๐Ÿ“ถ Router & network

Router settings that break Wi-Fi printers

Quick answer
If the printer connects to a phone hotspot but not your home router, the problem is a router setting โ€” not the printer. The most common causes are: AP isolation (blocks device-to-device communication), band steering forcing 5GHz (most printers only support 2.4GHz), WPA3-only security (many printers only support WPA2), or a mesh network putting devices on different nodes that can't see each other. All of these are fixable in the router's admin page.

Router settings that cause printer problems

SettingWhat it doesWhy it breaks printersFix
AP isolation / Client isolationPrevents wireless devices from communicating with each otherComputer can't see the printer โ€” they're on the same Wi-Fi but can't talkDisable AP isolation in router admin โ†’ Wireless โ†’ Advanced settings
Band steeringAutomatically moves devices to 5GHz for faster speedsMost printers only support 2.4GHz โ€” they get kicked off or can't joinDisable band steering, or create a separate 2.4GHz-only SSID for the printer
5GHz only modeRouter broadcasts only on 5GHz bandPrinter can't see the network at all โ€” 2.4GHz radio is offEnable the 2.4GHz band in router settings
WPA3 onlyUses the newest Wi-Fi security standardOlder and mid-range printers only support WPA2 โ€” they can't authenticateSwitch router to WPA2/WPA3 mixed mode (sometimes called "Transitional")
Hidden SSIDWi-Fi network name doesn't broadcastMany printer setup wizards can't find hidden networks during initial setupTemporarily unhide the SSID during printer setup, or enter the SSID manually on the printer's control panel
MAC filteringOnly allows pre-approved devices to connectPrinter's MAC address isn't in the allow listAdd the printer's MAC address to the router's MAC whitelist (find it on the printer's network config page)
Guest network isolationGuest network can't see devices on the main networkIf the printer is on main and the computer is on guest (or vice versa), they can't communicatePut both the printer and computer on the same network โ€” both on main, or both on guest

Mesh networks and printers

Mesh Wi-Fi systems (Google Wifi, Eero, Orbi, Deco) create a single network name across multiple nodes. This usually works well, but can cause problems when the printer connects to a different node than the computer. Some mesh systems isolate nodes from each other, or the printer's weak Wi-Fi radio connects to a distant node instead of the nearest one.

  • Check your mesh app โ€” confirm the printer and computer are both connected and on the same network (not a guest network)
  • If the mesh has a "client steering" or "fast roaming" feature, try disabling it temporarily and reconnecting the printer
  • Place the printer physically near one mesh node โ€” printer Wi-Fi radios are weaker than phone or laptop radios and need a stronger signal
  • If nothing works, connect the printer to a mesh node via Ethernet cable. This bypasses Wi-Fi entirely and gives the printer a stable, permanent connection
Best practice for mesh + printers
If your mesh system supports it, assign the printer a static IP via the mesh admin app and disable any "band steering" or "smart connect" for the printer. This prevents the mesh from moving the printer between bands or nodes. The most reliable option is an Ethernet cable from the printer to the nearest mesh node.

WPS setup โ€” when to use it and when not to

WPS (Wi-Fi Protected Setup) lets you connect the printer to Wi-Fi by pressing a button on the router and a button on the printer within 2 minutes. It's the simplest method for initial setup. However, WPS doesn't work on routers that have WPS disabled for security reasons, and some newer routers have removed it entirely. If WPS fails, use the printer's control panel to select the Wi-Fi network and enter the password manually, or use the manufacturer's setup app.

How to access your router's admin page

  • Open a browser and type your router's IP address โ€” usually 192.168.1.1 or 192.168.0.1 (check the sticker on the bottom of your router)
  • Log in with the admin username and password (default is often admin/admin or printed on the router sticker)
  • Navigate to Wireless or Wi-Fi settings to find AP isolation, band steering, and security settings
  • After making changes, save and reboot the router โ€” then reconnect the printer
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For ISP-provided routers (AT&T, Comcast/Xfinity, Verizon), the admin page URL and default login are often different. Check the sticker on the router or search "[your ISP] router admin login" for the specific address.
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