CNET lab tests validate Wi-Fi 7 routers' speed and value

After testing 34 routers, CNET Labs found Wi-Fi 7 models deliver the highest throughput at 3,169Mbps across bands, far surpassing Wi-Fi 6E's 1,309Mbps. The author, once skeptical, now recommends tri-band Wi-Fi 7 routers for future-proofing amid rising data use. Prices have dropped, with good options under $200.

CNET Labs evaluated over 30 Wi-Fi routers in a 15,000-square-foot facility, measuring throughput, jitter, packet loss, and signal strength at distances up to 50 feet. Wi-Fi 7 routers achieved top total throughput of 3,169Mbps combined across bands, compared to 1,309Mbps for Wi-Fi 6E. At 50 feet, they averaged 515Mbps, exceeding Wi-Fi 6's 383Mbps. Key upgrades include 320MHz channels—double Wi-Fi 6E's widest—Multi-Link Operation for simultaneous band use, and 4K-QAM for up to 20% better efficiency, as explained by David Coleman of Extreme Networks: “Wi-Fi 7 supports 320MHz-wide channels -- double the size of the widest channels in Wi-Fi 6E -- meaning it can deliver much higher data rates.” Gianmarco Chumbe, CNET's lab engineer, described the router as “the heart of your home network.” A CNET survey noted 86% of Americans face Wi-Fi drops. Lab awards went to Netgear Nighthawk RS700S as fastest Wi-Fi 7 router, TP-Link Archer AXE75 for Wi-Fi 6E, and TP-Link Deco X55 Pro for Wi-Fi 6. Dual-band Wi-Fi 7 routers underperformed, lacking 6GHz access and resembling Wi-Fi 6 in tests. Tri-band models like TP-Link Archer BE550 ($200, 3,269Mbps) topped price-per-Mbps value. Average prices: Wi-Fi 7 at $293, Wi-Fi 6E $124. OpenVault reported U.S. households averaged 767GB monthly data in late 2025, up 69GB yearly. Jitter stayed under 1ms for most, but packet loss exceeded 1% on 5GHz across standards.

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Netgear and Eero Wi-Fi routers displayed with an FCC exemption document in a professional office setting.
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Netgear and Eero gain exemptions from FCC foreign router ban

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The Federal Communications Commission has granted exemptions to Netgear and Eero from its ban on new foreign-made Wi-Fi routers. The move follows the original March 23 order that targeted devices with manufacturing or design outside the United States. Firmware updates for existing models will continue until at least January 1, 2029.

ASUS has introduced a lineup of compact mini routers designed for secure Wi-Fi access at home or on the go. Models like the RT-BE58 Go, RT-AX57 Go, and RT-AX50 Go offer high speeds, VPN protection, and portability. The company is running a giveaway for one of these devices through May 17.

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CNET readers have selected GFiber as the leading internet service provider overall in the outlet's People's Picks awards. The fiber provider earned the highest marks for reliability, speed and customer support.

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