Wide-area coverage
Covers rural areas, neighborhoods, industrial sites and remote assets with proper gateway and antenna planning.
Design long-range, low-power networks, connect gateways and devices, and turn telemetry into dashboards, alerts, work orders, commands and operational automations.
LoRaWAN is a networking protocol for sensors and actuators that exchange small data packets over long distances. It prioritizes battery life, coverage, security and scale for periodic readings, states, events and controlled commands.
Low Power Wide Area Network: a network category designed for broad coverage, low data rates and devices that must operate for long periods with limited energy.
Covers rural areas, neighborhoods, industrial sites and remote assets with proper gateway and antenna planning.
Supports efficient transmission cycles for battery-powered or small solar-powered sensors.
A managed architecture registers devices, deduplicates messages and routes data to authorized applications.
Gateways can use Ethernet, fiber, Wi-Fi or cellular connectivity as backhaul to the network server.
Radio modulation is not the same as a managed IoT network. Compare purpose, topology and operational capabilities before selecting a technology.
The long-range radio modulation technology. It provides the physical link but does not define registration, security, routing, management or network integration.
Best suited forRadio foundation for custom solutionsAdds protocol, authentication, device classes, gateways, a network server and application integration to operate IoT at scale.
Best suited forManaged sensors and actuatorsAn open LoRa mesh messaging system for communication among users and devices beyond conventional coverage.
Best suited forOff-grid messaging between peopleLightweight firmware for decentralized routing among LoRa nodes. It is a communication mesh rather than a gateway-and-server IoT network.
Best suited forSimple distributed mesh networksDirect communication between two devices without gateways or a network server. It is simple for specific links but limited in governance and scale.
Best suited forDirect controlled linksDevices transmit by radio, one or more gateways forward packets, the network server validates and organizes traffic, and the platform turns data into operations.
Sensors and actuators measure variables, detect events or execute commands according to their class and power policy.
Uplinks, downlinks, OTAA and Classes A/B/CReceive packets from every in-range node and forward them without binding each sensor to a single gateway.
Outdoor, indoor, Ethernet, fiber or cellularAuthenticates devices, removes duplicate messages, manages ADR, selects gateways and routes valid data.
Join Server, Network Server and AES securityDecodes payloads, organizes assets, displays maps and metrics, and triggers flows, alerts, integrations and work orders.
MQTT, HTTP, APIs, dashboards and automationsThe same uplink may reach several gateways. The server deduplicates copies and keeps the best available path for the application and possible downlinks.
The regional frequency is only the beginning. Environment, power, protection, antenna, connectors, firmware and maintenance determine real-world performance.
Boards and bundles for validating sensors, payloads, joins, coverage and integrations before purchasing at scale.
Ready devices for temperature, humidity, level, pressure, energy, presence, soil, air quality and digital states.
Mobile nodes with GNSS, BLE or motion sensing for assets, people, livestock, loads and checkpoints.
Indoor or outdoor concentrators connecting the radio layer to the network server through reliable IP backhaul.
Radios and modules for manufacturers adding LoRaWAN to meters, controllers, equipment and proprietary products.
Antennas, cables, connectors, surge protection, power supplies and enclosures determine loss, safety and availability.
Every device implements Class A. Classes B and C add receive windows for applications needing more predictable or faster downlinks.
Opens two short receive windows after each uplink. It maximizes battery life and works well when the device initiates communication.
Lowest powerEnvironmental, soil, leak, waste, parking and asset tracking applications.Adds beacon-synchronized periodic receive windows, reducing downlink wait without continuous reception.
Intermediate powerScheduled commands, device groups and operations requiring predictable latency.Keeps reception open almost continuously, providing the lowest downlink latency with higher power demand.
Highest powerStreet lighting, alarms, meters and usually mains-powered actuators.Use LoRaWAN when many points must send readings, states or events with low power and without Wi-Fi or a cellular subscription per device.

Monitor luminaires, faults, consumption and controller status and apply commands according to device class and operational policies.
Faults, energy, availability and commands
Connect parking, waste, air quality, flooding, noise and roadside cabinets across the city.
Level, presence, environment and critical events
Compare moisture, temperature, conductivity, rainfall and environmental conditions across fields, greenhouses and crop zones.
Soil, climate, rainfall, CO2 and humidity
Monitor reservoirs, flow, pressure, pumps and valves to detect anomalies and guide irrigation routines.
Level, flow, pressure and pump status
Record motion, checkpoints, fences, water troughs and field conditions with low-maintenance devices.
Periodic location, motion and supply
Monitor meters, tanks, stations, pressure, leaks and electrical states across dispersed or unattended infrastructure.
Metering, pressure, level, losses and alarms
Add lightweight telemetry to equipment, warehouses, cold rooms, panels and outdoor areas without replacing critical industrial controls.
Temperature, vibration, status and environmentTrack tools, crates, slow vehicles, equipment and checkpoints when periodic visibility matters more than continuous streaming.
Motion, checkpoints, location and inventory
Deploy stations for climate, rivers, soil, air, wildfire risk and other environmental conditions across wide territories.
Climate, air, water, risk and trendsCentralize the LoRaWAN application layer with asset, user, map, metric and business-process context.
Link DevEUI, sensor, location, owner, model, firmware and history.
View gateways, devices, areas, states, incidents and signal quality.
Turn payloads into series, KPIs, trends, comparisons and reports.
Detect limits, missing communication, low battery, faults and abnormal patterns.
Create tasks, messages, escalations, commands and actions from events or rules.
Connect MQTT, HTTP, APIs, databases, CRM, ERP and field services.
Open work orders with location, asset, diagnosis, deadline, evidence and history.
Summarize incidents, identify deviations and support prioritization and diagnosis.
Quality comes from combining a measurable goal, correct regional plan, coverage survey, suitable hardware, security and observability.
Specify the variable, frequency, acceptable delay, retention, alerts, commands and process that will consume the data.
Align the device, gateway, antenna, channel, sub-band, local limits and certification before purchasing.
Assess terrain, buildings, height, shadow zones, interference, redundancy, gateway backhaul and power.
Test power, payload, accuracy, join, ADR, RX windows, enclosure, antenna and field behavior.
Configure the network server, decoders, identities, maps, dashboards, alerts, flows and data retention.
Measure coverage and availability, document installation, monitor battery and firmware, then expand in controlled waves.
Protect identities, keys, integrations and operational actions throughout the device lifecycle.
The nominal band is not enough: gateway, node, channels, antenna and server configuration must match the region and project sub-band.
Brazilian projects commonly use AU915-928. Confirm the sub-band, channels and applicable certification for every device and installation site.
| Band | Formal plan | Typical market | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| AU915 | AU915-928 | Brazil | 915-928 MHz |
| EU868 | EU863-870 | Europe | 863-870 MHz |
| US915 | US902-928 | United States and North America | 902-928 MHz |
| AS923 | AS923-1/2/3/4 | Asia-Pacific markets | 915-928 MHz |
| AU915 | AU915-928 | Australia and New Zealand | 915-928 MHz |
| CN470 | CN470-510 | China | 470-510 MHz |
| IN865 | IN865-867 | India | 865-867 MHz |
| KR920 | KR920-923 | South Korea | 920.9-923.3 MHz |
Organize team learning in the same sequence used to reduce project risk: fundamentals, hardware selection and field validation.
Understand architecture decisions before comparing products or estimating coverage.
Compare the complete installed stack, not only the radio or the advertised range.
Take the prototype to its final environment to measure coverage, power and operational behavior.
Use these answers to guide a proof of concept and separate coverage, provisioning, channel, decoding and integration failures.
Verify that device, gateway and server use the same region, channels and version; confirm DevEUI, JoinEUI, AppKey/NwkKey, OTAA, join counters and radio coverage. Band or credential mismatches are common causes.
Start with a measurable use case, validate coverage and energy in the field, and connect the network to Dashify maps, dashboards, alerts, flows, teams and integrations.
Discuss the project