- Netherlands ranked highest in Europe for overall mobile Quality of Experience
- Nordic markets continue to set pace for mature 5G deployment and user performance
What happened: Europe’s connectivity benchmark
The Netherlands has been ranked the top-performing mobile market in Europe for overall user experience, according to a 2026 benchmarking report from network testing specialist MedUX, published by Advanced Television.
The study evaluated mobile Quality of Experience (QoE) across more than 33 European countries during the fourth quarter of 2025, analysing over 180 million performance tests and 39 billion radio samples collected from real users.
The Netherlands achieved an overall QoE score of 4.51 out of five, outperforming Denmark and Norway, with Switzerland completing Europe’s top tier. The country also secured awards for Best Overall Experience, Best Reliability, Best Data and OTT Experience, and Best Value for Speed — reflecting consistently strong performance across everyday digital services.
Reliability reached 91.1%, while data and OTT performance scored 91.3%, indicating stable connectivity for bandwidth-intensive services such as cloud applications, video streaming and real-time communications.
Northern European countries dominated the rankings. Denmark performed particularly strongly in social media usage, while Norway led Europe in video streaming quality, achieving the highest 4K playback rates and minimal buffering.
The report also found that 5G has effectively become the default mobile experience in leading markets including the Netherlands and Denmark, where usage levels approach 87% of total connections.
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Why it’s important
The results underline a structural divide emerging within Europe’s digital infrastructure: network quality, rather than simple coverage, is becoming the defining competitive metric.
Nordic and Northern European operators have benefited from early spectrum allocation, dense infrastructure investment and coordinated rollout strategies, allowing 5G networks to carry most mobile traffic. By contrast, parts of Southern and Eastern Europe continue to show uneven adoption and performance gaps.
From a financial perspective, superior QoE increasingly translates into reduced churn and higher premium service uptake — reinforcing the investment case for sustained network modernisation.
According to MedUX chief marketing officer Jaime González, the leading countries demonstrate that “world-class 5G” performance is already achievable, offering a framework other European markets may follow as the EU advances its Digital Decade connectivity goals.
As mobile networks evolve into platforms supporting cloud services, AI applications and real-time communications, the Dutch and Nordic lead suggests future competition will hinge less on rollout speed and more on operational efficiency and user-perceived performance.
