FCC puts home routers on the Covered List—Wi‑Fi 7 slows
The FCC added foreign-made consumer routers to its Covered List, blocking authorization for new home router models on national security and supply-chain grounds, while allowing already-authorized models to remain on the market and receive updates through at least March 1, 2027. Analysts warn the policy could cause supply shortages, higher CPE costs, and slower innovation cycles (including Wi-Fi 7 rollouts), with potential spillover to gateway devices used in 5G fixed wireless access offerings from AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon.
Key Takeaways
- New consumer router models manufactured/assembled outside the US now face an FCC authorization wall via the Covered List.
- Existing authorized models stay in market; updates are allowed under a waiver through at least March 1, 2027.
- Vendors can seek “conditional approval” exemptions via DoW/DHS, requiring deep supply-chain disclosures and a time-bound US manufacturing expansion plan.
- Because most consumer routers are built abroad, the approval pipeline could bottleneck—raising prices and slowing Wi‑Fi 7/8 refresh cycles.
- Broad “router” interpretation may include integrated gateways (cellular/cable), impacting 5G FWA CPE plans for major carriers.
Why It Matters
Home Wi‑Fi is the invisible last-mile for streaming QoE—and the FCC just turned router certification into a strategic chokepoint. If conditional approvals clog up, the US could lag global upgrade cycles (Wi‑Fi 7/8), pushing more households onto older gear that struggles with multi-stream 4K, low-latency live sports, and congested ad-supported viewing. For ISPs and FWA operators, higher CPE costs and constrained gateway options can squeeze margins and slow subscriber growth. The emerging “router industrial policy” meme: security hardening may arrive as higher buffering risk—and higher bills.
Read full article at lightreading.com