Many people don’t ever change their Wi-Fi password. Out of those who do change theirs, many think that that’s it, they’re done, their connection is now super safe.
Except, that’s not really true.
The Wi-Fi password is just one piece in a larger puzzle, and there’s a lot more out there that works to protect your home network. Here’s everything else that matters.
The Wi-Fi password only controls network entry
Useful, but so easy to overestimate
Your Wi-Fi password matters, of course. It matters a whole lot. It especially matters if you haven’t changed it in ages. But it only matters up to a certain point.
It decides whether a phone, laptop, console, smart TV, or whatever else you have can join your wireless network in the first place, which is why a weak or widely shared password is a problem.
The mistake is assuming that once the password is strong, the entire network is safe. After a device is connected, the password is entirely irrelevant, so it doesn’t go a long way toward securing your home network from its very foundations.
- Brand
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ASUS
- Wi-Fi Bands
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6 GHz, 5 GHz, 2.4 GHz
If you’re looking for a solid Wi-Fi router, you just found it. Asus’ RT-BE92U supports Wi-Fi 7 with 6GHz, and has five built-in Ethernet ports.
Encryption mode decides how the password is used
WPA3 if you can, WPA2-AES if you must
The security mode next to your password in your router settings decides how that password is actually used, and whether your network is relying on something reasonably modern or some ancient compatibility mode that should’ve been retired ages ago.
Ideally, you want WPA3-Personal if your devices support it. WPA2-Personal with AES is still a perfectly reasonable fallback for most homes. WEP, WPA, TKIP, and mixed modes should go, though. If one aged printer or smart plug forces you to weaken the entire network because they don’t support newer encryption modes, it’s better to send them off to a guest or IoT network instead.
The router admin password can cause more damage
This is the login that changes everything
Your Wi-Fi password lets devices join the network. Your router admin password, on the other hand, lets someone change how the entire network behaves, which makes it a much bigger deal than some people give it credit for. Both are important in their own unique ways.
This is the login that controls your DNS settings, firmware updates, port forwarding rules, guest networks, remote access, and wireless security mode. If you’re still using a default admin password or using the same one across admin and Wi-Fi, that’s the thing I’d fix before worrying about anything else.
Firmware updates protect against router flaws
Old router software has nothing to do with your password
Something as simple as a lack of firmware updates can cause some real issues. Your router is basically a tiny computer that every device in your home depends on, and those tiny computers need their updates. A strong Wi-Fi password’s not going to make up for the fact that your router hasn’t received important patches that fix security holes or stability problems.
If your router supports automatic firmware updates, turn them on. If it doesn’t, check for updates manually every now and then, and pay attention if the last available update is from years ago. That might mean your router is about ready to retire.
Shortcut settings can come back to bite you
WPS is one of those settings that exists to save you a minute during setup, then sits there for years, long after you’ve forgotten about it. If you don’t actively use it, turn it off. Typing the Wi-Fi password once or scanning a QR code is a lot less annoying than leaving an unnecessary shortcut enabled for all eternity.
Remote management deserves the same kind of treatment. Most people don’t need to access their router’s admin page from outside the house, and if you do use a cloud-managed router app, make sure that account is secured properly. A good Wi-Fi password doesn’t help much if the actual router controls are reachable through a weak account or an exposed remote access setting.
Port forwarding and UPnP decide what leaves the network exposed
Old experiments can stay open for years
Port forwarding and UPnP are where your home network can start exposing things you forgot were ever exposed.
Maybe you opened a port for a Minecraft server, Plex setup, NAS, security camera, or remote desktop test ages ago, and then it just sort of kept sitting there. UPnP can make this even easier by letting devices request port openings automatically, which is handy for games and consoles, but not something I’d leave totally unchecked.
Put low-trust devices where they belong
Not all the tech clutter in your house deserves a spot on your main network by default. If your router lets you block guest devices from accessing local devices, that’s even better. You may need to keep some gadgets on the main network for things like casting or smart home control, but a lot of the random stuff we all have at home can live perfectly normal lives on a guest network with internet access and no connection to the rest of the home.
Change your password, just don’t stop there
Don’t get me wrong, a strong Wi-Fi password still matters, a lot. It’s just not the only thing you should be thinking of. Changing the password is the most obvious part of your whole setup, it’s not the whole story.
The safer approach is to treat your router settings as a checklist, including modern encryption, a unique admin password, current firmware, WPS off, remote access controlled, old port forwards removed, and low-trust devices kept away from the important parts of your network.
9/10
- Brand
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Unifi
- Wi-Fi Bands
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2.4/5/6GHz
Secure network? You’ll need a good router. The UniFi Dream 7 is one of our picks for both security and performance.

