Where to place your router is the single cheapest WiFi upgrade you will ever make, and most people get it wrong. The router usually lands wherever the internet cable enters the house, which is almost always a corner, a closet, or a basement. Move it to a central, elevated, open spot and you can fix slow rooms and dead zones for free. This guide covers exactly where to place your router, why it matters, and when placement alone is not enough.
What changed in 2026
The physics of radio waves has not changed, but what runs on your network has. In 2026 a typical home juggles more bandwidth-hungry devices at once — 4K streaming, cloud backups, video calls, and AI assistants constantly pinging the cloud. Newer routers lean on the 6 GHz band (WiFi 6E and WiFi 7), which is blisteringly fast but has short range and struggles through walls. That makes placement more important, not less. A powerful WiFi 7 router stuffed in a closet will underperform a modest router sitting out in the open at the center of the house.
The rules of good router placement
A few simple principles cover almost every home:
- Central. Signal radiates outward in a rough sphere, so a corner wastes half of it into your yard or a neighbor's wall. The middle of the floor plan spreads coverage evenly.
- Elevated. Put it on a shelf or mount it high, ideally around chest height or above. Routers tend to send signal slightly downward, so floor level buries it.
- Open. Keep it out of cabinets, drawers, and entertainment centers. Enclosed spaces and dense materials absorb the signal before it reaches you.
- Away from interference. Microwaves, cordless phones, baby monitors, and large mirrors or aquariums all disrupt the 2.4 GHz band. Give the router a few feet of clearance.
Placement spots, ranked
Not every home has a perfect central shelf, so here is how common spots actually stack up.
| Placement |
Coverage |
Verdict |
| Central room, elevated, open |
Excellent, even in all directions |
Best case — aim for this |
| Central but on the floor |
Good, weaker to upper floors |
Fine, but raise it if you can |
| Near a window or exterior wall |
Half the signal leaks outside |
Wasteful; move inward |
| Inside a media cabinet |
Muffled, noticeably slower |
Avoid — worst common mistake |
| Basement corner |
Weak upstairs, dead zones likely |
Needs mesh or a wired move |
If the modem is stuck in a bad spot, you do not have to accept it. A short Ethernet run or a wired access point lets you place the WiFi radio somewhere far better.
Height, antennas, and orientation
Getting the router up high is half the battle; the antennas do the rest. If yours has external antennas, do not point them all straight up. For a multi-floor home, set one vertical and one horizontal — vertical antennas spread signal sideways across a floor, while horizontal ones push it up and down between floors. Internal-antenna routers are designed to sit flat and upright, so keep them level and never stand them on end or lay them on their side.
One more quick win: avoid tucking the router directly behind a wall-mounted TV, which is a sheet of metal and electronics that blocks the beam.
When placement is not enough
Placement solves most problems, but it cannot beat distance forever. If your home is large or split across floors, one router will always leave a weak corner. That is the point to add hardware, not before.
- Mesh node. Place a second node roughly halfway between the main router and the dead zone, still out in the open, not inside the dead zone itself.
- Wired access point. If you can run Ethernet, this gives the best performance because it does not steal wireless bandwidth for backhaul.
- Extender. A last-resort budget patch that often cuts speed on the extended band. Try everything else first.
What to skip
- Hiding it for looks. A router in a drawer or behind books is a router working at a fraction of its range.
- Buying an extender first. Move the router and change your WiFi channel before spending anything.
- Foil reflectors and stick-on boosters. These gimmicks do nothing measurable.
- Cranking transmit power. Most routers already run at the legal maximum, so the setting rarely helps.
FAQ
Where is the best place to put my router?
The center of your home, elevated on a shelf, and out in the open. That balances coverage in every direction and lets the signal reach the most rooms with the fewest obstacles.
Does putting the router upstairs help?
Often yes. Signal travels down more easily than up, so a central spot on an upper floor can cover a two-story home better than a basement location.
Should the router be near the TV or computer?
No. Proximity to one device barely helps and puts the router near metal and electronics that cause interference. Wire that one device with Ethernet instead and place the router centrally.
How far should the router be from walls?
A few feet from thick or masonry walls is ideal. Verify your own layout, since a single dense wall can matter more than several thin ones.
Where to go next
If you are rethinking your home tech setup, see our Apple Intelligence review for 2026, our take on whether 60Hz vs 144Hz is worth the upgrade, and our roundup of the best smartwatches in 2026.