Updated
Updated · How-To Geek · May 20
Home Wi-Fi Bottlenecks Can Slash 1Gbps Plans to 40Mbps as Ethernet Tests Isolate the Problem
Updated
Updated · How-To Geek · May 20

Home Wi-Fi Bottlenecks Can Slash 1Gbps Plans to 40Mbps as Ethernet Tests Isolate the Problem

7 articles · Updated · How-To Geek · May 20
  • A 1Gbps internet plan only guarantees speed to the modem; once traffic hits the router and devices, home-network limits can drag a phone speed test down to 40Mbps.
  • The article says the fastest way to pinpoint blame is a wired test: connect a PC directly to the router with a proper gigabit-capable Ethernet port and cable, then run a speed test.
  • Common culprits include distance from the router, crowded 2.4GHz channels, older client devices, outdated routers, and mesh nodes with weak backhaul links.
  • Practical fixes focus on placement and bands—move the router into the open, keep high-speed devices on 5GHz or 6GHz, and avoid assuming extra mesh nodes automatically improve throughput.
  • Ethernet remains the most reliable path to near-gigabit performance because it avoids Wi-Fi interference, walls and congestion that make router box speeds only best-case figures.
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