WiFi Repeater Count Calculator

Size repeaters for offices, sites, and workshops today. Choose materials, estimate losses, and compare fast. Get a clear count, plus spacing tips for installation.

Calculator inputs

Enter approximate dimensions and conditions. For long corridors, consider adding one extra node per 25–35 meters.

Please enter a valid length.
Please enter a valid width.
Please enter a valid floor count.
Typical indoor planning: 8–18 m depending on obstacles.
Please enter a valid radius.
0.75 is common when backhaul is shared.
Please enter a value between 0.40 and 1.00.
Higher overlap improves roaming but increases node count.
Please enter 0–60.
Please choose a material.
Use 0 for open halls, 2–3 for offices.
Please enter 0–6.
Reset

Example data

A sample scenario showing how the estimate scales with obstacles and floor area.

Length (m) Width (m) Floors Radius (m) Material Walls Overlap Repeaters
60 25 2 14 Concrete 2 20% 35

Formula used

This calculator estimates coverage using an adjusted service area per device:

Total Area = Length × Width × Floors
Wall Factor = (Material Multiplier) ^ (Average Walls)
Overlap Factor = 1 − (Overlap % / 100)
Device Area = π × (Effective Radius²) × Wall Factor × Overlap Factor
Repeaters = max(0, ceil((Total Area − Router Area) / Repeater Area))

The model is a planning estimate. Real layouts, antenna placement, and interference can shift results. Use a quick site survey to validate.

How to use this calculator

  1. Measure building length, width, and count usable floors.
  2. Enter your router’s approximate indoor radius from its spec or experience.
  3. Select wall material and estimate how many walls separate likely node locations.
  4. Pick an overlap target; 15–25% is typical for roaming.
  5. Click Calculate, then use spacing tips for rough placement.
  6. Validate with a walk test; adjust nodes for dead zones.
Tip: For long corridors, place repeaters in a line rather than a grid.

Coverage requirements in building fit-outs

Repeaters are often planned during interior buildouts, before final furniture and partitions. For open workshops, start with a router radius of 14–18 m. For office grids, 10–14 m is safer. Ceiling height also matters; high bays can create shadowing behind racks. Use this calculator to convert rough drawings into an initial device count and spacing for procurement.

Effective radius and backhaul impact

A repeater rarely matches the router’s reach because it shares airtime for backhaul. The efficiency factor represents that loss. Values around 0.70–0.80 are common for single-band repeating, especially on channels. Dedicated backhaul radios, mesh systems, or wired uplinks can justify 0.85–0.95. If you expect heavy streaming, cameras, or VOIP, keep the factor conservative to avoid optimistic counts.

Wall materials and obstacle allowance

Signals drop sharply through dense materials. Light partitions and glass usually behave better than masonry, while reinforced concrete and metal cladding are most challenging. For planning, each additional wall multiplies loss, so two concrete walls may reduce usable area to nearly one third. Stairwells, lift shafts, and fire doors often behave like extra walls. If your floor has metal racks or machinery bays, assume extra loss and plan one spare node.

Overlap targets for roaming and reliability

Overlap improves handoff and reduces dead zones, but it also increases node count. A 15–25% overlap works for most offices, while warehouses may operate at 10–15%. For classrooms or meeting suites, aim closer to 25% to reduce edge drops. High overlap above 40% is typically reserved for voice, scanning, or moving equipment that cannot tolerate brief disconnects.

Installation checks and adjustment steps

Use the suggested spacing as a starting grid, then verify with a walk test. Place repeaters where they can “see” the router or previous node with good signal, ideally above head height and away from metal. After installation, measure throughput in key rooms at work hours, adjust channels if you control them, and relocate nodes away from electrical panels or thick cores.

FAQs

Does this calculator replace a site survey?

No. It provides a planning estimate from dimensions and obstacles. A quick walk test with a phone or analyzer should confirm dead zones, interference, and real device placement before purchase.

What router radius should I enter?

Use a conservative indoor figure from experience or specifications. Typical ranges are 8–18 m. If the space has dense walls, shelving, or machinery, choose the lower end.

Why does overlap increase the repeater count?

Overlap reserves extra shared coverage so devices can roam without dropping. More overlap reduces the effective service area per node, so you need more nodes to cover the same floor area.

How do floors affect the result?

The calculator multiplies area by floor count to reflect additional coverage demand. If floors are open atriums or share strong vertical signal paths, you may need fewer than the estimate.

How should I interpret wall count?

Enter the average number of significant walls between the router and repeater locations. For open halls use 0–1. For typical offices use 2–3. Increase it for cores, fire doors, or stairwells.

When should I add extra repeaters?

Add one spare node for high-risk areas: concrete cores, metal shelving, long corridors, or critical rooms. Also add capacity if many users stream, run cameras, or use voice tools.

Built for early planning and budgeting in building fit-outs.

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Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.