Where you place your router has a surprisingly large effect on your WiFi coverage and speed. A few sensible adjustments can improve your signal for free, before you consider buying anything. This guide explains how to position your router for the best possible signal.
Choose a Central Location
WiFi spreads outward from the router, so a central position gives the most even coverage across your home. Placing it in a corner or at one end wastes signal beyond your walls.
Somewhere central, in a room you use, is usually the best starting point.
Keep It Elevated and Open
Raising the router off the floor, such as on a shelf, helps the signal travel, since it tends to spread slightly downward and outward. Keeping it in the open rather than inside a cabinet avoids blocking the TOTAL4D Resmi signal.
An exposed, elevated position consistently outperforms a hidden, low one.
Avoid Interference
Keep the router away from thick walls, large metal objects, and appliances like microwaves, which can block or interfere with the signal. Other electronics and even fish tanks can weaken WiFi more than people expect.
A clear space around the router helps it perform at its best.
It is also worth keeping the router away from other wireless transmitters, such as baby monitors and cordless phone bases, which share or sit near the same frequencies. Moving these a little apart from the router, where you can, reduces a source of interference that is easy to overlook when troubleshooting weak coverage.
Adjust for Your Layout
If certain rooms matter most, position the router to favour them, since coverage is strongest nearest the router. Adjusting any external antennas, where the router has them, can also shape the coverage.
Testing the signal in different rooms after moving the router shows whether your changes helped.
A Practical Note
Make one change at a time and check the signal in the rooms you care about, since the effect of placement is easy to measure with your phone. If good placement still leaves a weak spot, that is the point to consider an extender or mesh system rather than moving the router endlessly.
It is also worth experimenting patiently, since the ideal spot is rarely obvious and a small move can make a noticeable difference. Trying a few positions and checking the signal in each, rather than settling for the first, often uncovers a placement that improves coverage across the whole home at no cost.
Conclusion
Positioning your router well, in a central, elevated, open spot away from interference, is the cheapest way to improve your WiFi. Adjust for your home’s layout, test the result, and you will often gain better coverage without spending anything.