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Wi-Fi 6 vs. Wi-Fi 7: What's the Difference?

By Omada Editorial Group

Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 7 are both capable wireless standards for a business network, but they solve different problems. Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax) was built for density and efficiency, handling many devices simultaneously without congestion. Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be) pushes the ceiling higher on throughput and introduces Multi-Link Operation (MLO), a fundamentally new way for devices to connect across multiple frequency bands at once. Understanding the Wi-Fi 6 vs. Wi-Fi 7 differences helps clarify which standard makes sense for your next deployment or upgrade cycle.

 

The comparison below outlines the key technical distinctions between Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 7. 

 

Wi-Fi 6 

Wi-Fi 7 

Standard 

IEEE 802.11ax 

IEEE 802.11be 

Max theoretical speed 

9.6 Gbps 

46 Gbps 

Max channel width 

160 MHz 

320 MHz 

Frequency bands 

2.4 GHz, 5 GHz (6 GHz with Wi-Fi 6E) 

2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, 6 GHz 

Key new features 

OFDMA, 8×8 MU-MIMO, TWT, BSS Coloring, optional Preamble Puncturing  

MLO, 4096-QAM, Multi-RU, enhanced Preamble Puncturing  

Best for 

Most SMB deployments; strong device ecosystem 

High-density, latency-sensitive, future-ready builds 

Omada Editorial Group

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