Hytera has unveiled new artificial intelligence-based command, control and enforcement communications products for the UK and European markets, including systems for law enforcement, control rooms and field communications.
The announcements focus on products being shown in Britain or Europe for the first time, including an Intelligent Mobile Enforcement Solution for the UK and an AI Powered Command and Control Centre for Europe.
Among them is a command and control platform that combines Hytera ICC, Hytera VCS, dashboards and AI applications in a single system. It brings together voice, video, data, GIS maps, alarms and location services, and works across radios, telephones, push-to-talk over cellular devices and public address systems.
Hytera is also introducing its Intelligent Mobile Enforcement Solution to the UK market. Aimed at police and other public safety users, it links AI-enabled body-worn cameras, in-vehicle systems, evidence management and cloud collaboration tools.
The product connects officers, vehicles, command platforms and digital evidence systems in one workflow. It includes scenario-based functions such as in-vehicle linkage and contactless screening, alongside secure data transmission and edge AI processing.
Also entering the UK market is Hytera's Smart Vehicle System. The package combines cameras, facial recognition, number plate recognition and pan-tilt-zoom controls to monitor officers and nearby activity in real time.
The vehicle system can link with body cameras and trigger recording when events such as sirens, door openings or officer movements occur. Alerts and live video can be sent to a command centre as incidents unfold.
Radio portfolio
Beyond software and enforcement tools, Hytera is expanding the range of radio and broadband terminals it is presenting to customers, with more than 50 terminals in its wider communications portfolio.
One product drawing attention is the PNC660 450M, a broadband smart device introduced earlier this year. The model has been shortlisted in the ICCA 2026 Best MCX Product or Solution of the Year category.
Hytera is also promoting its 3GPP MCX offer, branded HyTalk MC, for sectors including public safety, transport and energy. The latest version, HyTalk MC 6.1, introduces what the company describes as a three-site active-active-active architecture, along with changes to dispatch integration and system security.
The updated system has also been tested in multi-vendor settings. According to Hytera, HyTalk MC 6.1, including its application server, client, dispatcher and several 5G user devices, was validated for interoperability at a recent ETSI MCX Plugtests event.
Enterprise push-to-talk
Alongside its mission-critical offer, Hytera is marketing a push-to-talk over cellular platform for commercial users. The HyTalk service supports voice, video calls, group communication, emergency alerts, location sharing, patrol management and dispatch over 3G, 4G, 5G and wireless local area networks.
The service includes encryption, lawful interception, device binding, geofencing, targeted calling, live monitoring and IP-based recording of voice, video and messages. It is offered through a multi-tenant operating model for organisations and channel partners that do not want to build their own communications platform.
Emergency use
Another focus is rapid-deployment communications for disrupted or remote environments. Hytera's Fast Deployment Solution is intended for use during power cuts, network outages and natural disasters, when teams need on-site communications without relying on external infrastructure.
The system combines portable repeaters, digital mobile radio equipment, mesh devices and intelligent robots with a command centre setup designed for live monitoring, dispatch and personnel tracking. Some elements of the package are also being shown in Europe for the first time.
Hytera said the robots can be used for reconnaissance in hazardous locations such as collapsed buildings or confined underground spaces. They are designed to collect audio, video and environmental information and send it back to the command centre.
The broader strategy reflects demand in critical communications for systems that combine radio, broadband, video and analytics in a single operating environment. Across the sector, suppliers are seeking to serve emergency services, transport operators, utilities and industrial customers that want tighter links between field staff, vehicles and control rooms.
Commenting on the European market, Sophia Yin, General Manager of Hytera Europe, said: "Europe is one of the most dynamic and innovative markets for critical communications, where customer expectations are rapidly evolving toward more intelligent, integrated, and real-time operational capabilities."
She added: "CCW is an important platform for industry collaboration, bringing together industry experts and ecosystem partners across the critical communications community. We look forward to engaging with customers, partners, and industry stakeholders to discuss the future of mission-critical communications and to explore better various forms of cooperation with local integrators and application partners across Europe."