In March 2026 the FCC added foreign-made consumer Wi-Fi routers to its Covered List, the roster of communications equipment the agency considers a national security risk. Once something lands on that list, it cannot be imported for sale or use in the US. Because nearly all consumer routers are made overseas, that sweeps in almost the entire market. Here is what it actually means for your business, and it is not simple.
What the ban covers
Routers you already own or that were already authorized are grandfathered in, so nothing on your network shuts off overnight. The catch is new hardware. So far only NETGEAR and Adtran have earned conditional approval, and even that only lets them push updates to existing models, not sell new ones. Those conditional approvals run only through October 1, 2027, after which the firmware stops getting patched and the devices drift toward being dangerously out of date.
Why the FCC did it
The agency points to the Volt, Flax, and Salt Typhoon attacks, where routers were part of the infrastructure attackers used to get in. FCC Chair Brendan Carr framed the move as protecting US networks, critical infrastructure, and supply chains. Whatever you think of the politics, the underlying problem is real. An unpatched router sitting at the edge of your network is exactly the kind of soft target these groups look for.
Expect shortages and higher prices
Only a small fraction of consumer routers currently meet the new requirements, so supply is going to tighten and prices are going to climb. If the rules ever extend to business-grade gear, the disruption gets much bigger. Remote workers feel this too. Anyone running a personal router from a brand like ASUS, Linksys, Eero, or D-Link, or renting one from their internet provider, will eventually have to swap it for a compliant device, and they will likely pay more for it.
What to do now
Move to professional-grade hardware. Ban or no ban, your business should not be running on residential routers. Enterprise gear is more secure and more capable by design, and getting ahead of the shortage beats scrambling later.
Keep your firmware patched. While your current router is still in service, stay fully up to date. Every missed update is a wider window for an attacker.
Kill the default passwords. Networking hardware ships with default logins that attackers know by heart. Change them to strong, unique passphrases today.
Encrypt your traffic. A VPN shields your business traffic even if someone manages to intercept it.
This is the kind of change that is easy to ignore until it bites. Book a call and we will check whether your network is exposed and map out the switch before prices spike.