RedCap to push cellular IoT growth, says Omdia

  • December 10, 2025
  • Steve Rogerson
Cellular IoT module shipments by region, 2025-2035.

The cellular IoT market is poised for significant growth in the coming years, with connections expected to surge to 5.9 billion by 2035, according to Omdia.

The study highlights the transformative impact of 5G technologies on the cellular IoT landscape, identifying three pivotal technologies as primary growth drivers – 5G RedCap, 5G massive IoT and 4G LTE Cat-1bis modules.

The research highlights 5G RedCap as a transformative development, with adoption projected to gain momentum starting in 2025. Positioned as the optimal mid-tier connectivity option, RedCap caters to 5G devices that do not require the advanced specifications of uRLLC or eMBB. Additionally, RedCap offers critical futureproofing benefits as the industry transitions towards phasing out 4G networks beyond 2030.

The study notes that while initial deployment of RedCap has been slower than expected, 2025 has showed some promise with the launch of the latest Apple Watch range that incorporates RedCap technology. Complementing this growth, eRedCap module launches are expected to begin in 2026, further expanding mid-tier connectivity options and driving adoption across a broader range of use cases.

“The implementation of 5G RedCap in the latest range of Apple Watches has signalled the starting gun for RedCap adoption” said Alexander Thompson, senior analyst for IoT at Omdia. “Going forward, enterprises will have a wider and wider selection of connectivity technologies to benefit any application. The expected launch of 5G eRedCap modules in 2026 will provide further cellular IoT connection growth over the next decade.”

The automotive segment will rise from 500m cellular connections to around 1.2bn over the next ten years, increasing its market share from 13% to 21%. Most of this connection growth will originate from Asia and Oceania, which will see its automotive segment rise due to increasing consumer demand for intelligent vehicles with 5G connectivity.

“The rapid rise of software-defined vehicles, the fundamental need for over-the-air updates, regulatory mandates and vehicle-to-everything, are all made possible by cellular connected vehicles, which is why we expect to see vehicles represent one in five cellular connections by 2025,” said Andrew Brown, IoT practice lead at Omdia.

For more on the report, go to omdia.tech.informa.com/om138234/cellular-iot-market-tracker–2h25-analysis.