comfast_logo

Full-Scenario WiFi Coverage Solution

Industry News

Industry News

One Broadband Account, How Many Routers Can You Actually Run?

Short answer: as many as you like—until you run out of speed, Ethernet ports or patience. The real ceiling is not a hidden rule from the ISP; it is simple math and radio physics.

1. Start with the pipe, not the boxes  

   – 100 Mbps plan: after overhead you have ≈ 90 Mbps. If every router’s average client load is 20 Mbps you can feed 4–5 routers before nobody gets a full slice.  

   – 300 Mbps or faster: the same sum gives you 10+ routers, but remember that one 4 K Netflix stream already wants 25 Mbps. Count devices, not routers.

2. Count radios, not routers  

   A £30 bargain box may start stalling after 10–15 active clients. Mid-range Wi-Fi 6/7 models (CF-WR631AX V3, CF-WR632AX, etc.) will happily handle 60–100 devices each. Fewer, better units always beats a pile of cheap ones fighting for channels.

3. Use the right glue  

   – Ethernet back-haul: each extra unit needs one LAN port on the main router or a switch. A £20 eight-port Gigabit switch instantly turns “only four ports” into “seven more routers”.  

   – Mesh instead of repeater soup: all nodes share one SSID, roam clients cleanly and balance load. One main router plus two satellites uses exactly one public IP; the ISP sees a single household.

4. Stay legal  

   Most residential T&Cs forbid sharing the line with the neighbour for money, but nothing stops you wiring your own bedrooms, garage or garden room. Just do not plug 50 routers into a 100 Mbps line and wonder why everything crawls.

Rule of thumb  

One good Wi-Fi 6/7 mesh pack (2–3 nodes) on a 300–500 Mbps line covers 95 % of family houses with speed to spare. Add nodes until every room hits –70 dBm and speed tests still show 80 % of your plan. When the test drops, you have hit the real limit—stop buying routers and buy more bandwidth instead.

Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn

Please Get In Touch

For assistance with your orders, account, or any technical issues, our customer support team is here to help