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I just tested the world’s first Wi-Fi 7 router — and the results are very impressive

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With every new Wi-Fi standard comes the extra speed and features we expect, but also a transition period when all the pieces needed aren’t quite in place. After spending a week testing and living with the TP-Link Deco BE85, the first Wi-Fi 7 router available, this notion rings true. The new spec moves a lot of data, codifies the good things from Wi-Fi 6E and adds a few extra goodies, like super-wide 320MHz data bands. 

On the other hand, it’s like a house under construction with a foundation and walls but no roof because there’s only one Wi-Fi 7 device that can take advantage of its abilities. I previewed the Deco BE85 with a OnePlus 11 smartphone that has built-in Wi-Fi 7 and gave them both a good workout. Here’s what I found out.

The rear ports of the TP-Link Deco BE85

(Image credit: TP-Link/Tom’s Guide)

To outward appearances, the cylindrical white Deco BE85 devices look like scaled-up versions of earlier Deco mesh units like the Deco XE75. I love the array of wired Multi-Gig input WAN choices: ports for a pair of 10Gbps and a pair of 2.5Gbps wired inputs along with an SPD+ fiber optic input. Few will have access to these top-speed broadband choices but it’s nice to know the router will be ready when they become generally available.  

I recorded peak Wi-Fi 7 download speeds of 3.85Gbps at 5 feet. That’s more than triple the throughput of Netgear’s Nighthawk RAXE500’s 1.15Gbps over the 6GHz band using Wi-Fi 6E.

There may be only one Wi-Fi 7 device around, but Android is ready with a notification bar “Wi-Fi 7” icon when it connects using the new protocol. The triband router is rated at a peak performance of 22Gbps, although as is the case with all Wi-Fi routers, it’s optimistic.

Speed test results from the TP-Link Deco BE85

(Image credit: Analiti/Tom’s Guide)

Using the iperf3 networking benchmark set to simulate 20 users, a Mac mini M2 with a 10Gbps Ethernet interface and Analiti’s Speed Test app on the OnePlus 11 5G phone, I recorded peak download speeds of 3.85Gbps at 5 feet. That’s more than triple the throughput of Netgear’s Nighthawk RAXE500’s 1.15Gbps over the 6GHz band using Wi-Fi 6E. This slowed to 2.55Gbps at 15 feet, though, showing the limited range of the 6GHz band. 

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