A focus on predictable and low-jitter performance will make Wi-Fi 8 appealing for ultra-high reliability applications.
Wi-Fi 7 is reshaping how devices communicate, and Wi-Fi 8, with even more advanced capabilities, is on the horizon. Businesses building connected devices need to understand how next-generation Wi-Fi impacts design decisions, user expectations and product viability.
Whether you’re developing smart home devices, industrial systems or enterprise-grade solutions, staying ahead of these evolving standards helps you deliver reliable and future-ready products.
Discover the key feature differences between Wi-Fi 7 and Wi-Fi 8, use cases and what this all means for product development.
Wi-Fi 7, or standard IEEE 802.11be, is the latest generation of wireless technology with extended capabilities of Wi-Fi 6 and 6E. The standard offers precise coordination, better use of spectrum and enhanced flexibility. Wi-Fi 7 delivers speeds of up to 46 Gbps.
The technology is commercially available in chipsets, routers, access points and adapters. Wi-Fi 7 maintains backward compatibility with Wi-Fi 6 and 6E, making it easier to transition without overhauling existing infrastructure.
Wi-Fi 7 redefines wireless connectivity with robust capabilities that boost efficiency. The features of Wi-Fi 7 include:
Wi-Fi 7 has a channel bandwidth of 320 megahertz (MHz). This additional bandwidth is primarily available in the 6 GHz spectrum and is beneficial in large data load settings, where faster data transfers reduce latency and streamline user experiences.
Quadrature amplitude modulation (QAM) determines how much data can be encoded into a signal. Wi-Fi 7 moves from 1024 QAM of Wi-Fi 6 to 4096 QAM, meaning more bits are transmitted per signal burst. For product developers, this means less time spent on data handoffs, which improves responsiveness and frees up network resources.
Multi-link operation (MLO) allows devices to operate across the 2.4 GHz, 5GHz and 6GHz bands simultaneously or dynamically. This flexibility reduces congestion, balances traffic and adds redundancy for stable connections.
MLO modes include:
Wi-Fi 7 introduces flexible ways to allocate spectrum through multiple resource units (MRUs). These resource units allow a single device to pull together fragmented portions of the channel to form a usable transmission path. For environments with mixed traffic or partial interference, MRUs help maintain efficient operation and minimize wasted spectrum.
Preamble puncturing enables devices and clients to avoid portions of a channel experiencing interference while still using the rest of the bandwidth. This technique increases bandwidth availability in spectrum-dense areas. For developers building products for offices or industrial zones, this feature better supports multiple devices on the same network.
Wi-Fi 7 enhances the target wake time feature in Wi-Fi 6. With restricted target wake time (R-TWT), devices schedule times to wake and communicate, reducing overlap and saving energy. This has direct implications for battery-powered smart devices, where predictable, energy-efficient operation is essential.
With better control over how and when devices communicate, Wi-Fi 7 improves energy use. Lower latency allows time-sensitive applications to respond more quickly, which translates to smoother operation and more reliable communication for industrial automation and health care products.
Wi-Fi 7 extends the multiple-user (MU) multiple input multiple output (MIMO) — MU-MIMO — and orthogonal frequency division multiple access (OFDMA) techniques from Wi-Fi 6. These features allow more devices to transmit data simultaneously, improving overall network efficiency. It’s useful in high-density environments like offices and stadiums.
Wi-Fi 8 technology, known as IEEE 802.11bn, is currently in development. Compatible devices are expected to launch in early 2028, and early drafts suggest a shift toward reliability, coordination and resource efficiency.
The standard is being designed for future-forward use cases, such as autonomous systems, immersive computing and dense Internet of Things (IoT) environments. IEEE 802.11bn will maintain backward compatibility with Wi-Fi 7, 6 and 6E, and is anticipated to exceed 46 Gbps.
While still in early development, Wi-Fi 8 will expand wireless capabilities. Here are some features that support next-gen applications.
Wi-Fi 8 aims to reduce jitter and packet loss by improving scheduling, redundancy and error correction. This shift prioritizes consistency over peak throughput and supports applications where dropped signals impact performance or safety.
The standard aims to create a more seamless experience for devices moving across spaces, improve load balancing and help avoid signal conflicts. For businesses managing high-density deployments, wireless networks may behave like well-managed wired ones.
Wi-Fi 8 refines device wake cycles and energy scheduling to extend battery life further in ultra-low-power devices. These refinements support long-lifespan IoT devices in industrial and outdoor settings where frequent battery replacement isn’t practical.
IEEE 802.11bn will introduce smarter spectrum management through predictive traffic scheduling and adaptive channel use. This reduces interference and increases network performance as the number of connected devices increases. For developers, this means more-reliable performance in real-world conditions.
Millimeter wave (mmWave) communication has already been employed in 5G for high-density urban environments and fixed wireless access solutions to provide high-speed, low-latency communication. Millimeter wave will become more native in Wi-Fi 8 and offer fast, short-range communication ideal for virtual reality (VR) headsets, docking stations and local data transfer between machines. Built-in mmWave support allows product designers to target these use cases without relying on separate radio systems.
Wi-Fi 8 targets lower latency than Wi-Fi 7, catering to responsive, real-time applications. This responsiveness benefits augmented reality (AR), VR and edge computing scenarios, where low-latency feedback loops are essential.
With more devices integrating multiple radios, Wi-Fi 8 addresses interference between them through better coordination protocols. For product teams, this improves performance with little to no custom shielding or radio isolation strategies.
As extended reality (XR) applications gain traction in training, simulation and entertainment, Wi-Fi 8’s emphasis on low latency and reliable throughput supports more-immersive and responsive experiences. This feature enables wireless AR/VR headsets and spatial computing platforms to function smoothly in real time.
With Wi-Fi 8, security focuses on making networks resilient against traditional and emerging threats. While details are still in development, it may bring deeper integration of hardware-based security mechanisms and more flexible policy enforcement tools.
Wi-Fi 7 and Wi-Fi 8 build on previous generations, but their unique capabilities make them more suitable for certain environments and user demands.
Wi-Fi 7 caters to data-rich environments where performance and speed are critical. Here’s where the standard offers tangible results:
Wi-Fi 8 takes wireless technology into new territory, supporting coordinated and power-conscious communication. Here are some of its use cases:
Ultra-high reliability applications: Wi-Fi 8’s most transformative benefit is its focus on predictable and low-jitter performance. This level of reliability is critical for autonomous machinery, collaborative robots and wireless industrial control systems.Future-proofing your devices allows you to anticipate changes and design systems that evolve with the standards. Here’s how to prepare effectively:
If you’re building for Wi-Fi 7 or preparing for Wi-Fi 8, you need hardware and connectivity that evolve with the standard. Synaptics provides intelligent and innovative technologies to help you achieve that.
We offer edge AI processors, multimedia SoCs, display docks, finger sensors and capacitive touch solutions to optimize power, responsiveness and security. With our engineering support and a portfolio built for scale, we help you adapt to emerging requirements, and deliver fast, intuitive and smart products.
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