Internet Speed for IoT — How Many Smart Devices Can Your Network Handle?
The Internet of Things (IoT) encompasses every internet-connected device beyond computers and phones. Understanding what smart devices actually need prevents over-engineering and under-planning. Test your overall network at instantspeedtest.net/.
IoT Device Bandwidth — Complete Category Overview
| IoT Category | Bandwidth per Device | Protocol |
|---|---|---|
| Smart speakers | 0.5–2 Mbps (active streaming) | WiFi 2.4 GHz |
| Smart thermostats | Under 0.01 Mbps | WiFi / Zigbee / Z-Wave |
| Smart light bulbs | Under 0.001 Mbps | Zigbee / Z-Wave (local) or WiFi |
| Smart plugs / outlets | Under 0.001 Mbps | WiFi / Zigbee |
| Security cameras (1080p) | 1–4 Mbps upload | WiFi 2.4/5 GHz |
| Video doorbells | 1–3 Mbps upload (events) | WiFi 2.4 GHz |
| Smart TVs / streaming | 5–25 Mbps download | WiFi 5 GHz |
| Robot vacuums | Under 0.1 Mbps | WiFi 2.4 GHz |
| Smart locks | Under 0.001 Mbps | WiFi / Zigbee / Z-Wave |
| Smart garage openers | Under 0.01 Mbps | WiFi 2.4 GHz |
Router Device Limits vs Bandwidth Limits — Two Separate Constraints
A 100-device IoT home doesn’t necessarily need more bandwidth — most IoT devices use under 0.01 Mbps. But it needs a router capable of maintaining 100+ simultaneous WiFi connections without degradation. Budget routers (pre-2020 WiFi 5) become unstable with 30+ connected devices due to CPU and memory limitations. WiFi 6 routers with OFDMA handle 50–100+ simultaneous IoT devices efficiently. Two separate scaling concerns: (1) bandwidth — cameras and streaming devices add up; calculate total by summing bandwidth-heavy devices. (2) Connection table capacity — routers advertise “max 50 devices” or “max 100 devices.” WiFi 6 routers handle 100+ devices reliably. See our device count guide.
Related Guides
- How Many Devices on WiFi?
- Smart Home Internet Speed
- Smart Home Hub Speed
- WiFi 7 vs WiFi 6
- Guest WiFi for IoT
- Does Router Affect Speed?
Frequently Asked Questions
How much internet speed do I need for 50 smart home devices?
50 smart home devices of the typical mix (lights, thermostats, plugs, speakers, 4 cameras) use approximately 15–30 Mbps total during peak activity — dominated by cameras (4 cameras × 2 Mbps = 8 Mbps) and active speakers (2 Mbps each). A 100 Mbps broadband plan easily handles this. The challenge is router capacity — ensure your router supports 50+ simultaneous connections. Most modern WiFi 6 routers handle this without issue.
Is Zigbee or Z-Wave better than WiFi for IoT devices?
For lights and switches: Zigbee or Z-Wave is better. These protocols use local hub communication (no internet required per device) — keeping your router’s WiFi radio uncrowded. A hub like Samsung SmartThings or Amazon Echo connects 50–100 Zigbee/Z-Wave devices but only uses a single WiFi connection to the router. This dramatically reduces WiFi congestion compared to having 100 individual WiFi-connected bulbs. Matter over Thread is the emerging successor — similar local-first architecture with broader vendor support.