Google Wifi review: Now available as a triple pack for £329

£229
Price when reviewed

Deal update: Fancy picking up Google’s easy to use mesh Wi-Fi system on the cheap? Available for just £179 at Currys, you’ll save a healthy £50 on the twinpack. That’s a great offer on a fantastic wireless router and definitely deserves your attention. 

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Google Wifi is at last going to be available in a three pack in the UK as well as the twin-pack and single units that it was launched with. That’s good news for those living in larger houses and flats as it means you can save £30 over buying a twin-pack and one extra single node separately.

The triple pack will set you back £329 and will be available on the Google Store from 13 March, while the twin pack costs £229 and extra single units are priced at £129. However, it is worth noting that the price hasn’t dropped for any Google Wifi package since the system first appeared on UK shelves in 2017 while other systems have fallen in price. Notably, BT’s Whole Home Wi-Fi system is now less than £200 for a three pack, which makes it conspicuously better value.

You can read our original review, in full, below:

Google Wifi review: In full

Ask most people what the bane of their technological existence is and I guarantee you many of them will respond with one word: “Wi-Fi”. Wireless in the home, despite the many advances of wireless technology over the past few years, has failed to move forward in one key area: coverage. That’s where Google Wifi comes in with its new mesh Wi-Fi system.

I’m sure you’ve heard this story before. In fact, Google isn’t the first to produce such a system. In the UK we have BT Whole Home Wi-Fi, Linksys Velop and Netgear Orbi all competing for a slice of the action.

Google Wifi is different, though, and for a number of key reasons. First is its use of the 802.11s mesh Wi-Fi standard, which it says no other residential mesh system is using. This is something Google has been working on with the IEEE since it began the Google Wifi project some four years ago, and it brings with it a number of benefits over the proprietary systems employed by other vendors.

READ NEXT: The best wireless routers of 2017 – our pick of the best

The most important advantage will be interoperability. As yet, no third-party vendors are using the 802.11s standard, so only Google’s Wifi boxes work with the system, but there’s a degree of future-proofing here. If you buy Google Wifi, there’s at least the faint prospect you might be able to upgrade it, node by node, with less expensive third-party devices later on.

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Then there’s the way Google brings all its machine-learning might to bear, because Google Wifi isn’t just a series of dumb boxes. By using a dedicated sensing radio to scan your local network environment, it can send information about signal strength and Wi-Fi congestion back to Google’s servers, which in turn analyse the data and send back information to Google Wifi about how and when to hop channels to maintain a strong signal.

Buy Google Wifi – Single unit from PC World now

Buy Google Wifi – Twin pack from PC World now

Google Wifi review: Price, key features and design

It’s clever stuff, and there are other techniques Google Wifi employs to keep your wireless running smoothly, but the basic recipe for improving Wi-Fi coverage remains the same as with all mesh Wi-Fi: essentially, the more boxes you have, the better it will be.

On that front, Google Wifi makes a lot of sense. It costs £229 for a twin pack, £329 for the triple pack and £129 (can be found for $126 on Amazon US) for each single box thereafter. That might look expensive in comparison with regular routers but, in the mesh networking space, Google Wifi isn’t actually hideously expensive. It isn’t as cheap as the three-node BT Whole Home Wi-Fi system, which has fallen to around £190 for a three pack, but it is better value than the Linksys Velop (£250 for two) and Orbi systems (£250 for two).

You also need to bear in mind that each of the nodes in a Google Wifi system is a fully fledged router in its own right. They don’t have DSL built in, but you get dual-band 802.11ac connectivity, with support for 2×2 MIMO and theoretical speeds of up to 1,200Mbits/sec over 5GHz, plus a pair of Gigabit Ethernet ports built into the base of each cylindrical unit.

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Google Wifi review: Setup and app

What you’re buying here is a series of routers; the difference is that Google wraps it up in its own inimitable way, with clever technology and slick, friendly software.

It all starts with the app. Unlike regular routers, Google Wifi can’t be administered or set up via the browser; you have do all that using either the Android or the iOS app. Fortunately, the app is brilliant. It takes you step by step through setup, starting with connecting the first unit to your existing router or modem, all the way through to setting up your extra node or nodes.

You might have to restart your modem or router in the process, but as long as you follow the instructions to the letter, you should be set up in less than a quarter of an hour. As with all the mesh systems I’ve looked at, the setup routine analyses your network as you go to make sure you’ve placed the nodes in the best possible place, and uses the status LED wraps around each unit’s middle to provide an indicator of the strength of the connection to the rest of the network.

And that’s pretty much it. Once you’ve done all this, you shouldn’t need to touch the settings ever again, except to delve into the newly improved parental settings or the guest network. Both of these, by the way, behave in precisely the way you’d want.

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Parental controls, or “Family WiFi” in Google parlance, allow you to block devices or groups of devices on a schedule. It’s also possible to pause internet access manually if you want to encourage your kids to put down their phones and start doing something more interesting instead.

By default, guest networks are kept completely separate from your main network, so visitors can’t access file shares or network storage, but the genius of Google’s system is that you can provide access to devices such as Chromecasts and wireless speakers with a single click.

You can also use the app to access more advanced settings such as port-forwarding, custom DNS and setting the network mode manually, although there’s no way to separate the 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands. Google Wifi takes care of connecting clients to the most appropriate band for you using band steering. It also uses another technique called “client steering” to ensure laptops, phones and tablets connect to the Wifi node with the strongest signal.

Google Wifi review: Performance

The most important thing to know about Google Wifi is that, if you have enough nodes, you’ll always get a strong Wi-Fi signal, no matter where you are. The question is, how fast is that throughput?

In my house, a narrow Victorian terrace that spans three stories and has thick brick walls all over the place, two Wifi nodes were enough to provide a solid signal in all parts of the house. They’re good enough to provide the full 38Mbits/sec my Sky Broadband connection is able to service without breaking sweat.

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It isn’t, however, the fastest mesh Wi-Fi system around. The BT Whole Home Wi-Fi system, for instance, has faster speeds at close and long range, and so does the Netgear Orbi. That’s not surprising, though, as those systems offer tri-band connectivity and are able to transfer data at higher rates between nodes.

What’s impressive is that Google Wifi was a match for the far more expensive Linksys Velop in my tests at both close and long range, as you can see from the chart above.

One thing I wouldn’t recommend you do, though, is buy a single Google Wifi unit now with a view to upgrading it later, as you’ll almost certainly suffer a downgrade in long-range connectivity and throughput. I tested a single unit from our normal long-range location – in the kitchen extension at the rear of the house – and it provided a usable but slow 5Mbits/sec download throughput to the test laptop.

Buy Google Wifi – Single unit from PC World now

Buy Google Wifi – Twin pack from PC World now

Google Wifi review: Verdict

Google Wifi is an impressive achievement for a company not necessarily known for its wireless networking prowess. Not only is it competitively priced within its sector, it’s also a decent performer and is stacked with clever technology to make your life easier, although it isn’t the fastest around.

But Google Wifi is about much more than providing strong Wi-Fi coverage for your home today. It represents a tipping point for home Wi-Fi, a watershed moment if you will, and from now on things can only get better.

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