Consumer Reports just torpedoed four popular sub-$100 routers for dead-slow speeds, high return rates, and outdated ports—skip these models or pay the hidden price of buffering and buyer’s remorse.
The router aisle is stacked with glossy boxes promising Wi-Fi 6, gigabit speeds, and whole-home coverage for under a Benjamin. Consumer Reports cut through the marketing haze and ran 28 affordable models through throughput, range, and reliability tests. Four repeatedly failed—and they’re still top sellers on Amazon. Buy any of these and you’ll either wrestle with buffering Zoom calls or burn gas returning hardware.
The Two Netgear Losers
Netgear Nighthawk RAX41
Spec sheet says Wi-Fi 6 and 25-device capability. Lab numbers show a different story: throughput drops to 55 % of the gigabit pipe once you step 30 ft away, and near-range speeds were bottom-quartile among 76 routers tested. Consumer Reports logged the RAX41’s Amazon return rate at 18 %, double the category average. Translation: shoppers routinely unbox it, notice dead spots, and ship it back.
Netgear R6120
Priced at $75 but hobbled by Wi-Fi 5 and—more damning—a 100 Mbps WAN port. Connect it to a 300 Mbps cable plan and the router caps every device at one-third speed. CR also flagged the absence of QoS rules; gamers and streamers can’t prioritize traffic, so a background cloud backup nukes your video call. Lab tests showed the unit delivering 40 Mbps on the 5 GHz band at 50 ft, good only for single-device browsing, not 4K TVs and Zoom classrooms.
The TP-Link Pair That Miss the Mark
TP-Link Archer AX10
Commonly dips to $50, making it the cheapest Wi-Fi 6 box on shelves. That bargain entails a sacrifice: no USB port and a 22 % performance dip past 25 ft. Close-range throughput is only 410 Mbps, according to CR’s database; for the same money you can grab a refurbished Archer AX21 that spreads 640 Mbps across two further rooms.
TP-Link Archer BE3600
Yes, it touts Wi-Fi 7 silicon, but the BE3600 is a dual-band rig—there’s no 6 GHz channel, the hallmark upgrade Wi-Fi 7 adds. Range scores were mediocre: 280 Mbps at 40 ft, beaten by older tri-band Wi-Fi 6 units. CR summed it up: “Every-day performance lags behind cheaper Wi-Fi 6 routers with better antennas.”
What This Means for Your Daily Life
- Buffering Roulette: Poor range forces repositioning; Netflix drops to 720p while the bedrooms get 2 bars.
- Wasted ISP Budget: Paying for 500 Mbps and seeing 100 Mbps because the WAN port or radio chokes is digital daylight robbery.
- Upgrade Treadmill: Returned routers still cost you shipping and restock fees; skipping them saves cash and carbon.
Smarter Budget Playbook
If you must stay below $100, Consumer Reports recommends these tactics:
- Target tri-band Wi-Fi 6 routers with gigabit ports—refurbished TP-Link Archer AX55 or ASUS AX56U routinely dip under $90.
- Look for Wi-Fi 5 “AC” models only if your internet plan is 100 Mbps or under and you own Cat 5e cabling throughout; otherwise step up.
- Buy from retailers with free returns and test coverage with an app like WiFi Analyzer; box it back on day 29 if signals sag.
Bottom Line
Black-and-white lab data doesn’t lie: the Netgear RAX41, R6120, and TP-Link AX10, BE3600 all finish in the bottom decile for speed, range, or both. Saving $20 today can cost you $200 in dead-spot extenders, higher data overages, and nightly rage against buffering wheels. Skip the shelf-fillers, surf onlytrustedinfo.com for instant verdicts on every tech purchase, and put your money where your signal is strong.
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