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How fast should hotel WiFi be?

This means you should shoot for speeds in the 5-25 Mbps range. For reference, Netflix recommends 5 Mbps for HD streaming and 25 Mbps for 4k (Ultra HD) streaming. If your motel's WiFi solution is within this range, you will be able to accommodate the high internet speeds of almost any guest during their stay.



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This means you should shoot for speeds in the 5-25 Mbps range. For reference, Netflix recommends 5 Mbps for HD streaming and 25 Mbps for 4k (Ultra HD) streaming. If your motel's WiFi solution is within this range, you will be able to accommodate the high internet speeds of almost any guest during their stay.

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Most hotels fall far short of that. In a survey conducted before the pandemic by Highspeedinternet.com, the hotel chain with the fastest free internet connection, Rodeway Inn, clocked in at just 7.66 Mbps. For paid connections, Econo Lodge had the fastest connection at 8.48 Mbps.

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Hotels also are stuffed with WiFi-blocking obstacles such as walls, electrical equipment, and other humans all sharing limited internet bandwidth. That's not an excuse, though. It's also tricky to pipe hot water to 100 rooms of people taking showers at the same time.

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To make it easy for guests to connect to WiFi Internet and avoid unnecessary confusion, many hotel chains adopt the single SSID standard for both 2.4GHz and 5GHz. Guests have no option to pick which band to connect. It's entirely up to the client device, not the AP, to select which band to connect.

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Most of the time, hotel WiFi speeds are enough for casual web browsing and video streaming, but gaming frequently needs more reliable connections with lower latency. Although it can reduce latency problems, fast internet does not ensure an enjoyable game.

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In short: No, hotel Wi-Fi isn't safe. You might think your hotel room's password-protected network is nearly as secure as your private Wi-Fi network at home. But despite common protections, hotel Wi-Fi security is very lax, making it one of the least trustworthy types of public Wi-Fi.

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“No hotel, convention center, or other commercial establishment or the network operator providing services at such establishments may intentionally block or disrupt personal Wi-Fi hot spots on such premises, including as part of an effort to force consumers to purchase access to the property owner's Wi-Fi network,” The ...

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Not only this, but expensive hotels are often larger with hundreds of rooms. It's a lot more expensive to have the infrastructure and bandwidth to support wifi in 500 rooms versus 50.

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