Find practical router locations for stronger outdoor connections. Compare bands, losses, height, and coverage limits. Cover gardens, patios, pergolas, paths, seating, and nearby sheds.
This calculator estimates outdoor WiFi reach by combining radio power, frequency, garden losses, hedge losses, and a design safety margin.
EIRP = Transmit Power + Antenna Gain − Cable Loss FSPL(dB) = 32.44 + 20 × log10(Frequency MHz) + 20 × log10(Distance km) Received Signal = EIRP + Client Gain + Mounting Bonus − FSPL − Environment Loss − Hedge Loss − Moisture Loss Coverage Radius = farthest distance where Received Signal ≥ Target RSSI + Safety Margin Estimated Routers Needed = Garden Area ÷ Effective Coverage AreaEnvironment loss is modeled as extra loss per meter for lawns, beds, pergolas, hedges, and reflections. This makes the result practical for gardens, though it remains an estimate rather than a measured site survey.
| Scenario | Garden size | Band | Environment | Radius | Routers | Suggested placement |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Open patio lawn | 18 m × 12 m | 2.4 GHz | Open lawn | 29.50 m | 1 | Center, mounted at 2.6 m |
| Mixed beds and pergola | 24 m × 16 m | 5 GHz | Mixed beds and pathways | 16.75 m | 2 | Patio-first, spaced about 22 m |
| Dense hedges and shed | 30 m × 20 m | 2.4 GHz | Dense hedges and shrubs | 12.25 m | 3 | House-side plus rear support node |
Lower frequencies generally lose less strength over distance and through foliage. That makes 2.4 GHz better for reach, while higher bands usually favor speed over long garden coverage.
Yes. Dense shrubs, wet leaves, and living plant mass can absorb and scatter radio energy. Moisture often worsens attenuation, so rainy or heavily watered gardens may need shorter spacing or extra nodes.
Not always. Center placement balances coverage, but house feeds, patios, sheds, and target activity zones may justify an offset location. Practical cabling and power access also matter.
A modest elevated position often works well. Mounting too low increases blockage from furniture and planting beds, while extremely high placement can overshoot nearby devices and complicate maintenance.
That depends on your chosen target RSSI and margin. Many cameras and general browsing work near moderate thresholds, but stable video streaming usually benefits from stronger design targets and less foliage blockage.
Large gardens, heavy hedges, multiple structures, and high-speed expectations often require more than one node. Additional coverage points reduce dead zones and keep edge performance more consistent.
Yes. The calculator is useful for outdoor seating areas, pergolas, garden offices, sheds, and side yards. Choose the environment and placement preference that most closely matches your space.
No. This is a planning tool for estimating radius, count, and placement. Final installation should still be checked with real signal testing because materials, reflections, and interference vary by site.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.