Find the Right Motorola Commercial Radio
Motorola commercial two-way radios bridge entry-level and professional gear - rugged, scalable, and ready to grow from analog to digital with your business. From retail stores and schools to warehouses and construction sites, these models deliver the clarity, range, and durability fast-moving teams rely on every shift.
Compare Commercial Radios
| Model | Mode | Best For |
|---|
| CURVE / DLR110 | Digital | License-free instant teams |
| CP100d | Analog & digital | Everyday business use |
| R2 | Analog & digital | Value digital upgrade |
| SL300 | Analog & digital | Slim, professional look |
| EVX-S24 | Digital | Compact digital teams |
| BPR40 / BPR50dX | Analog | Budget business comms |
How to Choose a Commercial Radio
- Analog or digital: analog models cost less up front, while digital adds clearer audio, more capacity, and longer effective range - and most of these run both.
- Display vs no display: display models (SL300, CP100d) make channel and contact management easier for larger fleets.
- Form factor: slim radios like the SL300 suit customer-facing roles; rugged models fit warehouses and back-of-house.
- Growth path: starting analog today and migrating to digital later is simple when you choose dual-mode models.
Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between business and commercial radios?
Commercial radios add more power, range, and digital features for larger or tougher operations, while business radios focus on simple on-site communication.
Are these radios analog or digital?
Most Motorola commercial models run both analog and digital, so you can migrate to digital on your own schedule.
Do commercial radios need an FCC license?
Most operate on licensed business frequencies and we handle the FCC licensing; license-free options like the CURVE are also available.
How many channels do commercial radios support?
It varies by model - from a handful on entry radios like the BPR series up to dozens on the CP100d and SL300 for larger fleets.
Can these radios talk to my older Motorola radios?
Yes - in analog mode they can be programmed to match the frequencies and tones of most existing Motorola fleets.