LoRa Alliance Positions LoRaWAN as the Leading Standard for Massive IoT Connectivity
- Publish Date: April 8, 2026
LoRa Alliance
- Publish Date: April 8, 2026



As IoT connectivity is growing rapidly worldwide, the LoRa Alliance is seizing the opportunity for LoRaWAN technology to become a globally ubiquitous, plug-and-play IoT connectivity method embedded into everyday objects and capable of delivering increasing value to users.
With the highest accessibility, most robust ecosystem, and widest, fastest-growing global adoption of any LPWAN IoT connectivity technology, LoRaWAN is quickly becoming an essential wireless technology for an increasingly intelligent, connected world. As with earlier technology revolutions in cellular, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth, the LoRaWAN connectivity revolution is driving a new generation of devices, users, and applications.
LoRaWAN achieves the highest accessibility by being built on an open-standard foundation, with the ecosystem offering many open-source implementations that accelerate time-to-market. Use of unlicensed frequency bands around the world also means that, like Wi-Fi, LoRaWAN can be deployed by anyone, not just a few big companies wealthy enough to afford spectrum licenses. LoRaWAN also has lower infrastructure build-out costs than other IoT connectivity technologies, with LoRaWAN gateways comparable in cost to Wi-Fi access points and LoRaWAN network servers so lightweight and low-cost that they can be bundled with the gateways.
These products are provided and supported by a robust ecosystem of companies. At the center of this ecosystem is the LoRa Alliance, which defines, evolves, and promotes the LoRaWAN standard and manages a broad product certification program designed to drive global adoption. The LoRa Alliance represents the interests of more than 300 members, having added 57 new members in 2025, and has certified more than 650 end-devices, like sensors and actuators, for adherence to the standard.
“By uniting ecosystem partners and ensuring trusted certification, we enable massive, sustainable IoT solutions that benefit businesses, people and the planet,” said Alper Yegin, CEO of the LoRa Alliance. “Now, the foundation is set for LoRaWAN’s next stage of growth to become the fourth pillar of global wireless connectivity, complementing cellular, Wi-Fi, and Bluetooth.”
That growth took a major step forward in 2025. LoRaWAN has achieved the widest global adoption of any LPWAN connectivity method outside of China, with 125 million connected devices at the end of last year, a figure representing 25% compound annual growth rate. Nearly 1,000 different LoRaWAN products are available in the LoRa Alliance Marketplace alone.
Furthermore, low power consumption, a range of 2 to 30 miles, and both outdoor and indoor coverage capability position LoRaWAN to serve a wide variety of applications and support a broad range of business models across industries such as smart buildings, manufacturing, transportation and logistics, automotive, smart cities, smart agriculture, retail, and more. Low power consumption means that devices can last more than 10 years on a single battery charge, and can run on harvested energy, helping make LoRaWAN deployments fully autonomous.
LoRaWAN is also unique among wireless technologies in its ability to support a mix of public, private, and community networks, both terrestrial and satellite-based, and enable roaming between them. This can foster application expansion and penetration into previously untapped markets.
Many companies around the world are using LoRaWAN today and lighting the path for the next generation of users. LoRaWAN deployments already support the widest span of applications, all the way from panic buttons used at schools to temperature sensors at Starbucks stores in USA, connected bikes across Switzerland, water meters throughout France, rhino trackers in Africa, streetlights in India, oil refineries in the Middle East, and cow collars in Australia.
“LoRa Alliance members continue to showcase how LoRaWAN is becoming the latest world-spanning form of wireless connectivity supporting the next phase of global IoT growth,” Yegin said.
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