G." In other words, it costs Verizon less to deliver those big data buckets to users when they're on 5G. While prices may go up, there could be more attractive unlimited data packages.

And Samsung's SVP of mobile, Justin Denison, said the belief is that 5G's expanded capabilities will make phones worth more than they already are. "If you generate enough value [in the phone], then consumers will be ready to pay," he said, referring to the notion that 5G's expanded capabilities will make phones more prized than they already are.

In the case of OnePlus, its 5G phone could be $200 to $300 higher than this year's flagship OnePlus 6T, CEO Pete Lau said in an interview with CNET. That's a whopping 36 percent to 55 percent increase.

"The new technology and the amount of R&D and new development that goes into 5G will inevitably mean the cost of the device is, to a significant degree, more expensive," Lau said.

4G phones will largely outnumber 5G phones in 2019

Even though phones with 5G speeds will eventually replace 4G phones, expect 4G-only devices to dominate in 2019. Heavy 5G marketing will make it seem like 5G phones are taking the lead, said Anshel Sag, Moor Insights Strategy, but experts say that won't be the case.

samsung-5g-prototype-phone

Samsung would only give us this dim glimpse of its 5G prototype design.

Jessica Dolcourt/CNET

Handset makers won't want to pour 5G phones into a market as the networks are still finding their feet. As with any new technology, a smaller segment of early adopters will rush to 5G, while the majority of people will wait to buy new phones.

For example, AT&T expects its 5G portfolio to be a "low single digit" number, said Kevin Petersen, the carrier's SVP of Device and Network Experiences.

"5G phones will be largely restricted to high end Android devices next year," said Vincent Thielke, a research analyst at Canalys. "To put this into perspective, based on our latest smartphone forecasts for the US market, we expect $800+ smartphones (includes both Android and iOS) to make up 31 percent of 2019 shipments (and we do not expect Apple to ship 5G iPhones next year)."

Watch this: Qualcomm gives us a glimpse of our future in 5G

"It took two to three years for 4G/LTE phones to become 10-15 percent of the market. Most consumers aren't on the bleeding edge so they rarely jump in early," said Ben Bajarin, an analyst with Creative Strategies. "Critical mass for 5G likely comes in the 2022-to-2023 time frame."

Your phone will only work with one carrier... really

If you buy a phone through your carrier, you may already expect it to work with your service provider alone. But unlike today's 4G phones, buying an unlocked phone in 2019 won't be possible.

That's because "5G" is a catch-all for a technology that's really broken into two different parts. Millimeter wave (mmWave) is the swatch of wireless spectrum that carriers will use to deliver those nosebleed speeds largely in cities, because it tends to be shorter range. Meanwhile, sub-6 GHz is a chunk of spectrum that's relatively slower, but better suited to penetrate buildings because it's longer range.

Here's what Verizon's 5G field test looks like (pictures)

See all photos

The problem is, every carrier has its own plan for building out either mmWave, sub-6 or a combination of the two. If a phone doesn't match the precise network bands, it won't work on the carrier. The result is that phonemakers will have to make a single phone for a single carrier. For example, One Plus; 5G device will include a sub-6 antenna tuned to EE's UK network, but it wouldn't work on Verizon even if you tried; the carrier is focusing on mmWave.

This one-at-a-time approach is another reason why 5G phones won't blanket the globe in 2019. Unlike an unlocked Galaxy S9 or Moto G6 that can work with any carrier, brands can't create a single phone to work with all carriers, so they won't be able to build a high volume of 5G phones at first.

5G network rollout will be slow, but steady

It seems like we've been hearing about 5G for years (and actually, we have). But the first networks will definitely light up in the coming months. AT&T says it's on track for turning on its first 5G network by the end of 2018 (though it's already December, which doesn't give it much more time).

5g

Carriers like Verizon feels there's a "first-mover advantage" to 5G.

Screenshot by Juan Garzon/CNET

Verizon, T-Mobile and others haven't yet said when they'll will turn on 5G, beyond early 2019. But everyone is aiming to get the service ready as soon as possible.

"Like any new technology, it's our intent to make this exciting enough and at the right value proposition where customers will want the latest device with the best network and the 5G ultrawide-band network we're providing," Verizon's Palmer said. "We're deploying as fast as we can."

For all carriers, 5G service will first start in cities and then eventually roll out to smaller towns and rural areas.

"People in rural areas could of course still upgrade to the latest 5G Android flagships before service is available to them if they really wanted a certain device," said Bajarin, "But the incentive to upgrade would be less than for urban dwellers."

5G will first be deployed as a way to deal with crowding on 4G networks, Palmer said. "We typically see the biggest demand in cities, but that doesn't mean there are other pockets where it doesn't make sense," she said.

At the same time, 4G networks will keep getting updated, too. Qualcomm's new Snapdragon 855 for high-end smartphones doesn't actually come standard with 5G technology. Instead, it has integrated its X24 LTE modem that's capable of download speeds up to 2 Gbps, double the current fastest speed.

Originally published Dec. 9 at 4 a.m. PT
Update: Dec. 10 at 9:41 a.m. PT. Adds more details.
Update: Refreshed on Dec 12.

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