PROFIBUS and PROFINET are both Siemens-originated field communication standards used widely in automation. Choosing between them depends on your application requirements, existing infrastructure, and future plans.
PROFIBUS Overview
PROFIBUS (Process Field Bus) was introduced in 1989 and became the dominant fieldbus in process and factory automation. Two variants exist:
- PROFIBUS DP (Decentralized Periphery): High-speed communication with remote I/O and drives. Most common in factory automation.
- PROFIBUS PA (Process Automation): Intrinsically safe variant for hazardous areas. Runs at 31.25 kbps over two-wire bus with power delivery.
PROFINET Overview
PROFINET is the Ethernet-based successor, standardized in IEC 61158. It carries PROFIBUS-style device profiles over standard Ethernet infrastructure.
- PROFINET RT (Real-Time): Cycle times of 1-10 ms. Suitable for most I/O and drives.
- PROFINET IRT (Isochronous Real-Time): Deterministic sub-millisecond cycles. Required for servo motion control.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | PROFIBUS DP | PROFINET RT |
|---|---|---|
| Physical layer | RS-485 | Ethernet (100Mbit/1Gbit) |
| Max speed | 12 Mbit/s | 100+ Mbit/s |
| Max nodes | 126 | Unlimited (switched) |
| Topology | Bus / linear | Star, ring, tree |
| Cycle time | ~1 ms (DP) | 1-10 ms (RT) |
| Hazardous areas | PA variant | Not directly |
| Legacy support | Widespread | Via proxy devices |
When to Choose PROFIBUS
- Brownfield sites with existing PROFIBUS infrastructure
- Hazardous area field devices requiring intrinsic safety (PA)
- Budget-constrained projects where rewiring is cost-prohibitive
When to Choose PROFINET
- New greenfield installations
- High-speed motion control requiring IRT
- Integration with IT systems and IIoT platforms
- Applications needing standard Ethernet infrastructure
Both protocols will coexist for years – PROFIBUS has a 30+ year install base – but PROFINET is the future direction for Siemens and most major automation vendors.


