Close Menu
  • Home
  • Leadership Alliance
  • Exclusives
  • History of the Internet
  • AFRINIC News
  • Internet Governance
    • Regulations
    • Governance Bodies
    • Emerging Tech
  • Others
    • IT Infrastructure
      • Networking
      • Cloud
      • Data Centres
    • Company Stories
      • Profile
      • Startups
      • Tech Titans
      • Partner Content
    • Fintech
      • Blockchain
      • Payments
      • Regulations
    • Tech Trends
      • AI
      • AR / VR
      • IoT
    • Video / Podcast
  • Country News
    • Africa
    • Asia Pacific
    • North America
    • Lat Am/Caribbean
    • Europe/Middle East
Facebook LinkedIn YouTube Instagram X (Twitter)
Blue Tech Wave Media
Facebook LinkedIn YouTube Instagram X (Twitter)
  • Home
  • Leadership Alliance
  • Exclusives
  • History of the Internet
  • AFRINIC News
  • Internet Governance
    • Regulation
    • Governance Bodies
    • Emerging Tech
  • Others
    • IT Infrastructure
      • Networking
      • Cloud
      • Data Centres
    • Company Stories
      • Profiles
      • Startups
      • Tech Titans
      • Partner Content
    • Fintech
      • Blockchain
      • Payments
      • Regulation
    • Tech Trends
      • AI
      • AR/VR
      • IoT
    • Video / Podcast
  • Africa
  • Asia-Pacific
  • North America
  • Lat Am/Caribbean
  • Europe/Middle East
Blue Tech Wave Media
Home » Switzerland’s railways shift to VoLTE as 3G shutdown looms
Abstract visualization of Switzerland’s railway network transitioning to VoLTE
Abstract visualization of Switzerland’s railway network transitioning to VoLTE
Europe/Middle East

Switzerland’s railways shift to VoLTE as 3G shutdown looms

By Jessica liuDecember 5, 2025No Comments3 Mins Read
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
  • The system now covers some 450 trains and about 1,000 devices on VoLTE, with “zero downtime” since going live. 
  • The upgrade preserves essential railway-specific communications (emergency/stopping calls, dispatching, numbering standards) while future-proofing for forthcoming 4G/5G-based communications standards such as FRMCS. 

What happened: Switzerland’s national railway operator SBB, in collaboration with Ericsson, has deployed a landmark upgrade

Switzerland’s national railway operator SBB, in collaboration with Ericsson, has deployed a landmark upgrade: interworking the legacy railway communication standard GSM-R with a modern IP Multimedia Subsystem (IMS) platform offering Voice over LTE (VoLTE).

Originally reliant on GSM-R for rail-specific communications and on Swisscom’s public 3G network for roaming when GSM-R coverage was lacking, SBB faced a hard deadline — Swisscom intends to fully shut down its 3G services by the end of 2025.

To prevent any disruption, SBB chose not simply to expand the old GSM-R infrastructure but to build a converged IMS/VoLTE solution that preserves all safety-critical and rail-specific functions (such as emergency stop calls, EIRENE numbering adaptation, dispatcher communications and group calls) while migrating voice services to 4G. 

Deployment began in mid-2023, followed by internal tests, lab validation, and field tests with pilot trains starting in January 2025. By April 2025 the system was rolled out nationwide. As of December 2025, around 450 trains and 1,000 operational devices use VoLTE with zero downtime. 

Ericsson describes the integration as Europe’s first live example of GSM-R/IMS interworking at this scale and says it demonstrates the viability of a path to future railway communication systems. 

Also read: Smile Nigeria drives 4G LTE telecom growth
Also read: Paratus debuts Namibia’s first private mobile network, redefining connectivity

Why it’s important

The move by SBB and Ericsson addresses several critical challenges associated with the impending 3G shutdown: it ensures uninterrupted, safety-critical voice and data communications for the rail network, avoids reliance on a soon-to-be-decommissioned network, and establishes a model that other rail operators across Europe may follow.

By preserving all the railway-specific features of GSM-R via the IMS/VoLTE solution — emergency stop calls, specific numbering, dispatcher and group calls — the upgrade demonstrates that rail-grade communications can be migrated to IP-based networks without sacrificing safety or reliability. 

Furthermore, the project lays the groundwork for future adoption of the FRMCS standard, which is expected to rely on 5G. Early success in such a migration may encourage wider acceptance of similar transitions elsewhere. 

However, the initiative also raises questions. For instance:

  • Can VoLTE/IMS infrastructures maintain the same resilience and safety levels as purpose-built GSM-R, especially in extreme conditions or under heavy load?
  • Will the migration process be as smooth for other railway operators with larger or more complex networks?
  • Might there be unintended dependencies on commercial mobile-network operators — potentially reintroducing vulnerabilities that dedicated rail systems aimed to avoid?

Given that this is reportedly the first such integration in Europe, only time will tell whether VoLTE-over-IMS will become the de facto standard or a stop-gap on the road to full FRMCS adoption.

Switzerland Technology Trends
Jessica liu

Jessica Liu is a Media Practice graduate from the University of Sydney and currently works as an intern reporter at BTW Media. Contact her at j.liu@btw.media

Related Posts

Fire Eater interview: Data-centres should rethink environmental cost of fire suppression

December 5, 2025

BT unveils ‘sovereign’ data platform to bolster UK’s data security and AI readiness

December 5, 2025

CAIGA initiative stirs debate, businesses must weigh internet governance changes in Africa

December 4, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

CATEGORIES
Archives
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • January 2025
  • December 2024
  • November 2024
  • October 2024
  • September 2024
  • August 2024
  • July 2024
  • June 2024
  • May 2024
  • April 2024
  • March 2024
  • February 2024
  • January 2024
  • December 2023
  • November 2023
  • October 2023
  • September 2023
  • August 2023
  • July 2023

Blue Tech Wave (BTW.Media) is a future-facing tech media brand delivering sharp insights, trendspotting, and bold storytelling across digital, social, and video. We translate complexity into clarity—so you’re always ahead of the curve.

BTW
  • About BTW
  • Contact Us
  • Join Our Team
  • About AFRINIC
  • History of the Internet
TERMS
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Policy
  • Terms of Use
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
BTW.MEDIA is proudly owned by LARUS Ltd.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.