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TP-Link Speed Test Guide: How to Test Your Router's Wi-Fi and Wired Performance

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AtualizadoMay 27, 2026

This guide walks through how to accurately perform a TP-Link router speed test, including identifying environmental interference, running a comparison test between wired and wireless clients, and configuring router settings to optimize results. This guide applies to most TP-Link broadband access products. Note that it does not apply if your Speedtest tool comes built into the device itself.

Key Takeaways

  • Position your test device at the same height as the router's antenna and keep them aligned. Misalignment will skew your wireless speed test results.
  • For accurate TP-Link speed test results, connect a computer to the router via Ethernet cable and a second device wirelessly. This lets you compare wired vs. Wi-Fi performance side by side.
  • Before running a speed test, close all applications on the test device that use network resources, and restore the router to factory settings to eliminate configuration variables.
  • Nearby Wi-Fi networks are a major source of interference. Use the inSSIDer tool to identify the number of competing networks on your channel before testing.
  • For 2.4 GHz testing, select the HT40 bandwidth when interference is low. For 5GHz, HT80 is recommended.
  • Before running a TP-Link Wi-Fi speed test, ensure Quality of Service (QoS) and Bandwidth Control are both disabled in the router management interface, and confirm NAT is enabled with the MTU value at its default setting.

Before You Begin

  • This Article Applies to TL-WR841N, TL-WR842N, TL-WR743ND, more All broadband access products which are low-speed on Speedtest.
  • This article is not relevant to you if you have the following condition: Your Speedtest tool comes with the device itself.
  • Please connect your computer to a TP-Link router by cable, and connect a laptop/PC/phone to a TP-Link router by wireless connection.
  • Close all applications on your test device that use network resources before running the speed test.
  • Install the inSSIDer app and any network analysis tools on your test device before you begin.
  • Restore the router to factory settings.

Diagram showing a TP-Link router connected to an ADSL/cable modem via WAN port and to a desktop via LAN port.

How to Run a TP-Link Speed Test

Step 1: Check Your Environment

1. Troubleshoot the placement of the router’s antenna relative to the receiver

The correct placement of your accompanying device should be positioned as high as the router’s antenna and aligned.

Note: Do not place your router on the ground during testing, as this will affect wireless performance.

Person holding a smartphone with the Tether app open at the same height as a TP-Link router, with a green checkmark.

The wrong placement:

  • Antenna polarization direction is inconsistent.
  • The test device is placed too close to the router
  • The test device is not aligned with the router's antenna
  • The test device is not at the same height as the router's antenna

Four incorrect ways to position a phone relative to a router during speed testing, each marked with a red X.

2. Identify the source of interference in the test environment:

Method 1:

Open the Insider tool, which is installed in your accompanying device in advance.

Check the number of nearby interference sources from the marked bold red box.

Wi-Fi analyzer showing a list of nearby networks and a channel usage graph highlighted in a red rectangle.

Method 2:

With the WDS scan function, you can check the interference when you click the ‘scan’ button.

TP-Link router Advanced Wireless Settings page with Advanced Settings in the menu and the Scan button in WDS both highlighted.

TP-Link router WDS AP List showing nearby networks with signal strength, channel, and encryption details.

Step 2: Run a Comparison Test

1. Your accompanying device should be in the same position and height as the test router and the competing router.

2. You must use the same accompanying device to connect to each router and test alternately.

3. When testing alternately between routers, ensure all wireless parameters are configured identically.

The configuration of the wireless parameters is shown below:

Recommended Wireless Parameters

Wireless

Mode

Channel

Bandwidth

RTS Threshold

2.4GHz

802.11b/g/n mixed

1

HT40

2347

5GHz

802.11a/n/ac mixed

Band 1

HT80

2347

4. Output the configuration profile: conf.bin

5. Record data for the entire comparison test process

Line chart showing 5GHz uplink speed test at 866.7Mbps, with our DUT outperforming the competing DUT at 261.77Mbps by UL-3.

Line chart showing 5GHz download speed test at 866.7Mbps, with the competing DUT outperforming our DUT, reaching 507.8Mbps.

6. Follow these steps to get the network card information,

Path: Control panel > network and Internet > network connection

Double-click the wireless card and select properties

Then we can check the information of the network card and the negotiation speed.

Windows Network Connections showing the wlan adapter connected to TP-Link_7405_5G highlighted in a red rectangle.

WLAN Status window showing connection to TP-Link_7405_5G at 780Mbps with duration and signal quality highlighted.

From this table, you can compare your accompanying device with standard specification:

Table showing wireless negotiating speeds for 2.4G and 5G spectrums across 1x1, 2x2, 3x3, and 4x4 configurations.

Compare wireless and wired clients:

Uplink line chart comparing wan-lan and wlan-wan speeds across three tests, with both lines performing similarly around 254-257Mbps.

Download line chart comparing wan-lan and wlan-wan speeds, with wan-lan around 1000Mbps and wlan-wan around 500Mbps.

Step 3: Configure Your Router Settings

Configure the WAN interface

1. Ensure the Quality of Service (QoS) function is disabled

TP-Link router Advanced QoS Basic Settings page with the QoS of Upstream Enable checkbox highlighted.

2. Ensure the Bandwidth Control function is disabled

TP-Link router Advanced Bandwidth Control page with the Enable checkbox highlighted and Controlling Rules table below.

3. Ensure NAT is enabled and the MTU value is set to its default

Log in to the router management website > Network > Internet > Enter the Advanced setting > Enable NAT

TP-Link router Advanced Network settings showing NAT enabled and highlighted among other internet connection options.

4. Link mode of the WAN interface

ADSL/VDSL can be distinguished from this data table

ADSL (Max Rate Upstream<2Mbps Downstream<25Mbps)

DSL status page showing a connected VDSL2 line with upstream rate 60015 kbps and downstream rate 100015 kbps.

2.4GHz Wireless configuration

1. Open the inSSIDer from your accompanying device, and you can collect the information from the tool:

Channel: 10

Negotiating speed: 65Mbps

RSSI: -85dBm

The associated BSSID: 00:11:22:33:44:55

inSSIDer app showing nearby 2.4GHz networks, alongside a TP-Link network detail view with Speed at 65Mbps and MAC address highlighted.

2. Packet capture

Set the parameters as follows:

RTS Threshold:2347 When there is less interference

Short GI: Enable

WMM: Enable

TxBF: Enable

MU-MIMO: Unable (This function can be turned on when multiple clients are present)

Turn on Sniffer and grab packets on the appropriate channel.

Record the Beacon Frame and Probe Response package.

Network topology.

Wireshark packet capture showing two 2.4GHz IEEE 802.11 beacon frames with Overlapping BSS Scan Parameters highlighted in both.

3. How to increase the current wireless rate

Select channels with little interference and record the interference and signal intensity of different channels by using inSSIDer.

Bandwidth selection: HT20 is selected when the interference is strong, and HT40 is selected when the interference is weak.

5GHz Wireless configuration

  1. Open the inSSIDer from your accompanying device, and you can collect the information from the tool:

Channel: 10

Negotiating speed: 135Mbps

RSSI: -85dBm

The associated BSSID: 00:11:22:33:44:55

inSSIDer app showing nearby 5GHz networks, alongside an AAATEST network detail view with Speed at 135Mbps and MAC address highlighted.

2. Wireless Packet Capture

Set the parameters as follows:

RTS Threshold:2347 (When there is less interference)

Short GI: Enable

WMM: Enable

TxBF: Enable

MU-MIMO: Unable (This function can be turned on when multiple clients are present)

Enable the Sniffer and capture packets on the appropriate channel.

Record the Beacon Frame and Probe Response package.

Diagram of a router connected to the internet, a desktop via cable, and a laptop wirelessly.

Wireshark capture showing a 5GHz beacon frame and a probe response frame, both with Overlapping BSS Scan Parameters highlighted.

3. How to increase the current wireless rate?

Select channels with little interference and record the interference and signal intensity of different channels by using inSSIDer.

Bandwidth selection: HT80 is available

Step 4: Submit Your Results

For more details on each function and configuration, visit the Download Center to find the manual for your product.

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