TP-Link Deco P9 review: An innovative Wi-Fi extender kit | Expert Reviews (2024)

They also don’t have a display, aside from a single-colour LED recessed into the top. This isn’t ideal, since it means you may not be able to see when one’s glowing red for an error condition without walking up and standing over it, although that issue didn’t arise during our testing.

Another disappointing design choice is the presence of a mere two Gigabit Ethernet ports on each node. On your router unit, one of these will be connected to your modem, leaving you just one wired socket and, if you want to take advantage of the Deco P9’s Ethernet backhaul option, the main unit won’t have any spare ports at all.

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Getting set up proved quick and easy, although there’s no web portal so everything has to be done via the TP-Link Deco smartphone app. Administrative options include turning the guest network on and off, blacklisting specific clients, reserving IP addresses for specific devices and setting up port forwarding. There’s no VPN support, though, and traffic management options aren’t exactly extensive: you can designate up to 16 devices as high-priority, but you can’t set specific usage limits, nor is there any information provided about what’s actually using your bandwidth.

TP-Link Deco P9 review: An innovative Wi-Fi extender kit | Expert Reviews (2)

Frustratingly, you also can’t call up a map of the network. Wireless and powerline connections can both be very location-sensitive, so it would have been great to be able to quickly check connection routes and speeds, and test the effect of moving the stations to different rooms and sockets. Alas, the app doesn’t help you out with this at all.

Still, the Deco P9 does have a decent per-device parental control function. This lets you block various sorts of site, including file-sharing sites, games and social networking, in addition to the usual p*rnography blocks. You can also set total online time limits for weekdays and weekends, and block out bedtimes.

TP-Link Deco P9 review: Performance

TP-Link advertises that the Deco P9’s built-in powerline provision helps the system extend wireless coverage even through thick walls. That sounds good to me, as there’s a wall in my home that noticeably weakens the wireless signal in the bathroom and on the rear terrace.

However, while powerline networking isn’t affected by such obstructions, it tends to be a lot slower than Wi-Fi. It’s impossible to say exactly how much slower, as that depends on the state of your wiring, the distance from one socket to another and how much interference other electronic appliances are generating. And of course, as I’ve mentioned, the Deco app doesn’t give you any clues as to what speeds you’re getting over which transport.

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Still, I was able to test the connection in my usual way, by setting up the Deco P9 system as advised by the app, then carrying my Surface Laptop (with its integrated Marvell 2×2 MIMO 802.11ac adapter) around various rooms and measuring upload and download speeds from a NAS appliance connected directly to the router unit via Ethernet.

The results speak for themselves. The P9 may get some benefit from its powerline connection but, if so, it’s greatly undermined by lightweight wireless hardware. It gave me a solid connection all through my home, but as soon as I moved out of the living room (where the router unit was located), download speeds dropped below those of rival sub-£200 mesh systems:

TP-Link Deco P9 review: An innovative Wi-Fi extender kit | Expert Reviews (4)

The conclusion is clear: in a regular domestic setting, a good quality Wi-Fi-only mesh system is likely to give you better performance than the Deco P9’s hybrid approach.

READ NEXT:Best mesh Wi-Fi – the best way to extend your home’s wireless network

TP-Link Deco P9 review: Verdict

I want to praise TP-Link for bringing something new to the increasingly crowded mesh networking market. Unfortunately, there may be a good reason why no one else is offering such a combination of powerline and mesh networking – it appears to yield limited returns.

That’s not to say that the idea doesn’t have its place. If you work in an attic or a garden office where a regular Wi-Fi signal can’t penetrate at all, you can plug in a Deco P9 unit to get coverage in that specific place (albeit at a fairly slow rate) while the third node boosts the wireless network in other areas of your home. For £170 it’s a neat all-in-one solution and, as a bonus, you can combine it with nodes from older Deco models too – although these will, of course, be limited to a Wi-Fi-only connection.

If you’re just looking to beef up a flaky connection, however, then the P9 is a tough sell. Both the hardware and software are relatively short on features and, in a typical home setting, it’s simply not as fast as the BT, Tenda or Zyxel systems, all of which can be had for similar or lower prices.

TP-Link Deco P9 review: An innovative Wi-Fi extender kit | Expert Reviews (2024)
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