MTS (telecommunications)
MTS is the largest telecommunications company and mobile network operator in Russia and Belarus, headquartered in Moscow, operating on GSM, UMTS, LTE and 5G standards. Apart from cellular network, the company also offers local telephone service, broadband, mobile television, cable television, satellite television and digital television.
As of Q3 2024, the company serves over 87.6 million subscribers in Russia and Belarus. MTS had previously operated in Uzbekistan until 2012, Turkmenistan until 2017, Ukraine until 2019 and Armenia until 2024.
MTS Russia
In 1994, a joint venture of Moscow City Telephone Network, T-Mobile and Siemens, which later MTS GSM became part of Mobile TeleSystems, offered Russia's MTS GSM first mobile phone service "Mobile Telecommunications" for the public in Moscow. In the same year in June, VimpelCom also started Beeline mobile phone service. MTS, having started Mobile TeleSystems in the Moscow license zone in 1994, received licenses in 1997 for further areas and began expansion across Russia, later entering other countries of the CIS.In 2009, MTS acquired several independent mobile retail chains, creating MTS monobrand retail network of 3300 stores — the second largest retail network in Russia. Also in 2009 MTS started marketing MTS-branded mobile handsets. In 2010, MTS became the 5th best selling handset brand in Russia, after Nokia, Samsung, LG and Sony Ericsson.
In 2010, MTS announced the acquisition of 62% of Comstar's stock, the largest Russian fixed internet and cable TV provider, serving 7.5 million households. Comstar products were rebranded to MTS in 2010, forming the largest Russian mobile and fixed telecommunications brand. Until this purchase, MTS was presented at the fixed telephony market through its subsidiary Moscow City Telephone Network.
In November 2013, the company launched the "Home Phone MTS" in Ryazan, Oryol, Kirov, Krasnodar, Rostov-on-Don, and Yekaterinburg. The subscription fee for the wired telephone is 100 rubles. Per month, it includes unlimited calls to numbers of local fixed-line operators. The cost of calls to mobile numbers ranges from 1.1 rubles per minute, depending on the region. Before that, in several cities, such services are also provided by Comstar, a subsidiary of MTS.
During 2012–2013, MTS deployed FTTB network in nearly twenty new cities of the Far East, Siberia, Central, Volga and Ural federal districts. In 2012, MTS launched in cities where the DTV signal standard is DVB-C, and in December 2013, launched a project to provide fixed telephony services to the mass market in the regions.
In 2013, Interregional TransitTelekom won a tender held by MTS to provide IPX services, and became one of the service providers for the company in the international telecommunications market. In November 2013, MTS began offering their Russian customers LTE roaming service, after such agreement were signed first with South Korean operator SK Telecom, and then with Saudi Arabia and Great Britain. Along with the construction of the fixed network, the company launched the DVB-C digital television standard in Ulan-Ude, Blagoveshchensk, Ussuriisk and Nakhodka. In November 2013, MTS completely switched to digital TV by connecting new subscribers, ending the connection to analogue television.
In March 2019, MTS launched an interactive media platform for cyber athletes and gamers called WASD.TV, and a mechanism for selecting players from the Gambit league to professional e-sports teams.
On 17 September 2019, it was revealed that a storage device containing 1.7 terabytes of information related to MTS was exposed to the public internet in a data leak.
From 2019 onwards, MTS has worked on building out its 5G networks in cooperation with Huawei as well as Ericsson and Nokia. In 2021, MTS and Huawei launched 5G networks at 14 pilot sites throughout Moscow, while MTS and Ericsson opened a 5G hub in Saint Petersburg.
In 2022, the company's revenue amounted to 392 billion rubles.
In January 2024, MTS, which previously owned a minority stake, increased its stake to 80.58% in the capital of the Urent scooter rental service, which provides services in more than a hundred cities in Russia.
Branding
In May 2006, MTS changed its logo as part of a rebranding campaign performed by its parent company, AFK Sistema PAO. The logo now has two red squares next to each other. The left one, common in form to all AFK Sistema PAO's telecom subsidiaries, contains a white egg which symbolises simplicity and genius, while the right square bears the name of the company: МТС. In 2010, MTS announced acquisition of Sistema Telecom, the owners of the MTS "egg" logo, for $380 million, thus becoming the sole owner of the logo.In 2008, the MTS brand was included in the Top 100 World's Most Powerful Brands list by Financial Times/Millward Brown ranking, becoming the most valuable Russian brand. According to this ranking, in 2010, the MTS brand was the 72nd most valuable brand worldwide with a brand value of $9.7 billion. In 2010, MTS also became the most valuable Russian brand according to the Interbrand ranking.
Operations
As of March 2025, MTS in Russia operates on GSM, UMTS, LTE, NB-IoT and 5G NR standards.| Frequency | Band number | Protocol | Class | Coverage across 89 federal subjects |
| 900 MHz | 8 | GSM | 2G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 1800 MHz | 3 | GSM | 2G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 900 MHz | 8 | UMTS | 3G | Country-wide No service in: Saint Petersburg, Leningrad, Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 2100 MHz | 1 | UMTS | 3G | Country-wide No service in: Saint Petersburg, Leningrad, Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 800 MHz | 20 | LTE, VoLTE | 4G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 900 MHz | 8 | LTE, VoLTE | 4G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 1800 MHz | 3 | LTE, VoLTE | 4G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 2100 MHz | 1 | LTE, VoLTE | 4G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 2600 MHz | 7 | LTE, VoLTE | 4G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 800 MHz | n20 | NB-IoT | 5G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 900 MHz | n8 | NB-IoT | 5G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 1800 MHz | n3 | NB-IoT | 5G | Country-wide No service in: Crimea, Sevastopol, Luhansk, Donetsk, Zaporozhye, Kherson |
| 4900 MHz | n79 | 5G NR | 5G | Moscow, Saint Petersburg, Novosibirsk, Altai Republic |
MTS Belarus
In Belarus, the MTS trademark renders services of cellular communication and data transmission of "Mobile TeleSystems JLLC ". The founders of this company are Beltelecom and Russian MTS "Mobile TeleSystems OJSC".MTS Belarus began operations on 27 June 2002, and became the second Belarusian mobile operator after A1 Belarus. In the first four days, 2,300 subscribers were connected.
MTS Belarus subscriber numbers have the following formats:
- +375 29 2 xx xx xx, +375 29 5 xx xx xx, +375 29 7 xx xx xx, +375 29 8 xx xx xx
- +375 33 3 xx xx xx, +375 33 6 xx xx xx, +375 33 9 xx xx xx
Former operations
MTS Uzbekistan
was the largest mobile phone operator in Uzbekistan in the 1990s and 2000s. Uzdunrobita was founded in 1991, as a joint venture between a group of American investors, the International Communications Group, with a 45% stake; and the government of what was then the Uzbek Soviet Socialist Republic, with a 55% stake. When Uzbekistan declared independence several weeks later, the registration of the joint venture was shifted from Moscow to Tashkent, with the government stake taken over by the independent Uzbek government.The company first turned a profit in 1993. By 1996, it had $50 million in annual revenues, 7,000 subscribers, and employed 224 staff. Gulnora Karimova gained control of the firm in the late 1990s or early 2000s, and by 2005 it was 74% owned by Russia's MTS, which paid $121 million for the stake. In 2006 it was reported to have 250,000 subscribers, ahead of Daewoo Unitel, which had 100,000, and some much smaller firms.
The company launched an LTE network on 2.6 GHz in July 2010, and received a license to expand it on 700 MHz in December 2010.
The brand UMC in Uzbekistan existed until mid-2007, when a major rebranding campaign took place, transforming UMC into MTS. In July 2012, authorities in Uzbekistan announced the suspension of the operating license of MTS's subsidiary Uzdunrobita. Officials argued that MTS-Uzbekistan has been responsible for a series of technical violations, and its operations have been suspended beginning on the evening of 17 July. According to the MTS, the suspension could affect millions of Uzbek mobile phone users. An MTS statement said the firm has some 10 million clients among Uzbekistan's population of 28 million.
In August 2012, the government of Uzbekistan revoked the company's operating license and arrested several of its top management, citing repeated regulatory violations. MTS protested the action as a "shakedown", but was unable to oppose it effectively, and moved to write down its stake. After the case in September 2012, the company's assets were seized, and some of its executives sentenced to prison terms.
The Russian Foreign Ministry reacted and declared that Russia was concerned about the situation with Mobile TeleSystems' Uzbekistan subsidiary Uzdunrobita, after Uzbek authorities suspended the mobile operator's license and put a senior official into custody. The dispute, which analysts fear may lead to MTS exiting the market, erupted at the beginning of 2012 when Uzbek authorities launched a nearly $1.3 million back-tax claim against MTS. MTS said in an emailed statement that the actions of the Uzbek authorities may be interpreted as "baseless attacks on the business of the Russian investor". However, in 2019, The United States Department of Justice charged the firm for bribery to secure contracts in Uzbekistan. MTS agreed to pay a penalty of $850 million.