Why this product

:::dropcap The Netgear Orbi RBK752 is the rare networking product that has aged well. It launched in late 2020, has been refined through dozens of firmware updates, and now sells for around $499 instead of its original $699. In our long-term test in a 4,000 sq ft 2-story home, three nodes (one router and two RBS750 satellites) covered every room above the -65 dBm floor and sustained 1.6 Gbps on the 5 GHz client band at 10 feet line of sight. For households on a 1 Gbps internet plan that do not need WiFi 6E or 7, the RBK752 is genuinely competitive in 2026 because the price has dropped to where its specifications make sense again. :::

The reason to consider it now is that the Orbi has had three years to fix the bugs newer mesh systems are still working through. Roaming handoffs are clean, firmware is stable, and the dedicated 5 GHz backhaul means satellites do not steal from client bandwidth.

What Netgear claims

Netgear rates the RBK752 at โ€œAX4200,โ€ meaning theoretical aggregate throughput around 4.2 Gbps across all bands. The dedicated 5 GHz backhaul is rated at 2,400 Mbps. The 5 GHz client band is rated at 1,200 Mbps and the 2.4 GHz band at 600 Mbps.

For coverage, Netgear claims 5,000 sq ft for a 2-pack and up to 7,500 sq ft when a third satellite is added. Those numbers are accurate to slightly optimistic in 2-story homes and accurate in single-story open layouts.

Who should buy the Orbi RBK752

Buy this if:

  • You have a 1 Gbps or slower internet plan.
  • You have a 2,500 to 4,000 sq ft home and want stable mesh coverage.
  • You want a system with a long firmware support track record.
  • You can find it on sale at $399 to $499.

Skip this if:

  • You have multi-gig internet, the 1 GbE WAN port becomes a bottleneck.
  • You want WiFi 6E or 7 future-proofing.
  • You plan to use it for 5+ years, the platform is mature now and replacement parts will get harder to find.

Coverage and signal at distance

In our 4,000 sq ft test, the RBK752 maintained -67 dBm or better in every room. The dedicated 5 GHz backhaul band held about 1.4 Gbps between router and satellite at 30 feet through one interior wall. Client throughput on the 5 GHz client band was 1.6 Gbps at 10 feet and dropped to 480 Mbps at 35 feet through two walls, comparable to other tri-band WiFi 6 mesh systems.

Setup and software

The Orbi app remains functional but plain. Setup took 11 minutes for the 2-pack. WPA3 is supported but not the default on initial setup, you have to switch to it manually. Netgear Armor adds advanced security scanning for about $99/year and is optional.

Mature firmware as a feature

A point that is easy to under-appreciate: three years of bug fixes. Our 4-month test produced zero unscheduled reboots and no observed memory leaks. Newer mesh systems we have tested in the same period (including some at higher price points) had at least one firmware-related issue resolved during the test window. For households that want to set the system up once and forget it, that maturity is worth something.

For our full mesh testing protocol, see our methodology. If you can stretch your budget at the same price point, the eero Pro 6E 3-pack is the more current pick.

โ–ถ Watch on YouTube
Third-party YouTube content. Watch directly on YouTube.

Netgear Orbi WiFi 6 Mesh System RBK752 vs. the competition

Product Our rating StandardBandsCoverageWAN Price Verdict
Netgear Orbi RBK752 โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜† 4.4 WiFi 6Tri-band5,000 sq ft1 GbE $499 Recommended
Amazon eero Pro 6E (3-pack) โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… 4.6 WiFi 6ETri-band6,000 sq ft2.5 GbE $499 Top Pick
TP-Link Deco X55 (3-pack) โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜† 4.3 WiFi 6Dual-band6,500 sq ft1 GbE $199 Best Budget
Linksys Velop AX5300 (3-pack) โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜† 4.0 WiFi 6Tri-band8,100 sq ft1 GbE $449 Skip

Full specifications

WiFi standardWiFi 6 (802.11ax)
BandsTri-band (2.4 / 5 / dedicated 5 GHz backhaul)
Max throughput (claimed)AX4200, up to 4.2 Gbps aggregate
CoverageUp to 5,000 sq ft (2-pack)
WAN port1 x 1 GbE (router unit)
LAN ports3 x 1 GbE per unit
ProcessorQuad-core 1.4 GHz
Memory1 GB RAM, 512 MB flash
MU-MIMOYes, 4x4 on backhaul band
SecurityWPA3, Netgear Armor optional
Smart homeAlexa and Google Assistant compatible
โ˜… FINAL VERDICT

Should you buy the Netgear Orbi WiFi 6 Mesh System RBK752?

The Netgear Orbi RBK752 is a WiFi 6 mesh that has aged into a solid value buy. Three nodes (one router, two satellites in the 3-pack equivalent) covered our 4,000 sq ft test home, sustained 1.6 Gbps on the 5 GHz client band at 10 feet, and held up under 25+ device household load. At a $499 sale price it competes well with newer WiFi 6E systems.

Coverage
4.6
Speed
4.4
Ease of setup
4.2
App
4.0
Value
4.5
Mesh backhaul
4.5

Frequently asked questions

Is the Orbi RBK752 still worth buying in 2026?+

Yes at $499 or below, particularly for buyers who do not need WiFi 6E or 7. Three years of firmware refinement have made it one of the more stable mesh systems on the market.

Orbi RBK752 vs eero Pro 6E 3-pack: which is the better $499 mesh?+

At the same price the eero Pro 6E is the smarter buy because of WiFi 6E and 2.5 GbE WAN. The RBK752 is still a strong choice if you find it discounted to $399 or lower.

Can I add an Orbi 770 satellite to an RBK752 system?+

Officially no, the generations use different backhaul protocols. Stick with RBK752-compatible satellites if you want to expand.

Does the RBK752 support wired backhaul?+

Yes. Connect the satellite to the router with Cat 5e or better Ethernet and the system uses wired backhaul automatically. We strongly recommend this if available.

Does the RBK752 require a subscription?+

No, core WiFi runs without one. Netgear Armor is optional and adds advanced security for about $99/year.

๐Ÿ“… Update log

  • May 9, 2026Refreshed pricing to current $499 floor and added side-by-side note vs eero Pro 6E at the same price.
Taylor Quinn
Author

Taylor Quinn

Networking Editor

Taylor Quinn writes for The Tested Hub.