Deco 7 Pro BE10000 Whole Home Mesh WiFi ...

TP-Link Deco BE63 BE10000 Drops 35% Off During Amazon Spring Sale

Amazon's top-selling Wi-Fi 7 mesh system, the TP-Link Deco BE63 BE10000, is down to $324 from $499 during the Amazon Spring Sale, a 35% discount on tri-band coverage for your entire home.

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

Updated Mar 29, 2026

Deco 7 Pro BE10000 Whole Home Mesh WiFi ...

Amazon's number one best-selling Wi-Fi 7 router just got significantly cheaper. The TP-Link Deco BE63 BE10000 three-node mesh system has dropped from $499 to $324 as part of the Amazon Spring Sale, a flat 35% off with no coupon codes or hoops to jump through.

Why $324 for Wi-Fi 7 is genuinely worth paying attention to

Here's the thing: Wi-Fi 7 mesh systems have been sitting at a price point that kept most people on the sidelines. When the Deco BE63 launched, it was priced closer to $500, and even a $400 purchase at Costco was considered a strong deal at the time. At $324, this is the lowest the system has been priced, and it puts full Wi-Fi 7 coverage within reach for anyone who has been waiting for the right moment to upgrade.

For gamers specifically, the performance specs here are not just marketing noise. The system runs tri-band Wi-Fi 7 with MLO (Multi-Link Operation), meaning it can transmit across the 2.4GHz, 5GHz, and 6GHz bands simultaneously rather than picking one at a time. The 6GHz band supports 320MHz channels, something Wi-Fi 6E could not do, which translates to more available bandwidth and lower congestion in dense wireless environments.

TP-Link claims theoretical speeds up to 10Gbps across the system. Real-world performance lands closer to 2Gbps under ideal conditions, which is still double what a standard gigabit connection delivers. For anyone running a fiber connection above 1Gbps, the 2.5Gbps ethernet ports on each node mean you can actually use that bandwidth instead of bottlenecking it at the router.

What the three-node setup actually covers

Each of the three Deco BE63 satellites can function as the primary router, so placement flexibility is built in from the start. Mesh systems work by having multiple nodes communicate with each other to blanket a space in coverage, rather than relying on a single router to push signal through walls and floors.

The wired side of this system is worth highlighting separately. Each node ships with four 2.5Gbps ethernet ports, which supports wired backhaul between nodes. Wired backhaul keeps the wireless bands free for client devices instead of using them for node-to-node communication, which is a meaningful performance difference in larger homes or multi-floor setups. You can read a detailed technical breakdown of the hardware in this full review of the TP-Link Deco BE63 system.

The regulatory window that makes timing matter

The sale price alone would be enough reason to flag this deal. The regulatory situation adds another layer.

TP-Link routers are currently caught up in a US government review of foreign-made networking hardware. The ban on new foreign-made router sales means that once existing Deco BE63 stock is gone, TP-Link may not be able to introduce a successor product in the US market. That is not a guarantee the product disappears tomorrow, but it does mean the window for picking one up at retail is finite in a way it was not six months ago.

For anyone who has been sitting on a Wi-Fi 5 or older Wi-Fi 6 setup and waiting for the right time to move to Wi-Fi 7, this combination of price drop and supply uncertainty makes the decision more straightforward than usual.

The Amazon Spring Sale is a limited-time event, so the $324 price point will not hold indefinitely. If you want more context on the hardware specs before committing, the product page for the Deco BE63 BE10000 breaks down the full technical details. Make sure to check out more:

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updated

March 29th 2026

posted

March 29th 2026

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