PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063816
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063816
According to Mordor Intelligence, the sOHO router market size was valued at USD 10.92 billion in 2025 and estimated to grow from USD 11.83 billion in 2026 to reach USD 17.82 billion by 2031, at a CAGR of 8.54% during the forecast period (2026-2031).

This report is Segmented by Frequency Band (Single-Band, Dual-Band, Tri-Band, and Quad-Band), Wi-Fi Standard (Wi-Fi 4, Wi-Fi 5, Wi-Fi 6, Wi-Fi 6E, and Wi-Fi 7), Application (Residential, Home Office, Small Office, and More), Distribution Channel (Online Retail, Offline Retail, ISP Bundled CPE, and Enterprise Channel Partners), and Geography. The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
Routers embedding neural-processing units have shifted from passive packet forwarding to active orchestration. Charter Spectrum introduced Wi-Fi 7 gateways with on-device AI in 2025, reporting lower support calls after dynamic congestion rerouting. Qualcomm confirmed more than 250 networking designs using Wi-Fi 7 chipsets equipped with inference engines in its 2025 investor briefing. Such silicon classifies traffic flows and prioritizes latency-sensitive packets without manual quality-of-service rules. Households running simultaneous video conferences, cloud gaming, and IoT sensors benefit from lower jitter, reducing churn for service providers. Predictive alerts that flag anomalous traffic create upsell opportunities for managed security subscriptions.
The Wi-Fi Alliance certified 233 million Wi-Fi 7 devices in 2024 and forecasts 2.1 billion by 2028, eclipsing the ramp of Wi-Fi 6. MediaTek's Filogic 880 and 660 platforms began shipping in 2025, enabling sub-USD 200 tri-band routers. Broadcom and Qualcomm followed with quad-band reference designs that exploit 320-MHz channels and 4096-QAM to achieve 40 Gbps throughput. January 2026 FCC authorization for standard-power 6 GHz devices removed indoor-range limits, catalyzing small-office and industrial uptake. Together, lower chipset costs and regulatory clarity compress replacement windows for Wi-Fi 5 hardware.
T-Mobile bundles Inseego's FX4200 and FX4100 gateways at zero upfront cost, integrating tri-band Wi-Fi 7 and 5G backhaul to displace standalone routers. Qualcomm's single-die Dragonwing platform further lowers bill-of-materials, letting carriers subsidize hardware. Small enterprises seeking unified billing opt for these gateways, eroding retail router volumes, especially in areas where fiber is scarce.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Tri-band routers boosted the SOHO router market share by capturing latency-sensitive 4K streaming and cloud gaming demand in 2025. Dual-band systems still dominate the mid-priced tiers, but tri-band shipments are forecast to grow faster than the overall SOHO router market through 2031. Lower-cost Wi-Fi 7 silicon from MediaTek and Broadcom lowered street prices beneath USD 200, bringing multi-gigabit capacity to mass-market budgets.
Mesh networking is the principal catalyst: quad-band designs dedicate a 6 GHz radio for backhaul, delivering deterministic latency without Ethernet cabling. Regulatory clearance for standard-power 6 GHz radios in January 2026 allows tri-band kits to cover larger floorplates, boosting attachment rates in suburban homes. Single-band devices linger only in ultra-low-cost brackets and embedded IoT endpoints, signaling eventual obsolescence as chipset costs continue to fall.
Wi-Fi 5 still anchors value-tier ISP bundles in 2025, yet Wi-Fi 7's 24.76% CAGR positions it as the volume engine for the SOHO router market size beyond 2027. FCC authorization for higher-power 6 GHz operation expanded viable coverage footprints, while chipset vendors raced to integrate 320 MHz channels and multi-link operation. Early adopters in gaming and prosumer niches validated willingness to upgrade ahead of device cycles, shortening refresh intervals.
Enterprise-grade small offices prize Wi-Fi 6E for its OFDMA efficiency and target wake time features that prolong IoT battery life. Wi-Fi 4 and earlier generations are in steady decline, limited to legacy industrial controllers pending retrofit budgets. As more client devices ship with tri-band radios, interoperability concerns recede, widening replacement opportunities for vendors.
Asia-Pacific contributed 36.52% to the SOHO router market in 2025, buoyed by China's universal-broadband policy and India's tier-2 fiber rollouts. Xiaomi monetized 904.6 million connected devices across its ecosystem, leveraging flash sales to lift router penetration in India (13.4% unit share) and Southeast Asia (16.7%). Japan's dense apartment clusters accelerated Wi-Fi 6E adoption, while Australia's NBN upgrades drove replacements of legacy ADSL hardware. The region's heterogeneity divides demand between cost-optimized dual-band units and premium quad-band offerings.
South America leads growth at 10.46% CAGR as carriers extend fiber to secondary cities. Brazil, Chile, Peru and Mexico each exceeded 70% fiber penetration by late 2024, exposing bandwidth constraints in 2.4 GHz-only routers. TP-Link's upcoming Brazilian factory will shorten supply chains and lower landed costs, while Xiaomi ranks second in regional share at 17.9%. Economic headwinds and currency depreciation heighten price sensitivity, but mesh bundles gain traction in urban Sao Paulo and Buenos Aires.
North America and Europe show mature penetration yet sustain replacement demand through Wi-Fi 7 upgrades and managed-service transitions. U.S. fiber passings crossed 100 million by September 2025, driving the adoption of routers capable of gigabit symmetric throughput. Charter's Wi-Fi 7 gateway with 5G failover reduced support overhead and improved customer satisfaction, validating the managed model. Middle East smart-city agendas in the UAE and Saudi Arabia drive enterprise-grade router demand, whereas much of Africa relies on mobile broadband, limiting high-end router adoption.