VoNR in an industrial router or IoT device requires a 5G SA-capable module with IMS firmware, a 5G SA network at the deployment site, and a SIM provisioned with ISIM credentials. Most 5G modules currently on the market are 5G NSA only and do not support VoNR. Plan for VoNR compatibility now; the hardware replacement cycle is 5-10 years.
A cellular module must have all of the following for VoNR capability:
| Module family | Examples | 5G SA | VoNR | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5G NSA data modules | Quectel RM500Q, RM502Q | Limited / NSA | No | High-speed data; no SA core support |
| 5G SA capable modules | Quectel RM520N-GL, FM350 | Yes | With IMS firmware | Confirm IMS/VoNR option at order |
| 5G SA voice gateways | Emerging product category | Yes | Yes | PSTN replacement for 5G SA sites |
| Cat 1 / Cat 4 (4G) | Quectel EC21, EC25 | No | No | 4G only – VoLTE capable (see voltesim.co.uk) |
For most IoT and industrial deployments today, VoLTE on 4G is the correct voice mechanism – 5G SA coverage is not yet widespread enough for VoNR to be a primary specification requirement. However, hardware selected now will be in the field for 5 to 10 years. Engineers specifying cellular voice-capable equipment in 2025 should:
For industrial deployments where voice quality and latency guarantees are required – critical communications, remote command and control, voice-enabled safety systems – VoNR on a dedicated 5G SA network slice provides the mechanism to contractually guarantee QoS. This requires working with the operator’s enterprise team to define a private or public slice with the required parameters, alongside 5G SA-capable hardware and correctly provisioned SIMs.