Broadcom announces two dual-band Wi-Fi 8 chips — performance bifurcation introduced with Wi-Fi 7 lives on with the next gen

Broadcom Wi-Fi 8
(Image credit: Broadcom)

Today at CES, Broadcom is expanding the family with two new dual-band Wi-Fi 8 chips that combine 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz radios into a single chip. The BCM6714 is the lower-end offering, with a 3x4 arrangement. That means it supports three spatial streams on the 2.4 GHz band and four on the 5 GHz band. The BCM6719 ups the ante by delivering four spatial streams across both bands.

And with that news, I can already see the collective eyerolls of the enthusiast community. When Wi-Fi 7 launched, the first devices to hit the market were more expensive tri-band solutions that supported the 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 6 GHz bands. Later, more affordable networking products arrived, supporting only the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands. While this allowed manufacturers to hit a lower price point, it also created confusion in the marketplace – just because a router was labeled Wi-Fi 7 didn't mean it supported the full feature set. That confusion will live on for another generation.

Broadcom Wi-Fi 8

(Image credit: Broadcom)

But that's not all; Broadcom also announced the BCM4918 Wi-Fi 8 APU, which is compatible with the BCM6714, BCM6719, and BCM6718. This system-on-chip is designed for high-performance computing and AI acceleration. Not only does it include an onboard neural engine for on-device AI/ML inference and acceleration, but it also features dedicated network engines to handle wireless and wired traffic, bypassing the CPU. It supports multi-gigabit Ethernet for powering your high-flying wired network. The chip also enabled Edge-AI processing and real-time network optimization.

Broadcom says it is already sampling the BCM6714 and BCM6719 to its "early access customers," pointing to general availability in consumer-grade networking products by the end of 2026, a similar timeline to MediaTek's. This seems doable, as we've already seen prototype Wi-Fi 8 hardware this week at CES, and Asus even told us that its first-generation Wi-Fi 8 products will launch later this year, with second-generation hardware coming in 2027.

Asus Wi-Fi 8

(Image credit: Future)

Wi-Fi 8 is designed to improve reliability and lower latency rather than deliver a massive uplift in theoretical speeds (as had been the case with previous Wi-Fi iterations). Instead of obscene theoretical speeds that consumers likely won't see in the real world, the IEEE says that Wi-Fi 8 will deliver up to a 25 percent improvement in real-world speeds while reducing latency. Asus specifically highlighted improvements to mid-range throughput and showcased a 10 percent uplift in throughput over its fastest Wi-Fi 7 router with early prototypes.

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Brandon Hill

Brandon Hill is a senior editor at Tom's Hardware. He has written about PC and Mac tech since the late 1990s with bylines at AnandTech, DailyTech, and Hot Hardware. When he is not consuming copious amounts of tech news, he can be found enjoying the NC mountains or the beach with his wife and two sons.