FACT · NETWORK DESIGNATION

About D-Netz

Historical German designation for the Telekom-grade mobile network.

Key facts

Type
Network quality designation
Origin
D1 = Telekom (DeTeMobil), D2 = Vodafone; launched 1992
Current usage
Telekom-grade network or Telekom-hosted MVNO
Telekom-hosted MVNOs
congstar, fraenk, ja! mobil, Penny Mobil, NORMA connect, KAUFLAND MOBIL
Vodafone-hosted MVNOs (D2)
otelo, SIMon mobile, LIDL Connect
Rural coverage strength
Best in Germany
connect 2025 ranking
Telekom: 1st (sehr gut)
Speed cap on MVNO prepaid
Typically 25-100 Mbit/s
Why it matters
Coverage in rural and alpine areas where O2 and 1&1 weaken

What is it?

D-Netz is a German shorthand for the Deutsche Telekom-grade mobile network. The term originates in 1992, when Germany licensed its first two digital GSM mobile networks: D1 (then DeTeMobil, now Telekom) and D2 (then Mannesmann, now Vodafone). Both became known as D-Netz ("D-Network") to distinguish them from the analogue C-Netz that preceded them.

In current consumer usage, "D-Netz" is most commonly used to mean Telekom-grade coverage. When a German MVNO advertises "D-Netz" or "bestes D-Netz", it almost always means the SIM runs on Deutsche Telekom cell sites - the network with the strongest rural and alpine reach.

The Telekom-hosted (D-Netz) MVNO portfolio in Germany includes congstar, fraenk, ja! mobil, Penny Mobil, NORMA connect, and KAUFLAND MOBIL. These all share the same physical cell-site infrastructure as Telekom-branded plans, with identical signal coverage. The trade-off is a speed cap of typically 25-100 Mbit/s on MVNO tariffs versus uncapped 300 Mbit/s on Telekom-branded prepaid.

If a comparison page uses the term "D-Netz" without qualification, it means Telekom-grade. Vodafone-grade is occasionally called D2 explicitly.

Where it appears on SimCompare365

Sources