What Are VHF and UHF?
VHF (Very High Frequency) covers the 136–174 MHz range. UHF (Ultra High Frequency) covers 400–520 MHz. Both are used for licensed and licence-free two-way radio communication across India, but they behave very differently in the real world.
Understanding the physics of radio propagation — how each band travels through and around objects — is the key to making the right choice for your deployment environment.
The Core Difference: How Waves Travel
VHF waves are longer. They travel farther in open, unobstructed environments and penetrate through dense foliage better than UHF. However, their longer wavelength means they struggle to navigate around or through solid structures like concrete walls, steel frames, and multi-storey buildings.
UHF waves are shorter. They carry less distance in open environments but are significantly better at bouncing off and penetrating hard surfaces. This makes UHF the dominant choice for any indoor or urban deployment in India.
In a controlled open-field test, a VHF radio may outrange a UHF radio by 20–40%. But inside a multi-storey building in Delhi or Mumbai, the same VHF radio may only reliably communicate across 2–3 floors, while a UHF radio reaches 8–10 floors with the same transmit power.
Head-to-Head Comparison
| Parameter | VHF (136–174 MHz) | UHF (400–520 MHz) |
|---|---|---|
| Wavelength | ~2 metres | ~0.6–0.75 metres |
| Open-Field Range | Excellent (5–10 km+) | Good (3–7 km) |
| Indoor Penetration | Poor | Excellent |
| Foliage Penetration | Excellent | Good |
| Urban Use | Not recommended | Ideal |
| Antenna Size | Longer (less portable) | Shorter (more portable) |
| Interference Risk | Lower | Moderate (crowded in cities) |
| Licence (India) | WPC licence required | WPC licence required (or licence-free PMR bands) |
Use Cases: India-Specific Guidance
Open & Outdoor Environments
Forestry, agriculture, open construction sites, highway patrol, rail yards, and large open manufacturing plants where walls are not a factor.
Indoor & Urban Environments
Hotels, hospitals, shopping malls, offices, warehouses, multi-storey construction, mining tunnels, and any dense urban deployment across Indian cities.
Construction Sites
Most Indian construction sites require UHF. While the external site may be open, workers operate inside partially-built concrete structures, underground levels, and enclosed machinery areas where UHF's wall-penetration is critical.
Hospitality & Events
UHF is universally preferred. Hotel properties, convention centres, and event venues are dense indoor environments. UHF reliably covers basements, service corridors, kitchens, and rooftop areas that VHF simply cannot reach.
Mining Operations
Underground mines in India — coal, iron ore, limestone — are almost exclusively UHF deployments. In tunnels and shafts, UHF's ability to propagate around bends and penetrate rock gives it a critical safety advantage.
Forest & Agricultural Monitoring
VHF is the clear winner here. Dense vegetation absorbs UHF signals aggressively. India's forest departments, tea estates, and agricultural cooperatives have relied on VHF for decades — and for good reason.
Licence Requirements in India
Both VHF and UHF require a Wireless Planning & Coordination (WPC) licence from the Ministry of Communications for most professional applications. However, certain UHF bands (specifically the 446 MHz PMR band, where available) can be operated licence-free for short-range use.
Vyntel's radios are pre-configured to comply with Indian wireless regulations. We handle the technical compliance documentation — so you can deploy in under 24 hours without navigating WPC red tape yourself.
Operating a radio on an unlicensed frequency in India is a criminal offence under the Indian Wireless Telegraphy Act, 1933. Always verify your radio's compliance status before deployment. Vyntel provides full documentation for all our devices.
Our Recommendation
For 90% of Indian business deployments — construction, hospitality, security, warehousing, manufacturing, events — the answer is UHF. India's built environment is dense, and UHF's indoor and urban performance is simply unmatched.
If your operation is specifically outdoors in open terrain or involves significant forest coverage, consider VHF or a dual-band device that handles both environments.
Still unsure? Our technical team has deployed radio networks across every major industry in India. We'll match you to the right frequency band and device for your specific environment — at no cost, within 2 business hours.
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