Each cellular provider in Canada uses its own set of frequencies. Each device supports a different set of frequencies that determine what networks it can connect to. In order for the device to work on certain providers, it must have the proper frequencies. To determine this you can use a website like GSM Arena to determine what frequencies your device supports. This is helpful when unlocking a device to use on a different Canadian provider, or traveling abroad.
Below you will find a tool that will tell you the frequencies each Canadian provider supports. Some devices may be modified to work on different providers as well. You can contact us for more information.
2G
CDMA 850/1900
EVDO 850/1900
3G (and some cases 4G)
HSDPA 850/1900
HSPA+ 850/1900
UMTS 850/1900
WCDMA 850/1900
1x EV-DO CDMA2000
4G
LTE 1700
2G
CDMA 850/1900
EVDO 850/1900
3G (and in some cases 4G)
HSDPA 850/1900
HSPA+ 850/1900
UMTS 850/1900
WCDMA 850/1900
1x EV-DO CDMA2000
4G
LTE 1700
2G
GSM 850/1900
GPRS 850/1900
EDGE 850/1900
3G (and in some case 4G)
HSDPA 850/1900
HSPA+ 850/1900
UMTS 850/1900
WCDMA 850/1900
4G
LTE 1700
2G
GSM 850/1900
GPRS 850/1900
EDGE 850/1900
3G (in some cases 4G)
HSDPA 850/1900
HSPA+ 850/1900
UMTS 850/1900
WCDMA 850/1900
4G
LTE 1700
2G
GSM 850/1900
GPRS 850/1900
EDGE 850/1900
3G (in some cases 4G)
HSDPA 850/1900
HSPA+ 850/1900
UMTS 850/1900
WCDMA 850/1900
4G
LTE 1700
3G/4G
AWS 1700/2100
2G
CDMA 850/1900
EVDO 850/1900
3G (and fake 4G)
HSDPA 850/1900
HSPA+ 850/1900
UMTS 850/1900
WCDMA 850/1900
1x EV-DO CDMA2000
4G (In some cases 4G+)
LTE 1700/2100
2G
CDMA 850/1900
EVDO 850/1900
3G (and in some cases 4G)
HSDPA 850/1900
HSPA+ 850/1900
UMTS 850/1900
WCDMA 850/1900
1x EV-DO CDMA2000
4G (called 4G+)
LTE 1700/2100
3G/4G
AWS 1700/2100