Finally, WiFi that works.

How many eeros does your home need?

A set of three will cover the average home (2,000 - 4,000 sq. ft.). But the beauty of eero is that you can expand your system to cover any home, regardless of its size or shape. Here are a few examples to help you figure out what’s right for your place.

The Two-Story

The Ranch

The Brownstone

The Loft

Your WiFi problems, gone

WiFi setup is the worst. You know it. We know it. With eero, simply download the app and plug one eero directly into your existing cable or DSL modem. The app takes it from there, prompting you to create a network name and password. Personality encouraged.

Additional eeros just need power from a wall outlet. The app will help guide you where to place them to maximize their connection. You can add as many as you need to cover your home. They automatically connect to each other wirelessly. If you have Ethernet wiring, you can hardwire some or all of your eeros. eero’s software will automatically figure out whether to send data over Ethernet or through the air.

WiFi is no longer a black box

The eero app lets you manage your network from the palm of your hand, so you’ll know how many devices are connected and the Internet speed you’re getting from your ISP. The app also allows you to configure advanced settings like DHCP, NAT, DNS, UPnP, Port Forwarding, and flux capacitation.

Security that's one step ahead

It may be out-of-sight, out-of-mind once you set it up, but think about the personal data transmitted over your network. eero is protected with state-of-the-art WPA2 encryption, and because it controls the hardware and the software for your entire network, it ensures that you’re always secure.

Since traditional routers don’t push software updates to their customers, they are left vulnerable to cyber attacks. eero updates automatically so that you not only have the latest features, but the latest security.

Be our guest

Digging through the kitchen drawer and rattling off a 16-digit alphanumeric password from an old Post-it note is crazy. With eero, you invite your friends to join your network straight from the eero app — it can be as simple as sending a text. Plus, you can create an entirely separate guest network with the push of a button. Sure, they’re your friends, but every relationship needs boundaries.

More family time, less screen time

Parental controls shouldn’t be one-size-fits-all: they should be tailored to each individual’s age and specific needs. With Family Profiles, manage your family’s screen time by creating profiles, setting schedules, managing devices, and pausing the internet for bedtime or important family moments like dinner. Now, the only thing standing between you and a great family game night is your family.

Rate vs. range

Distance may be good for the heart, but it weakens WiFi signal. Same goes for walls, doors, appliances, neighbors’ networks, metal, water (water heaters and fish tanks alike), dogs, anything solid. When you and your router are at opposite ends of your house, there are too many obstacles in between. Your WiFi signal simply can’t make it that far.

Electromagnetic waves have different shapes and behaviors at different frequencies. In general, lower-frequency waves like AM radio can travel much farther than higher-frequency waves like light. That’s why the 5GHz waves used by the newest WiFi standard (802.11ac), though capable of transmitting more data at higher speeds, aren’t as effective over longer distances as the older 2.4GHz standard.

The only answer is multiple access points

For fast, reliable WiFi in every room, you need a set of access points — devices that broadcast WiFi —  distributed throughout your home. That’s why WiFi is so great at work: if you lifted up the ceiling tiles, you’d see access points throughout the office. These enterprise systems are typically wired and linked to a rack of WiFi equipment in an IT closet that makes sure your laptop talks to the right access point and maintains a solid, reliable connection. There’s an IT person to manage everything.

Until now, recreating this sort of enterprise setup at home has meant expensive Ethernet wiring, painful manual setup, custom firmware, and a network engineer. eero brings this enterprise model to the home. Multiple eeros connect to form a mesh network — the first available on the consumer market. Unlike the “hub-and-spoke” model of a single router and a range extender, each eero in the network is created equal and the result is an incredibly fast, resilient network.

Mad hops

If you’ve ever tried to give your router a boost with an “extender,” then you’ve experienced true disappointment. That’s because “extenders” can only stretch your signal a single hop — you can’t connect multiple in a row. They often create an entirely separate network (SSID), so you find yourself having to continually switch from one network to the other as you move through your house.

Worse, many range “extenders” cut your bandwidth in half because they rely on a single wireless radio to both send and receive data. In contrast, each eero has two radios — both of which communicate with your devices and sync with other eeros — so your connection is always fast. Not only does an eero system operate on a single network name (SSID), but you can also walk throughout your home and devices like your iPhone® will connect to the nearest eero.

All prices reflect the final price after savings/rebate(s).

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