WiFi 6 vs WiFi 7 Explained: What Home Users Actually Need to Know

Published · 9 min read

Walk into a big-box store and you will see routers labelled WiFi 6, WiFi 6E, and WiFi 7, with prices that range from $80 to over $700. The marketing promises "10 Gbps wireless speeds" and "the future of WiFi". The reality, for most homes, is more nuanced. This guide cuts through the spec sheets and tells you what actually matters when picking your next router or buying a new device.

The Naming Refresher

The WiFi Alliance simplified naming a few years ago. Here is the correspondence to the underlying IEEE standards:

Marketing nameIEEE standardYearBands
WiFi 4802.11n20092.4 / 5 GHz
WiFi 5802.11ac20145 GHz
WiFi 6802.11ax20192.4 / 5 GHz
WiFi 6E802.11ax20202.4 / 5 / 6 GHz
WiFi 7802.11be20242.4 / 5 / 6 GHz

What Actually Changed in WiFi 7

Three features in WiFi 7 are worth understanding because they each translate into real-world differences:

1. 320 MHz Channels

WiFi 6 maxed out at 160MHz wide channels. WiFi 7 doubles this to 320MHz, but only in the 6GHz band where the spectrum is wide enough to allow it. Wider channels mean more bits per second per device, but they also mean fewer non-overlapping channels available, which matters more in apartment buildings than in detached homes.

2. 4096-QAM Modulation

QAM (Quadrature Amplitude Modulation) determines how many bits are encoded per radio symbol. WiFi 6 used 1024-QAM. WiFi 7 uses 4096-QAM, packing 12 bits per symbol instead of 10. The catch: 4096-QAM only works at very high signal-to-noise ratios. In practice, you only see the benefit when the device is close to the access point with minimal interference.

3. Multi-Link Operation (MLO)

This is the most genuinely new feature. MLO lets a single device use the 5GHz and 6GHz bands simultaneously to send and receive data. If one band is congested, traffic shifts to the other transparently. The result is lower latency and higher reliability, particularly for time-sensitive applications. MLO requires WiFi 7 on both the router and the client.

WiFi 6E: The Underrated Middle Ground

WiFi 6E is often overlooked because it sounds like a minor revision, but it added something huge: access to the 6GHz band. The 5GHz band has been crowded for a decade — in any city your neighbour's WiFi, your speakers, and a dozen IoT devices all crowd into 5GHz. The 6GHz band is essentially empty by comparison and offers more non-overlapping wide channels.

If you live in an apartment building and have been suffering from WiFi congestion, jumping from WiFi 5 to WiFi 6E often produces a bigger user-visible improvement than jumping from WiFi 6E to WiFi 7. The 6GHz band itself is the win.

Use a WiFi analyzer to see how crowded your 2.4 and 5 GHz bands are. If you see 20+ networks competing on 5GHz, the 6GHz band (WiFi 6E or 7) will feel dramatically better.

Speed in Theory vs Speed in Practice

Marketing speeds (BE19000, AX6000, etc.) are theoretical aggregate maximums across all bands and streams, with every device using the highest modulation. No real device hits these numbers. Practical single-device speeds tend to look like:

Notice the qualifier "close to the AP". Walls, distance, and obstacles cut these numbers in half quickly. A WiFi 7 router at the other end of the house may be slower than a WiFi 6 router in the same room.

Should You Upgrade?

Stay on what you have if…

Upgrade to WiFi 6 or 6E if…

Upgrade to WiFi 7 if…

Do Your iPhone and Mac Support WiFi 7?

How to Tell What Standard You Are Connected On

From your iPhone, open PingKit and go to Network Info. It shows your current SSID, band (2.4/5/6 GHz), and link details. Combine this with a speed test from the same spot to verify you are getting the throughput your hardware claims.

On Mac, hold Option and click the WiFi icon in the menu bar. You will see "PHY Mode" (the WiFi standard), channel, signal, and noise floor.

Conclusion

WiFi 7 is a real upgrade with three meaningful new features: 320MHz channels, 4096-QAM, and Multi-Link Operation. For most homes, the bigger win is moving from a 5GHz-only router to anything that supports 6GHz (WiFi 6E or WiFi 7). And no router upgrade improves devices that are stuck on older WiFi standards.

Before spending $500 on a router, run a speed test from the rooms where you actually use WiFi. If you are already getting your full internet plan, the router is not the bottleneck. If you are not, identify why before buying — it might be channel congestion, a dead spot, or an aging client device.

Related Articles

See Exactly What Your WiFi Is Doing

PingKit's Network Info, WiFi Analyzer, and Speed Test show you the band, channel, signal, and real throughput your iPhone is getting.

Download Free on the App Store