Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

If You Buy a New Router, It Might ‘Turn Into a Pumpkin’ Next Year

read original get TP-Link Archer AX6000 Router → more articles
Why This Matters

The FCC's recent ban on foreign-made routers marks a significant shift in national security policy, potentially impacting consumers by limiting access to new devices and risking the security of existing routers due to halted firmware updates. This unprecedented move could reshape the router market and influence future regulations in the tech industry.

Key Takeaways

Key takeaways:

The Federal Communications Commission has banned the sale of new foreign-made routers in the US. The sweeping order applies to virtually every Wi-Fi router currently available in the US market.

After speaking with four cybersecurity experts, my advice is to hold off on buying a new router if you can.

Under the current rules, banned routers will no longer receive essential security firmware and software updates after March 1, 2027.

The FCC’s action has effectively frozen the entire market while router companies scramble to gain approval.

More specific information on which router companies will be subject to the ban is expected to become clearer within the next month or two.

In my eight years of writing and reviewing broadband and routers, I’ve rarely seen news that I would describe as unprecedented. The FCC’s recent decision to ban foreign-made routers is absolutely unprecedented.

The sweeping order applies to any router in which any stage of “manufacturing, assembly, design and development” occurs outside the US -- in other words, just about any router you can buy right now. The FCC order says that foreign-made routers pose "unacceptable risks" to national security. The ironic side effect is: It could stop your current router from receiving vital security updates.

The ban doesn’t apply to routers that were already authorized by the FCC -- that is, every router that’s currently for sale in the US -- and will only impact new models that haven’t been approved yet. That means every router that was available before the order is still available today, and router companies can still restock them using their existing manufacturing processes.

Essentially, the FCC is freezing the entire router market. As William Budington, a technologist for the digital rights nonprofit Electronic Frontier Foundation, put it to me, “This is using an extremely blunt instrument.”

... continue reading