Your Wi-Fi router is probably the ugliest thing in your living room, but stashing it in a cabinet or shoving it behind the sofa is basically like putting a muffler on your internet. We’ve all been there: You pay for "blazing-fast" speeds but the second you walk into the bedroom, your connection drops to 2010 levels. It’s not your provider being cheap; it’s likely your furniture acting as a signal-blocking cage.
Wi-Fi signals are essentially radio waves, and they operate by a very simple rule: They love open air and hate solid objects. When you tuck your router inside a wooden media console or hide it under a pile of books, those waves have to fight through layers of material before they even reach your phone. The result is a spotty, frustrated connection that struggles to penetrate even a single wall.
If you want to stop the "spinning wheel of death" during your 4K streams, you’ve got to prioritize physics over aesthetics. The sweet spot for any router is a central, elevated location -- think of it like a lightbulb that needs to illuminate the whole house. Keep it away from the kitchen (microwaves are Wi-Fi killers) and off the floor. Moving that "clunky" box just a couple feet can be the difference between a dead zone and a solid signal.
Locating local internet providers
Placing your router in a central location gives it the best chance at broadcasting a strong Wi-Fi signal evenly throughout your home.
In general, the fewer obstructions around your router, the stronger your signal will be. Here's what not to do when you're setting up your router.Â
Read more: Should You Buy or Rent Your Router? Here’s What I Learned $873 Later
Locating local internet providers
First mistake: Put your router on the floor
Putting your router on the floor won't completely kill your signal, but you won't be maximizing it, either. Think of your router like a light bulb. You want it to light up as large an area as possible. Putting a lamp on the ground will still provide some lighting, but not as much as putting it on a table.Â
Radio waves typically send their strongest signals downward, so placing your router in an elevated position will maximize your coverage. You can find wall mounts on Amazon, but I wouldn't recommend them -- attaching your router to a wall will block a good chunk of its signal. Instead, try placing it on a table or shelf, ideally with a foot or so of space from the wall.Â
Second mistake: Place your router behind the couch
If you look around the living room for the best place to put your router, the couch might jump out as a convenient hiding place. But this is a bad idea for the same reason you don't want to put it right against a wall or floor.
"You want to avoid as many hard materials that the Wi-Fi signal has to travel through as possible," Julian said.Â
A couch or armchair might not be as oversized of an impediment as a wall, but it will still weaken your Wi-Fi signal.Â
Third mistake: Stash your router in the basement
Some people dislike the look of their router so much that they stash it in the basement. But that violates one of the fundamental rules of home networking: Put your router where you use it the most -- and that's probably not in the basement. Basements also tend to have a lot of things that can interfere with a Wi-Fi signal.Â
"There's also a lot more noise in the basement," said David Maxey, a senior technician at IT support company NerdsToGo in Bellevue, Washington. "If you have fluorescent lighting, wiring or copper piping in the ground floor, that's definitely going to have some effect."
Fourth mistake: Hide your router away inside cabinetsÂ
A cabinet might seem like a clever solution to an unsightly router, but it's one of the few mistakes you can make that could actually damage your router. In addition to blocking the signal, keeping a router in an enclosed space could cause it to overheat. In late 2024, one woman in Florida lost her home in a fire that she says was started by her Wi-Fi router.Â
That's an extreme, worst-case scenario. What's more likely is that your router would degrade over time with inadequate airflow, with occasional periods of complete shutdown.Â
Fifth mistake: Set your router up near another Wi-Fi router
"Wi-Fi operates on its own spectrum of basically radio waves, so any device that broadcasts on the same spectrum is going to interfere with it. That includes other Wi-Fi devices," Julian told me.Â
Receiving devices like your TV or smart speaker will not mess with your Wi-Fi, but it will be a problem if you have other equipment like routers or gateways. That doesn't include mesh systems, which use multiple routers in tandem to spread a Wi-Fi signal throughout the home.Â
Why would someone have multiple routers if they're not part of a mesh system? It's more common than you might think, says Julian.Â
"People just don't know. You start with one device, like a router, and then your internet's not working as well as you want. So then you go buy another device," Julian says. "It's just a lack of knowledge that the devices should be in the same family, in the same system."
So, where should you put your router?
The best place to put your router is somewhere you can see it, such as a centrally located room. Ideally, it should be raised at least a few feet off the ground, with some open space between it and any walls or thick pieces of furniture.Â
That might be unwelcome news for those of us with eyesores for routers, but you can always hide your router inside a wicker basket or plastic crate. Just make sure the container isn't metal, which can interfere with a Wi-Fi signal.Â


