How to Eliminate WiFi Dead Zones in Your Canadian Home (2026 Guide)
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Why Is Your WiFi Slow in Certain Rooms?
Your router broadcasts WiFi in all directions — but walls, floors, appliances, and distance weaken the signal. By the time it reaches a far bedroom or basement, you might have half the speed you're paying for. A WiFi extender solves this by picking up the signal and rebroadcasting it at full strength.
Single-Band vs Dual-Band Extenders: What's the Difference?
Single-band extenders split their bandwidth between receiving and sending, which cuts your speed by up to 50%. Dual-band extenders use one band to receive and another to transmit — so you keep close to full speed throughout your home. Our extender is dual-band 1900Mbps (600Mbps + 1300Mbps).
2,800 Sq.Ft Coverage: Is That Enough?
The average Canadian home is 1,700–2,000 sq.ft. At 2,800 sq.ft, this extender covers most homes completely with signal to spare for the garage or backyard. For very large homes, you can daisy-chain two extenders.
The Gigabit Ethernet Port: Why It Matters
If you have a desktop, gaming console, or smart TV near the extender, plug it in via ethernet. You'll get faster, more stable speeds than WiFi — especially for gaming and 4K streaming.
Setup: How Long Does It Take?
3 minutes. Plug in, press the WPS button on your router and the extender, and it connects automatically. No app, no account, no tech knowledge needed.