By the team at Cabling For U, Auckland’s trusted network cabling specialists since 2018.
It’s a conversation we have with almost every new Auckland commercial client: “Do we really need data cabling if Wi-Fi is this fast now?” The honest answer is that Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 7 are genuinely brilliant, but they don’t replace structured cabling — they depend on it. Here’s why every serious business network in 2026 still needs both.
The short answer
Wi-Fi covers mobility — laptops, phones, tablets, wireless printers. Wired cabling covers reliability, low-latency, and backhaul — desktops, servers, PoE cameras, VoIP phones, Wi-Fi APs, and anything that can’t afford a dropped packet. Every Wi-Fi access point runs off a Cat6 or Cat6A cable. Remove the cable and the Wi-Fi stops working.
Where Wi-Fi genuinely wins
- Mobility — you can’t walk around an office with a network cable
- Guest access — dedicated guest SSID on a separate VLAN
- Cheap endpoint connectivity — no outlet install cost per device
- Rapid deployment — no cabling through walls for temporary spaces
Where wired still wins, hard
- Latency — wired gives you 1–2 ms; Wi-Fi is typically 5–15 ms under load
- Bandwidth under load — wired is consistent 1 Gbps; Wi-Fi slows down the more clients join
- Reliability — no interference, no coverage dead-spots, no channel contention
- Security — a wired port requires physical access; Wi-Fi can be targeted from the car park
- PoE — wired delivers up to 90W to cameras, phones and APs on a single cable
- Video-conferencing quality — Teams/Zoom jitter is noticeably lower on wired
Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 7: what actually changed?
Wi-Fi 6E opened the 6 GHz band, which triples available spectrum. Wi-Fi 7 adds multi-link operation (MLO) so a device can use 2.4, 5 and 6 GHz simultaneously. Real-world, this means:
- Top-end Wi-Fi 7 can hit 4–6 Gbps to a single nearby client
- Average dense-office Wi-Fi 7 runs 800 Mbps–1.5 Gbps per client
- APs now need 2.5 GbE or 10 GbE uplinks to keep up, which means Cat6A to every AP
That last point is the important one. Wi-Fi 7 has made structured cabling more important, not less — because the backhaul needs to keep up with the radio. Our structured cabling services page goes into more detail.
The hybrid approach we recommend for Auckland offices
- Cat6A to every desk — with 2 outlets minimum for flexibility
- Cat6A to every planned AP location — at least one per 150 m², denser in meeting rooms
- Wi-Fi 6E or Wi-Fi 7 APs for roaming devices and guest access
- Dedicated VLANs — staff, guest, voice, cameras, IoT — so a compromised device can’t pivot
- Fibre backbone if you have more than one floor or building
This gives you speed, reliability, mobility and security without sacrificing any of them.
Typical Auckland cost comparison (20-user office)
- Wi-Fi only (3 APs, basic switch, no desk cabling): $4,500–$7,000 installed
- Wired only (40 outlets, Cat6A, full certification): $10,000–$15,000 installed
- Proper hybrid (20 Cat6A desk outlets + 3 AP cables + switch + APs): $11,000–$16,000 installed
The hybrid is only 5–10% more than wired alone because the cost of running Cat6A to three AP points is marginal.
When it’s okay to skip wired
- Pop-up or temporary office with a lease under 12 months
- Very small startup with 1–3 people working from laptops
- Budget residential where every bedroom has strong Wi-Fi already
Even then, we recommend at least one wired outlet per room for the router, Smart TV and console.
Frequently asked questions
Is Wi-Fi 7 fast enough to replace wired for desktops?
For general office work, yes. For anything latency-sensitive (VoIP, video-conferencing, design, CAD, video editing, financial trading), no. A wired Cat6A connection remains 3 to 5 times more responsive than Wi-Fi 7 under real office load.
Do I need Cat6 or Cat6A for Wi-Fi 7 access points?
Cat6A. Wi-Fi 7 APs typically have 2.5 GbE or 10 GbE uplinks that Cat6 cannot sustain at a full 100 metre channel length. Running Cat6 to Wi-Fi 7 APs will bottleneck your network.
Will wireless mesh systems replace structured cabling?
No. Wireless mesh trades Ethernet backhaul for wireless backhaul, which cuts usable bandwidth in half. Every serious commercial Wi-Fi deployment still uses wired Ethernet (Cat6 or Cat6A) to each AP. Mesh is fine for homes, not for Auckland offices.
Is wired network more secure than Wi-Fi?
Yes, inherently. A wired port requires physical access to the building and the port itself. Wi-Fi signals travel outside the building, so wireless networks must rely on WPA3 and strong passwords. For sensitive data, wired is the safer default.
Can I future-proof my Auckland office now without over-cabling?
Yes. Install Cat6A to every desk and every AP location, fibre backbone between floors, and leave pull-strings in the main cable pathways so future additions don’t require rework. This covers 10+ years at modest extra cost.
Does wired Ethernet use more power than Wi-Fi?
Per device, yes (a switch port draws a few watts). But the network as a whole uses less because you can turn off access points at night and still keep critical wired devices (cameras, alarms, printers) on. For businesses with 24/7 monitoring, wired is actually more energy-efficient at the system level.
Want a hybrid plan that fits your office?
We’ll walk your Auckland site, design the right wired and wireless mix, and quote fixed-price. Book a free site survey or call 0800 222 546.
Take the next step
You need both — Cat6 backbone with WiFi nodes. See Cat6 pricing tiers.

