How to Improve Home WiFi Signal – DIY Guide
How to Improve Home WiFi Signal
Fix dead zones and slow speeds without replacing your router.
Improve home WiFi signal by repositioning your router to a central, elevated location, switching to the 5 GHz band for nearby devices, reducing interference from thick walls and appliances, and adding a wireless access point or mesh node to cover dead zones.
- Smartphone or tablet (for speed testing)
- Laptop or desktop computer
- Ethernet cable
- Tape measure
- Spirit level
- Cable clips or conduit
- Screwdriver
- Wireless access point or mesh network node
- Powerline adapter kit (optional)
- Ethernet cable (Cat 5e or Cat 6)
- Cable management clips
- Wall anchors and screws
- Foam draught excluder strip (to seal cable entry points)
Step-by-Step Guide
Test your current signal across the property
Before moving anything, use a free speed-test app on your smartphone to measure download and upload speeds in every room, including upstairs, the kitchen, and any outbuildings you want to cover. Note which rooms drop below a usable threshold — typically below 5 Mbps for streaming. This gives you a baseline and tells you exactly where dead zones sit, so you are not guessing when you reposition equipment. If you want to go further with your smart home setup, reliable whole-home WiFi is the foundation everything else depends on.
Reposition your router to a central, elevated point
WiFi signal radiates outward in all directions, so a router shoved behind the television in the corner of a room wastes roughly half its output pushing signal into external walls. Move the router to the most central point possible — ideally at mid-height on a shelf or unit rather than on the floor, which loses signal downward into the foundations. Keep it away from microwave ovens, baby monitors, and cordless phone bases, all of which operate on overlapping frequencies and actively degrade signal. If your ISP-supplied router is fixed near the incoming telephone or fibre point, consider running an Ethernet cable from the router to a secondary wireless access point placed centrally — this is nearly always a cleaner solution than relying on the router’s own wireless range.
Switch devices to the correct frequency band
Most modern routers broadcast on both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz simultaneously. The 5 GHz band delivers faster speeds but shorter range; 2.4 GHz travels further and penetrates walls better but is heavily congested in built-up areas from neighbouring networks. Connect devices that are physically close to the router — smart TVs, gaming consoles, desktop computers — to the 5 GHz band. Push devices further away, such as smart speakers in the kitchen or a thermostat in the hallway, onto 2.4 GHz. You configure this through your router’s admin panel, typically accessed by typing the router’s IP address (printed on the underside of the unit) into a browser. If you are installing a smart door lock or other low-bandwidth device near the front door, 2.4 GHz will serve it more reliably.
Change the wireless channel to reduce interference
In terraced or semi-detached properties, multiple neighbouring routers broadcasting on the same channel create co-channel interference that slows every device on the network. Inside your router’s admin panel, navigate to the wireless settings and switch from automatic channel selection to a fixed channel. For 2.4 GHz, channels 1, 6, and 11 are the only non-overlapping options — run a free WiFi analyser app to see which channel your neighbours are using and pick the least congested one. For 5 GHz the channel congestion problem is less severe, but fixing the channel rather than leaving it on auto still produces more consistent performance. If you already have a security camera on the network, moving it to a dedicated channel band reduces bandwidth competition with everyday streaming devices.
Extend coverage with a mesh node or wired access point
If repositioning the router and adjusting channels still leaves dead zones, you need additional hardware. A mesh WiFi system uses multiple nodes that communicate with each other and present a single network name across the whole property — your devices roam between nodes automatically. For the best result, connect at least one node back to the router via Ethernet cable rather than relying on a wireless backhaul, which halves available bandwidth with each wireless hop. Where running cable is impractical through solid masonry walls, a powerline adapter kit uses your existing ring-main wiring to carry a network signal to a remote access point — performance varies depending on the age and condition of your wiring, but it outperforms a single wireless extender in most UK homes. Our guide to setting up a smart home covers how to choose the right network topology before you buy hardware.
Re-test, optimise, and secure the network
Once changes are in place, repeat the speed test in every room from step one and compare results. If a node or access point is still underperforming, try adjusting its physical position by as little as a metre — signal is sensitive to shelf height, proximity to metal objects, and even plasterboard versus masonry walls. Confirm your network password is using WPA2 or WPA3 encryption rather than the older WEP standard, which is trivially broken and allows unauthorised devices to consume bandwidth. Rename your network to something that does not identify your ISP or router model, which marginally reduces the risk of targeted interference. If you have a smart thermostat or other connected devices, verify each one has reconnected to the correct band after any network changes.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will upgrading to a mesh WiFi system always improve signal?
Mesh systems significantly improve whole-home coverage in most properties, but performance depends on how nodes are connected. A mesh system with at least one Ethernet-wired node delivers consistent speeds; a fully wireless mesh in a large stone or brick property may still struggle to penetrate thick walls between nodes. Test placement before mounting nodes permanently.
Can solid brick or stone walls be causing my dead zones?
Yes — solid brick, stone, and reinforced concrete all absorb 2.4 GHz signal substantially and 5 GHz signal even more so. If your property has solid external or internal walls, running an Ethernet cable through or along the wall to a second access point is the most reliable solution. A powerline adapter is the next best option where cable routing is impractical.
Do I need my ISP’s permission to change router settings?
No — you are entitled to adjust channel, band, and security settings on a router installed in your own home. Your ISP may restrict changes to the WAN (internet-facing) settings, but all wireless configuration options are yours to modify freely. If your ISP supplies a locked router, you can connect your own router to it in bridge mode.
Is it safe to use powerline adapters on an older ring main?
Powerline adapters work on most UK ring-main wiring, but performance degrades significantly on circuits older than around 30 years or those with aluminium wiring. They must be plugged directly into a wall socket — not an extension lead or surge-protected multi-socket — to function correctly. If you are uncertain about the condition of your wiring, a qualified electrician can assess it.
How many devices are too many for one home router?
Most modern routers handle 20–30 simultaneous active connections without meaningful degradation; problems typically arise when 40 or more devices are connected and several are streaming or transferring large files concurrently. A mesh system with multiple access points distributes the load effectively, which is why they perform better in larger households with many smart home devices. You can check how many devices are currently connected through your router’s admin panel.
When positioning a secondary access point or mesh node, aim for halfway between the router and the dead zone — not inside the dead zone itself. A node placed where signal has already dropped below 50% will relay a weak signal and amplify noise as well as data; positioning it where signal is still strong (around -65 dBm or better on a WiFi analyser app) gives the node enough headroom to broadcast a clean, full-strength signal into the problem area.
Sources
- Ofcom — Home broadband performance and coverage guidance — ofcom.org.uk
- Which? — How to boost your home WiFi signal — which.co.uk
- BT — Understanding WiFi channels and interference — home.bt.com
Safety Notice: Electrical and plumbing work can be dangerous if done incorrectly. In the UK, certain electrical work must comply with Part P of the Building Regulations and certain plumbing work with Part G. If in doubt, consult a qualified electrician (NICEIC/NAPIT registered) or plumber (CIPHE/WaterSafe registered). This guide is for general information only — it is not a substitute for professional advice.



