Recent moves by local telcos are mostly a market correction driven by Italy’s unique tower-market dynamics – where Inwit holds a dominant, near-monopolistic position
In sum – what to know:
Market-specific pressure – The dispute reflects Italy’s unique tower dynamics, though it highlights broader tensions around cost and control.
Cost and control converge – Rising lease costs and limited flexibility are pushing operators to rethink long-term reliance on towercos.
High-stakes contract battle – Conflicting claims over contract validity could reshape infrastructure relationships and impact 5G rollout timelines.
Moves by Italian carriers TIM and Fastweb + Vodafone to exit their tower agreements with tower operator Infrastrutture Wireless Italiane (Inwit) reflect a market-specific correction rather than a broader shift away from the towerco model, according to analysts, but they also underscore growing tension between cost control and infrastructure ownership.
“This is largely a market-specific correction driven by Italy’s unique tower-market dynamics, where Inwit holds a dominant, near-monopolistic position and has been accused of charging above-market prices that operators struggled to renegotiate,” Diana Gorelik, senior analyst at Omdia told RCR Wireless News.
TIM recently initiated the termination of its master service agreement (MSA) with Inwit, following a similar move by Swisscom-owned Fastweb + Vodafone. Together, the operators account for a significant portion of Inwit’s tenancy base, increasing the stakes of the dispute.
TIM said the termination would take effect in August 2030 under current contractual terms, or potentially March 2028 if legal interpretations confirm an earlier change-of-control trigger. The operator framed the decision as part of efforts to optimize infrastructure costs and maintain flexibility in managing network assets.
Inwit has strongly rejected this position, maintaining that the agreement remains valid until August 2038 following the exercise of a change-of-control clause in 2022.
“The company believes the termination notice has no legal ground and, as such, will oppose it in all competent legal venues,” Inwit said, adding that the move appears “merely instrumental in exerting undue pressure” to renegotiate pricing.
At the core of the dispute is a broader shift in operator priorities. Rising tower lease costs, combined with legacy contractual constraints, are prompting telcos to reassess long-term infrastructure strategies.
“Rising tower-lease costs are a major catalyst, especially in Italy where Inwit’s above-market pricing and refusal to renegotiate have put heavy pressure on operator economics,” Gorelik said.
Strategic control is also becoming a central issue. Fastweb + Vodafone inherited long-term agreements from Vodafone, while TIM is seeking greater flexibility in deployment and cost structures.
“In practice, it’s the combined pressure of financial strain and the need for strategic autonomy that is pushing telcos to rethink whether relying solely on external towercos still serves their long-term strategic goals,” Gorelik added.
Inwit, for its part, has emphasized the scale and strategic importance of its infrastructure. The company operates more than 26,000 towers across Italy, many in locations that are difficult to replicate.
It warned that replacing its network would require building at least 15,000 new towers, a process that could take decades, increase costs significantly, and generate more than 500,000 tons of additional CO2 emissions.
“Infrastructure duplication has no industrial, economic and environmental logic,” Inwit said, cautioning that such a move could slow 5G deployment and reduce network efficiency.
Despite the escalating dispute, both sides have left room for negotiation. TIM said it is open to discussions on revised terms, while Inwit indicated willingness to consider improvements within the existing framework.
TIM and Fastweb+Vodafone have recently announced a preliminary agreement to cooperate on the development of mobile access networks in Italy using a radio access network (RAN) sharing model. The initiative is designed to speed up the rollout of 5G services nationwide, the companies said.
The agreement, which is subject to a final contract expected by the second quarter of 2026, aims to make more efficient use of existing infrastructure in the country while expanding coverage, particularly in less densely populated areas.
Under the proposed model, Fastweb+Vodafone will focus on extending 5G coverage to municipalities with fewer than 35,000 residents. Each operator will be responsible for network development across 10 regions. By the end of 2028, the partnership is expected to result in around 15,500 mobile sites per operator, the partners said.
“TIM and Fastweb + Vodafone are now pushing to regain more control over their infrastructure through a new operator‑led tower venture, rather than signaling a broader structural shift away from the towerco model. However, while the immediate drivers are commercial, the deeper motivation reflects a sovereignty‑style push to reduce dependency on a dominant external towerco and ensure operators can steer deployment, cost structures, and 5G network evolution,” Gorelik said.