Antenna Buyers Guide

IoT antenna buyers guide for UK installations. Specification checklist, what to be sceptical of, gain vs size physics, port isolation requirements and UK LTE band coverage.

What should I look for when buying an IoT antenna?
When buying an antenna for an IoT installation, the key specifications are: frequency band coverage matching your deployment technology (check LTE bands B20, B3, B28 for UK coverage), gain in dBi, number of ports (2 for 2x2 MIMO, 4 for 4x4 MIMO), cross-polarisation on MIMO antennas, connector type, and IP rating for outdoor use. Be sceptical of very high claimed gain figures on small form-factor antennas — physics limits what is achievable at a given frequency for a given physical aperture.

Specification checklist

SpecificationWhat to checkMinimum for UK IoT
Frequency bandsCovers B20 (800 MHz) and B3 (1800 MHz) at minimum698–2700 MHz broadband
GainReal gain at B20, not peak gain at B35 dBi at 800 MHz for directional
PortsMatch to router MIMO capability2-port for RUT200; 4-port for RUTX50
PolarisationCross-pol (+45/-45 degrees) for MIMO gainCross-polarised dual or quad port
Port isolationHigher is better for MIMO performance25 dB minimum between ports
IP ratingOutdoor installations require waterproofingIP65 minimum for external mount
ConnectorMatch to router connector (SMA-M most common)SMA-M or N-type with quality cable

What to be sceptical of