PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063824
PUBLISHER: Mordor Intelligence | PRODUCT CODE: 2063824
According to Mordor Intelligence, the stackable switch market size was valued at USD 10.36 billion in 2025 and estimated to grow from USD 11.17 billion in 2026 to reach USD 16.28 billion by 2031, at a CAGR of 7.82% during the forecast period (2026-2031).

This report is Segmented by Product Type (Stackable Managed Switches, and Stackable Unmanaged Switches), Port Speeds (≤1 GbE, 2. 5/5 GbE, 10 GbE, 25-40 GbE, and ≥100 GbE), Port Counts (≤24 Ports, 48 Ports, and More Than 48 Ports), Deployment (Enterprise Campus, and More), End-User Industry (Government and Defence, and More), and Geography. The Market Forecasts are Provided in Terms of Value (USD).
Hybrid-cloud architectures are flooding campus cores with east-west traffic, prompting enterprises to specify 10 Gbps or 25 Gbps uplinks in new switch stacks. Containerized workloads moving between on-premises Kubernetes clusters and public-cloud regions demand latency under 5 ms, a target met by HPE's CX 6000 launch in 2026 that embeds AMD DPUs for inline telemetry. IoT device density in manufacturing hit 47 endpoints per 1,000 sq ft in 2025, up from 31 in 2023, forcing network planners to deploy additional stackables to preserve sub-millisecond jitter. Converged IT-OT fabrics now carry video surveillance, access control, and building-automation traffic, raising segmentation complexity that managed stackables solve through hardware-enforced VLANs. Vendors embedding AI inference engines for anomaly detection further reduce operational burden in lean IT teams.
Wi-Fi 6E access points exceed 2 Gbps throughput, yet legacy 1 GbE uplinks throttle user experience in lecture halls and stadiums. IEEE 802.3bz multi-gig ports deliver 2.5 Gbps or 5 Gbps over existing Cat5e/Cat6, avoiding costly re-cabling. Cisco Catalyst 9200 and HPE Aruba CX 6300 shipped multi-gig variants in 2025, accelerating adoption in education and hospitality. Late-2025 interoperability tests confirmed bit-error rates below 10-12 across 100 m Cat6 runs, addressing early signal-integrity concerns. Integrating PoE Type 3 and Type 4 over multi-gig lines introduces thermal constraints, driving switch makers to redesign airflow paths and heatsinks. Demand is strongest where Wi-Fi 7 pilots are underway and bandwidth ceilings near 5 Gbps per AP.
Broadcom and Marvell lead times stretched to 52 weeks in late 2025, stalling campus refresh projects and inflating vendor backlogs. Cisco cited an 8% revenue dip in campus switching during its fiscal Q3 2025 earnings, attributing the slide to silicon shortages. Concentration of production at a handful of Asian foundries injects geopolitical risk, prompting Arista and Juniper to dual-source select models. Enterprises are countering by ordering hardware nine months ahead of deployment, tying up capital and skewing quarterly shipment data. Persistent scarcity could redirect some refresh budgets toward subscription-based managed services rather than outright hardware purchases.
Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
For complete list of drivers and restraints, kindly check the Table Of Contents.
Stackable managed switches generated 64.32% of 2025 revenue, underscoring enterprise reliance on centralized configuration and SNMP-based monitoring. This category anchors the stackable switch market size narrative by offering lifecycle automation and firmware orchestration that unmanaged gear lacks. Industrial stackables, fortified with conformal coatings and DIN-rail mounts, are forecast to expand at a 12.52% CAGR through 2031, reflecting intensified Industry 4.0 rollouts.
Managed models now embed on-chip AI engines that flag anomalous traffic spikes and predict port failures, streamlining operations for lean IT staffs. Industrial variants converge PROFINET, EtherNet/IP, and TSN on a single platform, trimming cabinet footprint on factory floors. Unmanaged units linger in small offices and retail POS lanes but their slice of the stackable switch market is shrinking as cloud-managed offerings approach similar pricing.
In 2025, ports with speeds of ≤1 GbE held a significant position in the stackable switch market, accounting for 51.28% of the shipment share. This segment continues to play a crucial role due to its widespread adoption and compatibility with existing network infrastructure. However, as Wi-Fi 7 pilots highlight gigabit bottlenecks, multi-gig interfaces are experiencing robust growth, with a remarkable CAGR of 18.33%. This speed tier has emerged as the fastest-growing segment in the market, driven by decreasing transceiver costs and the benefit of backward-compatible cabling, which facilitates seamless integration into current systems.
HPE Aruba CX 6300 and Cisco Catalyst 9200 provide 24- and 48-port multi-gig SKUs that slot seamlessly into existing racks. Data-center leaf layers are jumping to 25 Gbps and 40 Gbps to feed NVMe-oF throughput demands, while NVIDIA's Spectrum-X demonstrates 400 Gbps stackables for AI fabrics. Auto-negotiation keeps multi-gig ports interoperable with legacy devices, enabling phased upgrades aligned with depreciation schedules.
North America accounted for 37.83% of global revenues in 2025, driven by government cybersecurity mandates and higher-education modernization efforts. The aging Cat5e cabling, approaching its end-of-life, has prompted organizations to synchronize re-cabling efforts with multi-gig switch upgrades. Additionally, vendor consolidation, following HPE's acquisition of Juniper, has strengthened the market position of the top three vendors, who now account for approximately 60% of total shipments.
Asia Pacific is the fastest-growing territory, projected at a 17.67% CAGR to 2031. China's USD 1.4 trillion digital-infrastructure investment and India's USD 30 billion electronics incentive scheme are catalyzing hyperscale data centers and smart-factory build-outs. In ASEAN, cities are increasingly adopting PoE-powered surveillance systems and environmental sensors, which has spurred demand for rugged stackable switches with high power budgets to support these applications. This trend reflects the region's focus on enhancing urban infrastructure and smart city initiatives.
Europe's stackable switch market is shaped by regulatory compliance, including GDPR and new sustainability reporting standards that emphasize vendor carbon footprints. Germany, France, and the United Kingdom are at the forefront of deployments, particularly in the automotive and financial sectors, where sub-10 µs latency is a critical requirement. These countries are leveraging advanced network infrastructure to meet the stringent demands of these industries. In contrast, South America and the Middle East and Africa lag in overall spending on stackable switches. However, isolated smart city projects and data center developments in countries like Brazil, the UAE, and South Africa indicate potential growth opportunities. As macroeconomic volatility subsides, these regions could witness increased investments in network infrastructure, further driving market expansion.