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frontpage Posted by PeteyTheStriker • 3d ago
frontpage Posted by PeteyTheStriker • 3d ago

Prime Members: TP-Link Tri-Band BE9700 Archer BE600 WiFi 7 Network Router

+ Free S/H (Earn 25% Back w/ Prime VISA)

$180

$250

28% off
Amazon
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Deal Details
Amazon has TP-Link Tri-Band BE9700 Archer BE600 WiFi 7 Network Router (Covers Up to 2600 Sq. Ft./120 Devices) on sale for $179.99 valid for Amazon Prime Members only. Shipping is free.

Additionally, Amazon VISA Prime Cardholders may receive 25% Back w/ purchase of this unit (using this method of payment)

Thanks to community member PeteyTheStriker for finding this deal

Note, product must be sold/shipped by Amazon

About the Product
  • 7-Stream/BE9700 Tri-Band WiFi 7 Speeds
  • 10 Gbps Port for Multi-Gigabit Connectivity
  • Next-Gen WiFi 7/TP-Link HomeShield
  • Maximized Covered Up to 2,600 Sq. Ft. coverage/120 Devices
  • VPN Clients and Server Supported

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff

Original Post

Written by PeteyTheStriker
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has TP-Link Tri-Band BE9700 Archer BE600 WiFi 7 Network Router (Covers Up to 2600 Sq. Ft./120 Devices) on sale for $179.99 valid for Amazon Prime Members only. Shipping is free.

Additionally, Amazon VISA Prime Cardholders may receive 25% Back w/ purchase of this unit (using this method of payment)

Thanks to community member PeteyTheStriker for finding this deal

Note, product must be sold/shipped by Amazon

About the Product
  • 7-Stream/BE9700 Tri-Band WiFi 7 Speeds
  • 10 Gbps Port for Multi-Gigabit Connectivity
  • Next-Gen WiFi 7/TP-Link HomeShield
  • Maximized Covered Up to 2,600 Sq. Ft. coverage/120 Devices
  • VPN Clients and Server Supported

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff

Original Post

Written by PeteyTheStriker

Community Voting

Deal Score
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Price Intelligence

Model: TP-Link Tri-Band BE9700 WiFi 7 Router Archer BE600 | 10G WAN/LAN +2.5G WAN/LAN +3× 2.5G LAN Ports, New 320Mhz Channel | Covers up to 2,600 Sq. ft and 120 Devices|VPN, HomeShield for Network Security

Deal History 

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Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
06/04/25Amazon$200
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Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 7/11/2025, 03:20 PM
Sold By Sale Price
Amazon$249.99

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PeteyTheStriker
12193 Posts
3490 Reputation
Already covered in other threads this is nothing but a rehash of last years information and besides one memo sent this year by a house representative asking for review this has almost zero movement but in the REVERSE direction....... Since that old information by the lazy journalist TP-Link has devested and built a new parent company no longer tied to China, moved the global HQ to California, and even was accepted by our federal government into CISA...... So TP-Link has complied with every US request...

On top of it, this never had anything to do with HACKING, lol. It was price competition, since they sell their products for way cheaper than Asus, Netgear, and others and still make a profit, which hurts the other manufactures pockets so they cry to their lobbyist for help since they cant compete with their outrageous prices.

So always good to read and understand the Fake news before taking a random lazy journalists word for it.

35 Comments

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2d ago
4,595 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
2d ago
AndrewinMD
2d ago
4,595 Posts
Apparently the federal government is weighing a ban on TP-Link routers, due to ties to Chinese hacking. I saw this headline a couple weeks ago: https://www.cnet.com/home/interne...lace-mine/
I'm not trying to thread crap but figured that some people might be interested in this information since it could wind up affecting long-term use of TP-Link products.
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2d ago
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2d ago
PeteyTheStriker
2d ago
Original Poster
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Quote from AndrewinMD :
Apparently the federal government is weighing a ban on TP-Link routers, due to ties to Chinese hacking. I saw this headline a couple weeks ago: https://www.cnet.com/home/interne...lace-mine/
I'm not trying to thread crap but figured that some people might be interested in this information since it could wind up affecting long-term use of TP-Link products.
Already covered in other threads this is nothing but a rehash of last years information and besides one memo sent this year by a house representative asking for review this has almost zero movement but in the REVERSE direction....... Since that old information by the lazy journalist TP-Link has devested and built a new parent company no longer tied to China, moved the global HQ to California, and even was accepted by our federal government into CISA...... So TP-Link has complied with every US request...

On top of it, this never had anything to do with HACKING, lol. It was price competition, since they sell their products for way cheaper than Asus, Netgear, and others and still make a profit, which hurts the other manufactures pockets so they cry to their lobbyist for help since they cant compete with their outrageous prices.

So always good to read and understand the Fake news before taking a random lazy journalists word for it.Wink
2d ago
1,524 Posts
Joined Nov 2008
2d ago
sarcasmo
2d ago
1,524 Posts
Moving to fiber internet soon (from cable). Any reason to upgrade my ASUS RT-AX86U to this?
Original Poster
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2d ago
12,193 Posts
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2d ago
PeteyTheStriker
2d ago
Original Poster
Pro
12,193 Posts
Quote from sarcasmo :
Moving to fiber internet soon (from cable). Any reason to upgrade my ASUS RT-AX86U to this?
Only reason to upgrade would be if you want to take advantage of WIFI 7 and have the WIFI7 clients to go along with it. Besides that no major reason to upgrade from WIFI 6 router to WIFI7.
2d ago
832 Posts
Joined Feb 2008
2d ago
Xtant
2d ago
832 Posts
This 25% offer (and all the other 10% offers) should work with the Amazon Store Card as well.

damn damn. Oh well. SD to whoever has it, congrats.
2d ago
78 Posts
Joined Jul 2015
2d ago
tman87
2d ago
78 Posts
Little traumatized recently by the spectrum wifi 7 router 1 gb service. Frequent dropped connections/wifi calls and inconsistent speed. Just bought the asus 86u pro on the current $150 deal because of reputation being super stable. Apartment with only 16 pro on wifi 7 and few wifi 6 devices m1 macbook etc. Am I overthinking this going with older tech, or the asus my best bet for stability and consistent performance for the next few years. Thanks!
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2d ago
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2d ago
PeteyTheStriker
2d ago
Original Poster
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Quote from tman87 :
Little traumatized recently by the spectrum wifi 7 router 1 gb service. Frequent dropped connections/wifi calls and inconsistent speed. Just bought the asus 86u pro on the current $150 deal because of reputation being super stable. Apartment with only 16 pro on wifi 7 and few wifi 6 devices m1 macbook etc. Am I overthinking this going with older tech, or the asus my best bet for stability and consistent performance for the next few years. Thanks!
I would go with the better specced, newer, cheaper gear but I am bias since I dont understand spending money on older more expensive gear and also posted this deal Big Grin. Since you already have wifi 7 gear feels silly not to take advantage of the newer tech. I guess you can always get both and run each for a week and decide which you like the best too.

Just FYI, as for your stability issues could be many factors to that, could have been a one off bad modem/router combo from spectrum, could also be line related or tap related issues on your run from spectrum. So no matter which router you go with if you continue to have issue it at that point is a spectrum issue...

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2d ago
752 Posts
Joined Aug 2008
2d ago
siulam
2d ago
752 Posts
I got this BE600 ($135 after 25% back) and the nighthawk RS600 ($500 MSR) for $221 used like new. Will compare and test both see which should stay.
2d ago
418 Posts
Joined Sep 2011

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2d ago
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2d ago
PeteyTheStriker
2d ago
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Quote from szefte :
stop buying tplink. seriously.....
Stop buying well reviewed, good performing products, for affordable prices, SURE RUMMY......
2d ago
4,595 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
2d ago
AndrewinMD
2d ago
4,595 Posts
Quote from PeteyTheStriker :
Already covered in other threads this is nothing but a rehash of last years information and besides one memo sent this year by a house representative asking for review this has almost zero movement but in the REVERSE direction....... Since that old information by the lazy journalist TP-Link has devested and built a new parent company no longer tied to China, moved the global HQ to California, and even was accepted by our federal government into CISA...... So TP-Link has complied with every US request...On top of it, this never had anything to do with HACKING, lol. It was price competition, since they sell their products for way cheaper than Asus, Netgear, and others and still make a profit, which hurts the other manufactures pockets so they cry to their lobbyist for help since they cant compete with their outrageous prices.So always good to read and understand the Fake news before taking a random lazy journalists word for it.Wink
If it was fake news with absolutely no substantiation, then why did they form a new parent company, move away from China, and basically do everything that the U.S. asked, as you claim? Seems like there was some substance there, much like there is with Huawei and ZTE, but they have (maybe) mitigated it to a slight degree. The CNET article references a WSJ article from last year, so are you saying those three journalists and the WSJ are lazy journalists as well? As for CISA, TP-Link did this:
Quote :
TP-Link, however, said in its announcement that the company is a signatory of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency's (CISA) "Secure by Design" pledge and actively participates in CISA's Secure by Design Technical Exchange Group.
They signed a pledge and participate in a group. Notable, yes, but not exactly handing them keys to government IT networks. One other interesting fact: the Government of India stated that TP-Link products represent a security risk, in May 2024. So, yes, lol, it had something to do with hacking. Well, not hacking for profit but state-sponsored exploitation in furtherance of Chinese government goals.

TP-Link is also under investigation by the Justice Department for predatory pricing, according to Bloomberg and reported also by Reuters (more lazy journalists, apparently): https://www.reuters.com/technolog...025-04-25/ If you can't figure out how predatory pricing leading to higher market penetration of compromised hardware could be beneficial to government-backed exploitation, let me know, and I can explain that. We've only recently, in relative terms, started to appreciate the problem with supply chain exploitation, and it's all connected. It was recently revealed that some Chinese-manufactured solar panels had some nefarious parts within them, and that industry dominance was certainly aided by illegal Chinese dumping and predatory pricing to drive out domestic competitors. Ditto for drones and DJI (the U.S. is apparently considering a ban on them as well, interestingly enough).

Incidentally, a group of Republican Senators and Representatives sent a letter in May of THIS YEAR calling on the Commerce Dept to ban TP-Link. So, it's most definitely not moving in the "REVERSE direction" since the Republicans are in firm control for another 18 months. Here's a handy link to the letter (2nd bullet at the top of the article): https://www.cybersecuritydive.com...er/748227/

So, multiple news organizations, another government, and multiple U.S. government agencies have expressed concern about TP-Link, as recently as a couple months ago. I'm just laying out facts, not defending anything. However, your insinuation that everything is hunky dory simply isn't true because I've seen no indication that any government investigations have concluded, which TP-Link would LOUDLY advertise if that were true. TP-Link still has 11,000 employees in China and still manufactures their products there, and if you think that doesn't tie them to the Chinese government, you are terribly naive.

The initial allegations are exceptionally plausible, consistent with a slew of open source reporting on similar allegations, and not yet resolved. Does any of it matter to the VAST majority of people? Probably not, but there's no reason to avoid laying out relevant (sourced) facts unless you have an agenda.
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2d ago
12,193 Posts
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2d ago
PeteyTheStriker
2d ago
Original Poster
Pro
12,193 Posts
Quote from AndrewinMD :
If it was fake news with absolutely no substantiation, then why did they form a new parent company, move away from China, and basically do everything that the U.S. asked, as you claim? Seems like there was some substance there, much like there is with Huawei and ZTE, but they have (maybe) mitigated it to a slight degree. The CNET article references a WSJ article from last year, so are you saying those three journalists and the WSJ are lazy journalists as well? As for CISA, TP-Link did this: They signed a pledge and participate in a group. Notable, yes, but not exactly handing them keys to government IT networks. One other interesting fact: the Government of India stated that TP-Link products represent a security risk, in May 2024. So, yes, lol, it had something to do with hacking. Well, not hacking for profit but state-sponsored exploitation in furtherance of Chinese government goals.

TP-Link is also under investigation by the Justice Department for predatory pricing, according to Bloomberg and reported also by Reuters (more lazy journalists, apparently): https://www.reuters.com/technolog...025-04-25/ If you can't figure out how predatory pricing leading to higher market penetration of compromised hardware could be beneficial to government-backed exploitation, let me know, and I can explain that. We've only recently, in relative terms, started to appreciate the problem with supply chain exploitation, and it's all connected. It was recently revealed that some Chinese-manufactured solar panels had some nefarious parts within them, and that industry dominance was certainly aided by illegal Chinese dumping and predatory pricing to drive out domestic competitors. Ditto for drones and DJI (the U.S. is apparently considering a ban on them as well, interestingly enough).

Incidentally, a group of Republican Senators and Representatives sent a letter in May of THIS YEAR calling on the Commerce Dept to ban TP-Link. So, it's most definitely not moving in the "REVERSE direction" since the Republicans are in firm control for another 18 months. Here's a handy link to the letter (2nd bullet at the top of the article): https://www.cybersecuritydive.com...er/748227/

So, multiple news organizations, another government, and multiple U.S. government agencies have expressed concern about TP-Link, as recently as a couple months ago. I'm just laying out facts, not defending anything. However, your insinuation that everything is hunky dory simply isn't true because I've seen no indication that any government investigations have concluded, which TP-Link would LOUDLY advertise if that were true. TP-Link still has 11,000 employees in China and still manufactures their products there, and if you think that doesn't tie them to the Chinese government, you are terribly naive.

The initial allegations are exceptionally plausible, consistent with a slew of open source reporting on similar allegations, and not yet resolved. Does any of it matter to the VAST majority of people? Probably not, but there's no reason to avoid laying out relevant (sourced) facts unless you have an agenda.
Why would they do that, for the same reason Tik Tok is doing what they are doing to comply with the US government to show they have nothing to hide..... That was a simple one.

As for your hacking, you mean to hacks that effect all the other major brands too but with less effect cause of their market share being pithful to TP-Link? As proven already countless times. Not to mention last major hack was to Asus routers.....

https://www.pcmag.com/news/cyberc...into-yours

https://www.cybersecuritydive.com...ng/749259/

Or do you want some Netgear hacks....

https://www.forbes.com/sites/dave...pdate-now/

https://www.netgear.com/hub/netwo...t-attacks/

So yeah, want to talk about hacking, the only difference is TP-Link has more market share than the above combined and its not even close. Thats why this was never about "hacking" but predatory pricing as even your memo mentions, which is the letter you referenced but its been a bit and I thought it was house reps, so I was wrong there it was Senate reps.

Yes the agenda of leveling the playing field when people always seem to forget to mention that there is nothing special about any of the manufactures besides market share and pricing.... When it comes to security they are all in the same bucket. Or did you forget that the USA installed back doors in all the major brands and spied on people all around the world without permission illegally already????

As for CISA, you cant just be a part of CISA cause of a pledge, you have to be allowed in by the agency... These new wave of routers are made to comply fully to CISA standards.... Which is why they list it as a feature.

" - TP-Link is a signatory of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency's (CISA) Secure-by-Design pledge. This device is designed, built, and maintained, with advanced security as a core requirement."

So yes reverse direction, cause some lobbyist are getting paid by router manufactures to attack TP-Link wont change much, since there is no proof of any subversive activity directly attributed by the parent company. As for things made in China, just about every sub component product made everywhere in the world use components made in China.... Are they dangers too that need to be banned???

People need to use their critical thinking skills more.... So the concern level for this is miniscule at best when put into real perspective.

Just wanted to add if the US in any shape way or form was serious about the security threat, they would still not TO THIS DAY be using and offering TP-Link products on their bases which they still are!
Last edited by PeteyTheStriker July 9, 2025 at 12:31 PM.
1
2d ago
181 Posts
Joined Jun 2008
2d ago
zichi
2d ago
181 Posts
Quote from sarcasmo :
Moving to fiber internet soon (from cable). Any reason to upgrade my ASUS RT-AX86U to this?
Well, kind of. The ASUS RT-AX86U only has a 2.5G WAN port, while the BE9700 has a 10G WAN port (but only 2.5G LAN ports). So, you would be able to somewhat take advantage of the fiber connection (assuming it is <= 10G). It would be better to get a router with a 10G WAN port and one or more 10G LAN ports. Then wired devices could take advantage of the full speed (assuming they can do 10G). A better upgrade, IMHO, would be a Ubiquiti Cloud Gateway Fiber and either keeping your AX86U as an AP or getting just an AP.
2d ago
3 Posts
Joined Sep 2015
2d ago
dxcheong
2d ago
3 Posts
Costco also has a version of this for $149. I just got it the other day and its pretty good. I don't have any WiFi 7 or 6E clients, but my 6 clients works great. I can't post a link but search for Archer BE9500 on Costco.com. There maybe some differences, but I couldn't see anything major.

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2d ago
268 Posts
Joined Dec 2007
2d ago
lurking4deals
2d ago
268 Posts
Quote from dxcheong :
Costco also has a version of this for $149. I just got it the other day and its pretty good. I don't have any WiFi 7 or 6E clients, but my 6 clients works great. I can't post a link but search for Archer BE9500 on Costco.com. There maybe some differences, but I couldn't see anything major.
this post describes the differences. Basically, they speed of the network ports.
https://slickdeals.net/f/18424018-archer-be9500-tri-band-wi-fi-7-router-plus-1-year-of-tp-link-homeshield-premium-included-149-99

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