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Bharti Airtel’s Priority Postpaid turns 5G network slicing into a premium offer

Bharti Airtel’s slicing-based Priority Postpaid targets prioritized access on SA 5G and is drawing GlobalData expectations of ARPU lift and competitive pressure.

Bharti Airtel’s Priority Postpaid turns 5G network slicing into a premium offer

Bharti Airtel has launched Priority Postpaid, a slicing-based premium postpaid offer designed to deliver prioritized network resources for customers during high congestion using local connectivity slicing.

GlobalData says the move is aimed at monetizing network quality and could encourage upgrades to higher-value postpaid plans, while also raising the bar for rivals considering similar premium connectivity products.

Priority Postpaid: prioritized resources during congestion via 5G slicing

Bharti Airtels Priority Postpaid is intended to provide prioritized network resources for Airtel postpaid users during periods of high network congestion, using 5G slicing technology.

The operator says the service is designed to deliver more stable connectivity for applications including video streaming, online collaboration, and mobile productivity.

GlobalDatas view: monetizing quality of service and potential ARPU lift

GlobalData said Airtels Priority Postpaid could help monetize network quality and encourage upgrades to higher-value postpaid plans.

Pradeepthi Kantipudi, associate project manager at GlobalData, said Indias telecom sector has historically struggled to find significant 5G monetization opportunities because telcos launched 5G services without a distinct pricing premium. Kantipudi said operators have effectively treated 5G as a network upgrade rather than a new revenue stream.

Kantipudi also said Airtels strategy differs because it focuses on monetizing quality of service rather than data consumption volumes, and that the Priority Postpaid offering creates a value proposition that monetizes quality of service instead of data consumption. The analyst expects the offering could help Airtel improve average revenue per user (ARPU) by encouraging high-value prepaid subscribers to migrate toward premium postpaid plans.

SA 5G progress and the network-slicing infrastructure angle

Kantipudi said the launch demonstrates Airtels progress in deploying advanced standalone 5G capabilities. Network slicing typically requires standalone 5G core infrastructure because it enables operators to create virtualized network environments optimized for different applications and customer groups.

In Kantipudis assessment, the launch shows Bharti Airtel reached an important milestone in deploying advanced standalone 5G capabilities, particularly by translating network slicing from a technical feature into a commercial consumer offering. Kantipudi also said the launch does not necessarily place Airtel ahead of rival Reliance Jio Infocomm in overall standalone 5G deployment scale or infrastructure maturity.

Competitive pressure: premium nnetwork experience offerings in India

GlobalData expects Airtels move to increase pressure on Indian operators to introduce local connectivity offerings based on advanced 5G features.

Kantipudi said it is likely that other Indian operators will follow Airtels lead and introduce premium connectivity offerings based on advanced 5G features such as network slicing. The analyst added that competition in Indias postpaid market could shift toward network experience and differentiated service quality, reshaping differentiation away from traditional metrics such as data quotas and pricing.

Sources