TP-Link
Deco BE63
$449.99
ASUS
Based on 28 Reddit mentions
$153.84
Sentiment summary across the product areas Reddit users mention most.
Original Reddit posts and comments behind this analysis.
Asus XT9 (AX 6e) should do the trick. Wired backhaul or dedicated 5ghz channel for backhaul should work very well for your situation, and more than adequate for 1 GB connection. I personally have an ASUS AXE7800 as my main router with two XD6 as nodes in an 1800 square foot house (two-story with bas
...TheImmortal_TK in r/HomeNetworking
January 30, 2026 5:47 PM
3
I'm confident someone will suggest the best solution is not a router or mesh, but router + APs (access points) -- and I'd agree with them. To set that up you'd need to connect the APs via ethernet to the router. If that is possible, it will give you better and more reliable speeds throughout the hom
...sunrisebreeze in r/HomeNetworking
December 1, 2025 4:33 AM
3
Jeg har selv 3 x Asus XT9 mesh enheder i 158 kvm hus lavet i armeret beton på 2 etager. Jeg koblet 1 på routeren fra fastspeed ved indgangen af huset, 1 står i stuen i den anden ende af huset og 1 på kontoret oven på. Det kunne sikkert være bedre, men jeg har wifi i både have, carport og på lokummet
...Zazuki99 in r/dktechsupport
April 21, 2026 2:13 PM
2
The key to 4K streaming on Stream is a strong stable WiFi signal or ethernet connection. I live in a 3 storey house and purchased an Asus mesh XT9 system which shares the broadband from the hallway. With good broadband your Stream should be fine (mine was). However, I cancelled for Sky's Now TV app
...Less-Significance-58 in r/skytv
November 29, 2025 5:21 AM
2
Third this. I've had Asus minis before and currently 4 XT9's. No issues.
raiderfan227 in r/HomeNetworking
December 8, 2025 1:22 PM
2
This is what we did. Picked up some ASUS XT9's and hardwired the network in the house. There isn't a corner of the home that doesn't get a solid 900+mb/s over wifi
DisastrousAcshin in r/Edmonton
January 2, 2026 6:32 PM
2
I just use an ASUS ZenWIFI XT9 set to AP mode instead of mesh, wired. That way I avoided locking into a ecosystem.like Ubiquiti. Also any router with WIFI in ap/bridge mode should work like many others recommended.
psynl84 in r/HomeNetworking
February 14, 2026 4:21 PM
2
u/crispysmoove I agree with u/TheImmortal_TK that ASUS would be a solid pick for you. BTW I have the slightly older ASUS XT8 mesh system and it works well in wireless backhaul, as it's tri-band WiFi 6 (2.4/5/5ghz bands). One of the 5ghz bands is dedicated to mesh traffic and the other 5ghz is just f
...sunrisebreeze in r/HomeNetworking
January 31, 2026 8:33 PM
2
Personally, I would return the WiFi range extender... what's the point of paying for a slower speed than you are getting from the router/ hub? As others have commented, a wired mesh system is best, but do you need it? I and my partner WFH with frequent Zoom & Teams meetings so we need a decent netwo
...Ok_Medium_8691 in r/UKBroadband
April 9, 2026 11:03 AM
1
I just started with a Cloud Gateway Max and U7 Pro and love it. I moved off of an ASUS XT9 mesh because I want more control like separate VLANs for IoT devices, work computer, etc. The IDS/IPS is pretty good and the UniFi OS looks and functions very well. I use unifi poller and SIEM export to send a
...security_jedi in r/Ubiquiti
November 27, 2025 6:20 PM
1