Eero’s new router is twice as powerful and twice as fast as before

Eero is back: a little over a year after kickstarting the home mesh networking trend, the company is announcing its second-generation hardware. According to the company, the new Eero provides double the speed and range of its predecessor, yet has the same footprint and form factor as before. The second-generation Eero is also the first product on the market with fully functioning Thread support, so it will be able to connect to a variety of smart home devices expected to arrive in the near future.

In addition to the new, faster, and more powerful hub, Eero is also releasing a smaller product called the Beacon. It is designed to extend the range and coverage of your Wi-Fi network just like the other hubs, but it has an even smaller size and plugs directly into a wall outlet. Starting today, you can order an Eero kit with one Eero hub and one Beacon for $299; $100 more gets you the hub and two Beacons. A “Pro” system is also available for $499, which includes three Eero hubs. All kits are expected to start shipping in a few weeks.

New hardware isn’t the only thing from Eero today — the company is also launching a new subscription service called Eero Plus. The service, which costs $9.99 per month or $99 per year, provides enhanced parental controls; a security service that Eero says will protect your network and devices from malware, ransomware, and phishing attacks; and priority access to Eero’s customer support. CEO Nick Weaver describes the services as “similar to Amazon Prime,” and says the company will add more features to it without raising the cost in the future.

Ever since Eero launched its first mesh router, the market has been flooded with similar ideas and systems. Incumbents like Netgear, Linksys, and TP-Link have all released mesh home router systems, and even Google and Samsung are in the router game now. All of the systems basically do the same thing: provide strong Wi-Fi coverage throughout your home by using multiple nodes, or router units, that are wirelessly linked together.

Eero’s first-generation product delivered on its claims, and we found it to be quite the solution to troublesome home networking problems when we tested it. But the other systems that have come out since have either provided even faster speeds and stronger coverage, more services, or delivered a similar experience at a lower price.

With its new hardware and service plans, Eero hopes to close the gap and even surpass its competition. The new hub has a tri-band radio and can broadcast on three wireless bands at the same time (the first-gen model had a dual-band radio), and Eero says it is the smallest access point on the market with such a capability. Unlike the Netgear Orbi or Linksys Velop, Eero does not reserve one of the three bands just for communication between the units; Weaver says any one of the three bands can be used for sending data to devices or for communication between the nodes, depending on what the network demands are.

The Beacon is not as powerful as the new hub and does not have a tri-band radio, but Eero claims it provides 20 to 30 percent better performance than the first-generation Eero. It is half the size of the hub and is designed to placed in areas where power cords are unsightly or unable to be used, such as in stairwells, kitchens, and hallways. The Beacon also includes a downward-shining LED nightlight, which can be automatically controlled by the device’s ambient light sensor or with a manual schedule set in the Eero app. Both the new hub and the Beacon are backwards compatible with existing Eero systems, so current customers can add new hubs or Beacons to their networks as they see necessary.

Including Thread radio support is a bit of a bet on the future of smart home tech by Eero. Thread has been around as a smart home protocol for a few years, and a number of existing routers, such as Google’s OnHub line, have dormant Thread radios in them that have not yet been put to use. Thread is said to be simpler and easier to deploy than competing standards ZigBee and Z-Wave, but there aren’t yet any devices on the market that can make use of it. Weaver says that will change now that the new Eero comes with an active Thread radio: finally there will be a hub for Thread devices to connect to. These devices will likely include smart home staples such as lights, locks, and doorbells, and Weaver says the idea is you won’t have to use a secondary hub like SmartThings to connect your smart home devices.

The home router market is wildly different in 2017 than it was two years ago when Eero first broke cover, but Weaver says Eero is well-positioned to be a neutral party for your home network. While other companies, such as Google and Samsung, sell other devices that connect to Wi-Fi networks and may have different priorities based on those businesses, Eero is only focused on networking and doesn’t put any device ahead of another — whether it’s from Apple, Google, Amazon, Samsung, or another company.

Eero’s new products catch it up to the technical capabilities of the other mesh router systems without making them more complex or difficult to use than its earlier efforts. Given how popular its first products were, the new Eero devices should prove to be even more so.

Comments

Interested to see how these perform, but after getting an Orbi system and using it for a while, no dedicated band between nodes = no buy from me.

It’s helped out in my house way more than I thought possible. So I’m interested to see how these work in terms of switching that third band between nodes and devices

Only thing I don’t like about these new routers is no support for PoE. While I realize many homes don’t have that functionality, mine does, and I would prefer a mesh solution that doesn’t require a secondary power cable, and that can do backhaul via wired GbE or even 10GbE.

If your home is already wired with ethernet, why not look at a prosumer/enterprise system of APs and a switch? Ubiquiti comes to mind on the prosumer end of the spectrum.

Solution = Ubiquiti Unifi

Welp. Time to return the ones I bought on Saturday.

The performance has been very good for me for anything normal. There are a few spots where the quick switching/handoff between eero devices has destroyed some games (think mobile gaming where things are live). That’s been my only real issue.

Note: I don’t use the eero (eeros? eeroes? eeri?) as a router, my house is wired and I have them setup as a bridge.

The eero is a pretty nice device, but they don’t (currently) support IPv6. They’re constantly promising that IPv6 is "coming soon" but as of yet it isn’t here. I wouldn’t recommend setting up an eero household until that gets added.

Looks slick, but a few things stick out to me:

1. Still not available in Canada… I know, you can order it and make it work, but I’m pretty sure it voids your warranty and could cause headaches down the line if something changes with the account management…
2. Weren’t things like the parental controls free before? Is there still a free version now, or is it locked behind the monthly subscription? I’m pretty sure Google WiFi still gives you that for free…
3. STILL NOT AVAILABLE IN CANADA!!! We’re right next door…

Sorry, but there should NEVER be a subscription for parental control. That should be included in your device as part of the software. Either have it or not. Malware protection, etc, etc, sure, but not parental control.

I just don’t understand these. are people in gigantic homes where a normal router doesn’t suffice? My $30 router pushes even out into my yard when I’m cutting grass and it’s in the middle of a 2-story home w/ a basement.

Normal house here, but a regular router wouldn’t cut it. Repeaters were terrible, so I used a couple of Airport Expresses to spread it out (wired), and it worked ok, but the Eeros overall are better.

Maybe it’s the area I live in. Too many signals, the government’s experimenting on us, house build, aliens, whatever. I just wanted stuff to work without thinking about it after the initial setup.

The new hub has a tri-band radio and can broadcast on three wireless bands at the same time (the first-gen model had a dual-band radio)

Sigh. These aren’t "tri-band" devices, they are still only dual-band (2.4 GHz and 5 GHz). They are tri-radio, which is very different from tri-band.

There are tri-band routers out there, which include support for the 60 GHz band alongside the normal 2.4 and 5 GHz. These Eero devices are not tri-band.

You’d think a publication like TheVerge that pretends to be tech oriented would be able to pick up on and correct something as simple and trivial as that.

Le sigh.

Eero’s specs say, "Tri-band WiFi radios, simultaneous 2.4GHz, 5.2GHz, and 5.8GHz wireless."

5.2 and 5.8 are the same band, aka 5 GHz aka 802.11ac. The 5 GHz wireless band goes from 4.97 GHz to 5.825 GHz (channels 7 through 196).

The next wireless band is 5.9 GHz aka 802.11p , which is Wireless in Vehicular Environments (aka WAVE).

These are dual-band devices. A proper tri-band device would support 802.11ad (60 GHz aka WiGig) or maybe even 802.11ah (900 Mhz) although that is very rare outside of cordless phones.

[Stupid edit limits.]

These are tri-radio devices, but two of the radios operate in the same 5 GHz band, making them only dual-band devices.

Thanks for the information. Learned new stuff.

Has anyone done a comparison on all these mesh units? I’d like to see who has the best for the $

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