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Issue #978: April 19-25, 2026
Q: What is this I hear in the news about the FCC banning routers that are manufactured overseas?
– Jim R.
Freeport, Florida
A: Glad you asked, Jim. This is a rather important issue that will affect pretty much everybody with a home internet connection at some point in the not-so-distant future. In this Geek’s opinion, it certainly merits a lot more coverage than it has been afforded in the mainstream media.
Here’s the rub: On March 23, 2026, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) dropped a metaphorical bomb on the consumer tech industry. In an update to its “Covered List,” the agency effectively prohibited the import and sale of all new consumer-grade routers manufactured outside the United States. A router, for those of you who don’t know, is a device that connects to your local home of office internet that allows multiple devices (computers, phones, etc.) to share a single internet connection. You almost certainly have one in your own home.
It’s important to understand that this wasn’t just a targeted strike against a single brand they think is a bad actor in the industry. This was a blanket prohibition based on geography. If a new router model is designed, developed, or manufactured abroad, it can no longer receive the FCC authorization that is required in order to be sold on American shelves—unless the manufacturer jumps through some very high, very fiery hoops.
The government’s reasoning behind this ban sounds like a plot from a techno-thriller. According to the FCC News Release, foreign-made routers pose “unacceptable risks” to national security. They specifically pointed to three massive cyberattacks—Volt Typhoon, Flax Typhoon, and Salt Typhoon—which investigators linked to actors working for the Chinese government. In these attacks, malicious actors exploited security gaps in home routers to build massive botnets, conduct espionage, and even gain access to critical U.S. infrastructure like power grids and water treatment plants. The White House essentially decided that having 60% of our home routers made in China was a supply chain vulnerability we could no longer ignore.
Before deciding to trash your current router, everyone take a few deep breaths. If your current router is working fine, you are legally in the clear. The ban only applies to new models seeking authorization after the March 23 cutoff. Retailers can even continue to sell their existing stock of previously approved models. There is, however, a ticking clock. The FCC issued a limited waiver allowing foreign-made routers already in use to continue receiving software and security updates. That waiver currently expires on March 1, 2027. After that, if the FCC doesn’t extend the deadline, your existing router could become like a computer with a version of Windows past end-of-life—stuck with whatever bugs it has and unable to receive any security patches to keep hackers out.
Here is where it gets really “Geeky.” Almost no consumer routers are actually made in the USA! Even American brands like Amazon’s Eero, Google Nest, and Linksys manufacture their gear in places like Taiwan, Vietnam, and China. The only major exception? Starlink. SpaceX manufactures its Wi-Fi routers in a massive facility in Texas. For everyone else, the race is on to “onshore” their factories.
This edict comes at a price. If you were planning to upgrade to a fancy new Wi-Fi 7 or Wi-Fi 8 system this summer, prepare for some sticker shock. Analysts are already predicting that router prices could jump by 30% to 50% as existing supplies thin out and companies pass the cost of building U.S. factories onto us.
We’re likely entering a “hollowed-out” era for home networking. For the next year, you might find that your local big box store has plenty of older “legal” models, but not the cutting-edge gear that will be launching in the rest of the world.
While the threat of state-sponsored hacking is very real, a blanket ban on hardware based on where it’s built seems like an overly heavy-handed approach that could leave millions of Americans with aging, unpatchable tech.
My advice is to avoid panic buying, but if you really need a new router, get one now while the “pre-ban” stock is still available. Where possible, turn on automatic updates to make sure you have the latest firmware. If you can’t do it automatically, learn how to perform a manual update, then do it. Finally, watch the deadline in March 2027. If the government doesn’t extend that update waiver, we’ll all be shopping for routers made in Texas come next spring.
To view additional content, comment on articles, or submit a question of your own, visit my website at ItsGeekToMe.co (not .com!)
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