wifi-distance-dat.md
Long-Distance Wi-Fi — Best Antennas and Maximum Range
Below is the previous information rewritten cleanly in English Markdown.
🥇 Current Maximum Practical Wi-Fi Range (Real-World Achievable)
With legal transmission power:
2.4 GHz + High-Gain Directional Antennas (Point-to-Point)
- 24–30 dBi parabolic dish antennas
- 20–30 dBm transmit power
- Full clear line-of-sight
👉 Typical range: 10–30 km
👉 Under ideal conditions: 50+ km
These are point-to-point wireless links, not normal routers.
🥈 Longest Range You Can Buy Commercially (Legal Power)
| Scenario | Hardware | Realistic Range |
|---|---|---|
| Long-distance point-to-point | Ubiquiti NanoBeam / LiteBeam | 1–5 km |
| High-gain parabolic antennas | Ubiquiti RocketDish | 10–30 km |
| Standard omni Wi-Fi router | Typical router antenna | 100–300 m |
| Upgraded omni antennas (7–12 dBi) | High-gain stick antenna | 200–600 m |
🧭 Four Factors That Decide Maximum Wi-Fi Distance
1. Antenna Gain = Distance
Higher gain = longer reach
Best antennas for extreme distance:
Parabolic Dish Antennas
- 24–30 dBi
- Very narrow beam (2°–7°)
- Massive boost to link budget
Every +3 dBi ≈ 1.4× range increase.
2. 2.4 GHz travels farther than 5 GHz
- Longer wavelength
- Better penetration
- Better diffraction
Best choice for long range: 2.4 GHz
3. Line-of-Sight Is Critical
For long distance links you need:
✔ Enough height
✔ Zero trees/buildings
✔ Clean Fresnel zone
No line-of-sight → no long-distance Wi-Fi.
4. Your receiver matters too
Phones = weak antennas (0–3 dBi)
CPE devices = strong antennas (8–15 dBi)
For multi-km links → use CPE on both ends.
🏆 Best Practical Setups
For 1–5 km
- Ubiquiti LiteBeam (23 dBi)
- Point-to-point alignment
For 10–30 km
-
Ubiquiti Rocket + RocketDish (27–30 dBi)
- Full line-of-sight
- Fast, stable link
For 200–600 m general outdoor Wi-Fi
- 7–12 dBi omni antennas
- Outdoor AP (UniFi Mesh)