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Asus RT-AX88U router review: A fantastic Wi-Fi 6 router

Our Rating :
£289.13 from
Price when reviewed : £261
inc VAT

The Asus RT-AX88U is a superbly fast router that is both functional and decisively future-proof

Pros

  • Stunningly fast with 802.11ax clients
  • Strong performance over 802.11ac
  • Plenty of ports and features

Cons

  • Fiddly firmware
  • Less bandwidth than tri-band models

The new wireless standard is here: 802.11ax, also known as Wi-Fi 6, is designed to deliver much faster connections than 802.11ac, and to keep things moving more smoothly when lots of devices want to connect at once.

Strictly speaking, the Asus RT-AX88U isn’t the first router we’ve seen that supports 802.11ax; that honour goes to Asus’ bigger, jazzier ROG Rapture GT-AX11000. That, however, was a £400 beast of a router aimed at hardcore gamers. The more affordable RT-AX88U brings next-generation Wi-Fi to the mainstream market – and things will never be the same again.

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Asus RT-AX88U router review: What you need to know

The RT-AX88U has the familiar look of a high-end Asus router and offers all the features you’d expect. The big news is 802.11ax, which delivers faster, stronger connections to compatible devices. Naturally, 802.11n and 802.11ac are supported too, so older clients aren’t left behind.

The router’s claimed maximum throughput is quite a bit lower than the ROG Rapture’s – 6Gbits/sec versus 11Gbits/sec – but that’s because it has two radios rather than three. This is less of a concern than it was with 802.11ac: the new standard uses a technical trick called orthogonal frequency-division multiple access to achieve better performance when multiple devices are connected, so there’s less to be gained by spreading the load across two radios.

Asus RT-AX88U router review: Price and competition

At £261, the RT-AX88U costs no more than a high-end 802.11ac router, such as the Netgear Nighthawk X10 or the Linksys EA9500 and, frankly, we’d choose it over either of those in a heartbeat. You might not have any 802.11ax devices in your home right now, but you’ll surely acquire some during the lifetime of your next router, and the AX88U will let them achieve their full performance potential.

If you want to get on the Wi-Fi 6 train as cheaply as possible, the Netgear Nighthawk AX4 can be had for just £200; we’ll be testing it in the coming weeks, so check back for a full review.

If even that’s beyond your budget then, for the time being, you’ll have to make do with an 802.11ac model, such as the £80 D-Link EXO AC2600. To be honest, though, at this point in time we’d suggest you save up and wait for 802.11ax prices to fall a bit, rather than buying into last-gen technology.

READ NEXT: Asus ROG Rapture GT-AX11000 review

Asus RT-AX88U router review: Performance

The major defining feature of 802.11ax is that it encodes more information into each packet of transmitted data than previous wireless standards. Thus, even though the RT-AX88U’s twin radios use the same frequencies as an 802.11ac router, they’re able to deliver significantly higher bandwidth: the 2.4GHz radio can handle speeds of up to 1,148Mbits/sec and the 5GHz radio is rated at a super-fast 4,804Mbits/sec.

On top of this, the standard uses new techniques to reduce the impact of interference, so less of that bandwidth is lost to environmental factors. Asus claims with unusual specificity that, as a result of these improvements, the AX88U delivers 2.3 times the performance of a comparable 802.11ac router.

To find out how true that is, I tested the AX88U in my usual way, by installing the router with default settings then walking around my home with a Dell Latitude 5490 laptop (equipped with a 2×2 MIMO Intel AX200 802.11ax adapter and connected on the 5GHz band) and copying large files to and from a NAS appliance connected directly to the router via Ethernet.

Here are the speeds I saw in various rooms, in megabytes per second, stacked up for comparison against the fastest 802.11ac router I’ve tested, namely the £440 Netgear Nighthawk Pro Gaming XR700:

All speeds are MB/sec

XR700 upload

RT-AX88U upload

XR700 download

RT-AX88U download

Living room

10.9

39.7

32.6

70.5

Rear terrace

3.9

24.7

19.4

51.6

Bedroom

4.2

27.8

19.3

56.8

Bathroom

2.4

16.6

18.4

32.6

Your eyes do not deceive you. The RT-AX88U roughly doubled my download speeds compared to the XR700, and write speeds in many areas of the house were more than six times as fast. To reiterate, these numbers are in megabytes per second, so even when I’m lying in the bath, at the opposite end of the house to the router, the connection is strong enough to max out a 250Mbits/sec fibre internet connection. Considering the number of walls and appliances in the way, not to mention the plumbing, that’s amazing.

Of course, it’ll be a few years before all our clients support Wi-Fi 6 – right now, the most popular device that supports it is probably the Samsung Galaxy S10 – so for the time being the RT-AX88U’s 802.11ac performance remains very relevant as well. To measure this, I repeated the test using my Surface Laptop, with its integrated 2×2 MIMO Marvell Avastar-AC adapter. Here are the results, again compared to the XR700:

All speeds are MB/sec

XR700 upload

AX88U upload

XR700 download

AX88U download

Living room

10.9

17.8

32.6

32.2

Rear terrace

3.9

4.2

19.4

8

Bedroom

4.2

7.8

19.3

16.9

Bathroom

2.4

5

18.4

10.8

In this mode, the RT-AX88U can’t quite keep up with the very fastest 802.11ac router there is but these are still very respectable speeds. There’s more than enough bandwidth here to watch Netflix in 4K on my laptop while I’m out on the rear terrace and, frankly, it’s hard to see what more you could ask for. And since the RT-AX88U supports 4×4 MU-MIMO, the connection shouldn’t stutter if other systems in the house start demanding network access at the same time, although a tri-band model would be able to handle even more clients at once.

Finally, let’s look at 2.4GHz performance. This radio band is better able to penetrate through physical obstacles, but it has a lower data rate and a greater susceptibility to interference, so you’re almost always better off with a 5GHz connection. For the record, though, here are the speeds I saw over the 2.4GHz band, in both 802.11ac and 802.11ax modes (on the RT-AX88U only):

All speeds are MB/sec

802.11ac upload

802.11ax upload

802.11ac download

802.11ax download

Living room

5.9

11.8

8.5

19.3

Rear terrace

2

6.7

5.5

11.1

Bedroom

3.9

8.5

6.9

12.8

Bathroom

3.4

6.4

5.6

9.2

As you can see, 802.11ax once again provides a decent speed boost – although it’s hard to imagine a situation where you’d have the option of using 802.11ax but not on the 5GHz band.

Asus RT-AX88U router review: Features and design

The RT-AX88U is tastefully designed, with few of the attention-seeking trappings of the gamer-oriented ROG Rapture GT-AX11000. Only the gold-lined cut-outs on the four antennae hint that there’s anything special about this router.

Functionally, though, it’s pretty upmarket. There’s a full eight Gigabit Ethernet ports and, while the AX88U doesn’t have a 2.5GbE socket like the ROG Rapture, the first two ports support 802.3ad link aggregation. Interestingly, you can also combine LAN port 4 with the WAN port to support a 2Gbits/sec internet connection, not that many of us will be able to take advantage of that.

There’s also a USB 3.1 socket at the rear, and another tucked away behind a flap at the front. Plug in a flash drive or hard disk and the RT-AX88U can serve as a basic NAS, with support for multiple user accounts and macOS Time Machine backups. The second port can be used to share a USB printer or plug in a 4G modem to serve as failover if your main internet connection goes down.

Other feature highlights include a built-in VPN server (supporting PPTP, OpenVPN and IPSec), to let you securely access your home network over an untrusted internet connection; integration with Alexa and IFTTT to automate basic tasks; and Asus’ nifty AiMesh system, which lets you extend your Wi-Fi coverage by linking two or more Asus routers together into a mesh network. If you’re currently using an older Asus router, this could give it a useful second life once you upgrade to the RT-AX88U.

Finally, you also get a single-device account on the WTFast VPN, which is designed to minimise lag in online games, plus the AiProtection system powered by Trend Micro, which provides a variety of intrusion-protection and antivirus features. Both are free forever; a welcome reassurance in an age when every service seems to be trying to drag you into a paid subscription.

If I’ve one grumble, it’s that the web-based management interface is exactly the same as on every Asus router since 2012, and frankly it’s a bit of a mess, with nested tabs, panes and buttons that can make it fiddly to find what you’re looking for. A slick router like this deserves a front end to match. Still, after the initial set up you should only need to deal with it once in a blue moon.

READ NEXT: Netgear Orbi RBK50 review

Asus RT-AX88U router review: Verdict

I’m sold. I knew that 802.11ax would mean faster Wi-Fi, but the reality is better than I’d dared hope for. Not only is it massively faster than 802.11ac at short range, it maintains that huge advantage through obstacles and over long distances. Hitherto I’ve been using a Netgear Orbi mesh system to ensure I get decent coverage throughout my home but with Wi-Fi 6 it’s simply not necessary. Perhaps it’s an exaggeration to say that 802.11ax changes everything but it does overturn the established wisdom of what you can expect from a wireless connection.

Of course, the RT-AX88U isn’t the only way to get 802.11ax. Other products are starting to trickle onto the market, and by Christmas every major router brand will doubtless have multiple Wi-Fi 6 offerings, including some at rather lower price points. If you want to make the leap right now, however, you won’t regret it: this superb router is fast, functional and decisively future-proof.