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📅 ⏱️ 👤 Ahmad Raza
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How to Fix Slow WiFi on One Device Only — 8 Targeted Fixes

When all other devices have fast WiFi but one device is slow, the issue is almost certainly in the device itself — not the router or ISP. Test the slow device at instantspeedtest.net/ and compare results to a working device on the same WiFi.

Single-Device Slow WiFi Causes — By Device Type

Device Type Most Common Cause Fix
Windows laptop/PC WiFi adapter driver outdated or throttled Update driver; disable power management
Windows laptop/PC Connected to 2.4 GHz while 5 GHz available Forget 2.4 GHz SSID; force 5 GHz connection
MacBook WiFi channel congestion (auto-selects busy channel) Router: manually assign WiFi channel 36/40/44 (5 GHz)
iPhone/Android Background apps consuming bandwidth Force close all background apps; check data usage
Smart TV Old firmware; 2.4 GHz only radio Update firmware; use Ethernet if TV supports it
Gaming console Console in WiFi dead zone Add mesh node; use Ethernet
Any device Too far from router / inside cabinet Reposition device; ensure line of sight
Any device Malware consuming bandwidth (PC) Run malware scan; check Task Manager network tab

The 2.4 GHz vs 5 GHz Band Problem — Single Device Cause

The most common cause of one device being slower than others: it’s connected to the 2.4 GHz band while other devices use 5 GHz. 2.4 GHz maximum real-world speed is 50–150 Mbps; 5 GHz delivers 300–600 Mbps at close range. Windows computers often stubbornly stick to 2.4 GHz once they’ve learned that SSID. Fix: go to Network Settings → WiFi → your network → Forget → reconnect by selecting specifically the 5 GHz SSID (if your router has separate SSIDs) or ensure band steering is enabled in the router to automatically assign 5 GHz to capable devices. See our 2.4 GHz vs 5 GHz guide.

Related Guides

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I check which WiFi band my device is connected to?

Windows: click WiFi icon in taskbar → your network → Properties → shows frequency band (2.4 GHz or 5 GHz). Android: Settings → WiFi → your network → shows frequency. iPhone: go to Settings → WiFi → tap the (i) next to your network — shows no frequency info directly, but if you have separate SSIDs for 2.4 and 5 GHz, the connected SSID tells you the band. Mac: hold Option key → click WiFi icon → shows connected frequency and channel.

Why does one device get lower speeds than others on the same 5 GHz?

If already confirmed on 5 GHz but still slower: WiFi adapter quality varies significantly between devices. A budget laptop’s 802.11ac 1×1 MIMO antenna achieves 150–200 Mbps maximum; a premium laptop’s 4×4 MIMO achieves 600+ Mbps at the same distance. The number of spatial streams (1×1, 2×2, 4×4) determines maximum WiFi speed per device independent of router quality. Check your device’s WiFi adapter specifications for MIMO stream count.