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expiredphoinix | Staff posted Nov 20, 2025 09:04 AM
expiredphoinix | Staff posted Nov 20, 2025 09:04 AM

GL.iNet GL-MT3000 Beryl AX Pocket-Sized Wi-Fi 6 Wireless Travel Gigabit Router

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$70

$108

35% off
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GL Technologies via Amazon has GL.iNet GL-MT3000 (Beryl AX) Pocket-Sized Wi-Fi 6 Wireless Travel Gigabit Router on sale for $69.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.

Specs:
  • 1x 2.5G WAN port
  • 1x 1G LAN port
  • 1x USB 3.0
  • MT7981B 1.3GHz dual-core processor
  • Dual band network
  • Wireless speed 574Mbps (2.4GHz), 2402Mbps (5GHz)
  • OpenVPN and WireGuard pre-installed, compatible with 30+ VPN service providers
  • Max. VPN speed of 150 Mbps (OpenVPN); 300 Mbps (WireGuard)
  • OpenWrt 21.02 firmware

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff
  • This offer is slightly less than the previous FP deal.
  • Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars from customer reviews.
  • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
  • If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.

Original Post

Written by phoinix | Staff
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
GL Technologies via Amazon has GL.iNet GL-MT3000 (Beryl AX) Pocket-Sized Wi-Fi 6 Wireless Travel Gigabit Router on sale for $69.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Deal Hunter phoinix for finding this deal.

Specs:
  • 1x 2.5G WAN port
  • 1x 1G LAN port
  • 1x USB 3.0
  • MT7981B 1.3GHz dual-core processor
  • Dual band network
  • Wireless speed 574Mbps (2.4GHz), 2402Mbps (5GHz)
  • OpenVPN and WireGuard pre-installed, compatible with 30+ VPN service providers
  • Max. VPN speed of 150 Mbps (OpenVPN); 300 Mbps (WireGuard)
  • OpenWrt 21.02 firmware

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff
  • This offer is slightly less than the previous FP deal.
  • Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars from customer reviews.
  • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.
  • Don't have Amazon Prime? Students can get a free 6-Month Amazon Prime trial with free 2-day shipping, unlimited video streaming & more.
  • If you're not a student, there's also a free 1-Month Amazon Prime trial available.

Original Post

Written by phoinix | Staff

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Model: GL.iNet GL-MT3000 (Beryl AX) Pocket-Sized Wi-Fi 6 Wireless Travel Gigabit Router – OpenVPN Wireguard Connect Public & Hotel Wi-Fi Captive Portal Repeater Extender Cybersecurity Tethering RV

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Top Comments

Spacey123
203 Posts
137 Reputation
Some uses I have actually done:
If the hotel/plane/whatever charges for wifi per-device, pay for only one device and then share it. The router connects it's "wan" to the hotel wifi via the wifi radio, but also uses the same wifi radio to create my own wifi network for all my devices. It's a wifi-to-wifi router.
If the hotel has a captive portal, and I have a lot of devices (personal laptop, work laptop, maybe kindle, maybe tablet, maybe streaming stick on TV) then I can use the travel router. I don't have to reconfigure EVERY device. They already know my private network's SSID and password. I just log into the router and select the upstream wifi network, then log into the captive portal once. That one captive portal login enables access for all of my devices. This is especially important if I have a lot of devices AND the hotel forces a relogin of every device every 24 hours, and I'm staying for a week or more.
If my device doesn't have a good way to log into captive portals, this takes care of that. For example, the original Chromecast had no UI for portals at all. Putting it behind the travel router ensured it worked.
One time I stayed at an airbnb and the Internet they gave me went down. I found the router, and was surprised to see they appeared to have two different Internet connections into two different routers. The first router showed no link. OK that's down. I tried plugging my laptop into the 2nd router and it worked great. But I didn't know the wifi name/password for that router. So, I dropped my travel router beside it, connected via Ethernet, and had my own wifi network for the rest of the trip.
Just a month ago I stayed at a hotel that offered free wifi, but they artificially limited each device to like 3 mbps. So, I connected my laptop's built in wifi as connection #1. I connected my travel router to wifi, then plugged ethernet from that into my laptop as connection #2. I put my phone on the wifi, enabled USB tethering, and connected that to my laptop via USB as connection #3. Then, I used Speedify to bond all 3 of the laptop's wifi connections. That got me 9 mbps on their 3-mbps-per-user wifi.
Note: Modern phones can generally do wifi-to-wifi routing. This has eliminated most of my need for a travel router. However, I still carry a travel router just because it's nice to have the local LAN not go down every time I leave the room with my phone. For example, if I want to leave my laptop downloading a file while I'm away doing some activity all day...
A lot of people use travel routers for VPNs too. I never do that, and instead just do a VPN right on my end device.
Magnicious
9 Posts
10 Reputation
This can connect to the wireless Internet and act as a repeater. The goal of it is you can use a VPN at the router level on the router and it is most secure especially when at hotels. Secondly you can bring it on a cruise where wifi is charge per device and use this to get the Internet and connect your other devices all while paying for one connection! Works on airplane wifi as well.

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Nov 20, 2025 08:35 PM
310 Posts
Joined Jan 2009
4vangerNov 20, 2025 08:35 PM
310 Posts
Surprisingly high quality and feature-full small router. Feels rock-solid.
Nov 20, 2025 09:10 PM
22 Posts
Joined Oct 2017
KingPyrrhusNov 20, 2025 09:10 PM
22 Posts
I personally use this exact router and its been great, handles surfshark VPN with no problem as well as my own home VPN profile.
Nov 20, 2025 09:23 PM
242 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
BradS1993Nov 20, 2025 09:23 PM
242 Posts
What is the main use of these? I used one in the past at hotels, but it seems few hotels now have wired connections.
Nov 20, 2025 09:29 PM
9 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
MagniciousNov 20, 2025 09:29 PM
9 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Magnicious

Quote from BradS1993 :
What is the main use of these? I used one in the past at hotels, but it seems few hotels now have wired connections.
This can connect to the wireless Internet and act as a repeater. The goal of it is you can use a VPN at the router level on the router and it is most secure especially when at hotels. Secondly you can bring it on a cruise where wifi is charge per device and use this to get the Internet and connect your other devices all while paying for one connection! Works on airplane wifi as well.
1
Nov 20, 2025 09:33 PM
87 Posts
Joined Jan 2016
jnrfalconNov 20, 2025 09:33 PM
87 Posts
Quote from BradS1993 :
What is the main use of these? I used one in the past at hotels, but it seems few hotels now have wired connections.
You don't have to use ethernet for WAN. It supports repeater mode, broadcasting your phone's internet via tether and so on. The most important bit is router level VPN and adblocking, so you don't have to have VPN on each device. For WFHers, it's useful that they can access home network or company network anywhere in the world with super simple setups, and appear to be home or in office for both security and flexibility reasons.
Nov 20, 2025 09:36 PM
87 Posts
Joined Jan 2016
jnrfalconNov 20, 2025 09:36 PM
87 Posts
For people that's looking for a bit extra oomph or stability at higher bandwidth, GL iNet will soon release Beryl 7 with WiFi 7.
1
Nov 20, 2025 10:14 PM
203 Posts
Joined Jan 2013
Spacey123Nov 20, 2025 10:14 PM
203 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank Spacey123

Quote from BradS1993 :
What is the main use of these? I used one in the past at hotels, but it seems few hotels now have wired connections.
Some uses I have actually done:
If the hotel/plane/whatever charges for wifi per-device, pay for only one device and then share it. The router connects it's "wan" to the hotel wifi via the wifi radio, but also uses the same wifi radio to create my own wifi network for all my devices. It's a wifi-to-wifi router.
If the hotel has a captive portal, and I have a lot of devices (personal laptop, work laptop, maybe kindle, maybe tablet, maybe streaming stick on TV) then I can use the travel router. I don't have to reconfigure EVERY device. They already know my private network's SSID and password. I just log into the router and select the upstream wifi network, then log into the captive portal once. That one captive portal login enables access for all of my devices. This is especially important if I have a lot of devices AND the hotel forces a relogin of every device every 24 hours, and I'm staying for a week or more.
If my device doesn't have a good way to log into captive portals, this takes care of that. For example, the original Chromecast had no UI for portals at all. Putting it behind the travel router ensured it worked.
One time I stayed at an airbnb and the Internet they gave me went down. I found the router, and was surprised to see they appeared to have two different Internet connections into two different routers. The first router showed no link. OK that's down. I tried plugging my laptop into the 2nd router and it worked great. But I didn't know the wifi name/password for that router. So, I dropped my travel router beside it, connected via Ethernet, and had my own wifi network for the rest of the trip.
Just a month ago I stayed at a hotel that offered free wifi, but they artificially limited each device to like 3 mbps. So, I connected my laptop's built in wifi as connection #1. I connected my travel router to wifi, then plugged ethernet from that into my laptop as connection #2. I put my phone on the wifi, enabled USB tethering, and connected that to my laptop via USB as connection #3. Then, I used Speedify to bond all 3 of the laptop's wifi connections. That got me 9 mbps on their 3-mbps-per-user wifi.
Note: Modern phones can generally do wifi-to-wifi routing. This has eliminated most of my need for a travel router. However, I still carry a travel router just because it's nice to have the local LAN not go down every time I leave the room with my phone. For example, if I want to leave my laptop downloading a file while I'm away doing some activity all day...
A lot of people use travel routers for VPNs too. I never do that, and instead just do a VPN right on my end device.
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Nov 20, 2025 10:41 PM
786 Posts
Joined May 2008
PoohBahNov 20, 2025 10:41 PM
786 Posts
I have the Opal version of this router (AC1200) and it is amazing. I have a full time VPN straight to my house from anywhere on the planet (Opal->Wireguard->opnsense). An added bonus is you never have to connect your tablet/laptop to the hotel wifi ever again. I have no need anything faster than the Opal when traveling, and the Opal is also the smallest and lightest model (barely) that they still sell. My tech travel kit is the Opal with a Firestick 4K in a small case. Love it.
Nov 20, 2025 11:32 PM
309 Posts
Joined May 2009
kunjoosNov 20, 2025 11:32 PM
309 Posts
Beryl or the Slate, which is also on sale at Amazing n for $23 more?
Nov 21, 2025 01:28 AM
257 Posts
Joined Apr 2004
maniacripperNov 21, 2025 01:28 AM
257 Posts
The best perk besides the ones mentioned is using the same SSID and password on this as your home network, so all youre devices, laptops, phones, etc just work once it's up and running, no need to login on each device to whatever Internet is available.
Nov 21, 2025 02:08 AM
200 Posts
Joined Jan 2005
Two_4_ExploringNov 21, 2025 02:08 AM
200 Posts
Quote from Spacey123 :
Some uses I have actually done:
If the hotel/plane/whatever charges for wifi per-device, pay for only one device and then share it. The router connects it's "wan" to the hotel wifi via the wifi radio, but also uses the same wifi radio to create my own wifi network for all my devices. It's a wifi-to-wifi router.
If the hotel has a captive portal, and I have a lot of devices (personal laptop, work laptop, maybe kindle, maybe tablet, maybe streaming stick on TV) then I can use the travel router. I don't have to reconfigure EVERY device. They already know my private network's SSID and password. I just log into the router and select the upstream wifi network, then log into the captive portal once. That one captive portal login enables access for all of my devices. This is especially important if I have a lot of devices AND the hotel forces a relogin of every device every 24 hours, and I'm staying for a week or more.
If my device doesn't have a good way to log into captive portals, this takes care of that. For example, the original Chromecast had no UI for portals at all. Putting it behind the travel router ensured it worked.
One time I stayed at an airbnb and the Internet they gave me went down. I found the router, and was surprised to see they appeared to have two different Internet connections into two different routers. The first router showed no link. OK that's down. I tried plugging my laptop into the 2nd router and it worked great. But I didn't know the wifi name/password for that router. So, I dropped my travel router beside it, connected via Ethernet, and had my own wifi network for the rest of the trip.
Just a month ago I stayed at a hotel that offered free wifi, but they artificially limited each device to like 3 mbps. So, I connected my laptop's built in wifi as connection #1. I connected my travel router to wifi, then plugged ethernet from that into my laptop as connection #2. I put my phone on the wifi, enabled USB tethering, and connected that to my laptop via USB as connection #3. Then, I used Speedify to bond all 3 of the laptop's wifi connections. That got me 9 mbps on their 3-mbps-per-user wifi.
Note: Modern phones can generally do wifi-to-wifi routing. This has eliminated most of my need for a travel router. However, I still carry a travel router just because it's nice to have the local LAN not go down every time I leave the room with my phone. For example, if I want to leave my laptop downloading a file while I'm away doing some activity all day...
A lot of people use travel routers for VPNs too. I never do that, and instead just do a VPN right on my end device.

Great post. I'll add even the firestick (4K) that can handle a basic captive portal choked on a pop-up that required me to scroll to the bottom and agree to the terms (Marriot property). So I broke out the Beryl MT-3000 and no problem getting thru the captive portal and all my devices connected. I generally don't use the Beryl if I get my handful of devices connected to the local WiFi...just so I can keep or pack the Beryl the night before heading out.
Nov 21, 2025 02:59 AM
26 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
UniqueCreator907Nov 21, 2025 02:59 AM
26 Posts
Quote from Spacey123 :
Some uses I have actually done:
If the hotel/plane/whatever charges for wifi per-device, pay for only one device and then share it. The router connects it's "wan" to the hotel wifi via the wifi radio, but also uses the same wifi radio to create my own wifi network for all my devices. It's a wifi-to-wifi router.
If the hotel has a captive portal, and I have a lot of devices (personal laptop, work laptop, maybe kindle, maybe tablet, maybe streaming stick on TV) then I can use the travel router. I don't have to reconfigure EVERY device. They already know my private network's SSID and password. I just log into the router and select the upstream wifi network, then log into the captive portal once. That one captive portal login enables access for all of my devices. This is especially important if I have a lot of devices AND the hotel forces a relogin of every device every 24 hours, and I'm staying for a week or more.
If my device doesn't have a good way to log into captive portals, this takes care of that. For example, the original Chromecast had no UI for portals at all. Putting it behind the travel router ensured it worked.
One time I stayed at an airbnb and the Internet they gave me went down. I found the router, and was surprised to see they appeared to have two different Internet connections into two different routers. The first router showed no link. OK that's down. I tried plugging my laptop into the 2nd router and it worked great. But I didn't know the wifi name/password for that router. So, I dropped my travel router beside it, connected via Ethernet, and had my own wifi network for the rest of the trip.
Just a month ago I stayed at a hotel that offered free wifi, but they artificially limited each device to like 3 mbps. So, I connected my laptop's built in wifi as connection #1. I connected my travel router to wifi, then plugged ethernet from that into my laptop as connection #2. I put my phone on the wifi, enabled USB tethering, and connected that to my laptop via USB as connection #3. Then, I used Speedify to bond all 3 of the laptop's wifi connections. That got me 9 mbps on their 3-mbps-per-user wifi.
Note: Modern phones can generally do wifi-to-wifi routing. This has eliminated most of my need for a travel router. However, I still carry a travel router just because it's nice to have the local LAN not go down every time I leave the room with my phone. For example, if I want to leave my laptop downloading a file while I'm away doing some activity all day...
A lot of people use travel routers for VPNs too. I never do that, and instead just do a VPN right on my end device.
Riffing on these use cases, some places also offer X free minutes of WiFi before you have to pay. I was stuck in an airport because my flight got delayed several hours, and the free window was only 20 minutes.

Those systems often function on MAC address, so when my time would run out, I'd randomize the MAC address and reconnect.

(Some phones/devices can do this directly, but mine phone couldn't, so it was a handy way around those limitations.)
2
Nov 21, 2025 03:07 AM
203 Posts
Joined Jan 2013
Spacey123Nov 21, 2025 03:07 AM
203 Posts
Quote from Two_4_Exploring :


Great post. I'll add even the firestick (4K) that can handle a basic captive portal choked on a pop-up that required me to scroll to the bottom and agree to the terms (Marriot property). So I broke out the Beryl MT-3000 and no problem getting thru the captive portal and all my devices connected. I generally don't use the Beryl if I get my handful of devices connected to the local WiFi...just so I can keep or pack the Beryl the night before heading out.
After writing that post, I decided to go take advantage of the Black Friday sales and upgrade today. I'll be going from the single-band "Mango" to the "Opal". That one is only $30 and has dual band support. I don't need lots of performance like the Beryl has (especially not for >2x the price), but I would like dual band. When possible, it's nice if the upstream and downstream aren't both on the same radio/channel.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09N72FMH5
The one big downside is size. My new one will be more than double the size. In the pics below, I'm moving from the 1st one on top to the 3rd one down. So maybe sometimes I'll still carry the old one when space is tight.
https://forum.gl-inet.com/t/size-...ison/21756
Nov 21, 2025 03:16 AM
26 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
UniqueCreator907Nov 21, 2025 03:16 AM
26 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank UniqueCreator907

Quote from kunjoos :
Beryl or the Slate, which is also on sale at Amazing n for $23 more?
They are very similar devices, but it kind of depends what you want to use it for. And if you mean the Slate AXT1800 (there's three or four Slates now, haha).

If it'll be as a travel router, unless you're staying in very high end places it's unlikely you'll be making use of internet faster than gigabit speeds.

The Beryl has a 2.5gbps WAN port, and a gigabit LAN port. The Slate has three gigabit ports (one WAN, two LAN).

The Beryl can technically achieve faster WiFi speeds, at 300 megabytes/sec, while the Slate can "only" achieve a maximum of 150 megabytes/sec.

The Beryl can achieve up to ~18 megabytes/sec with OpenVPN, and ~36 megabytes/sec with Wireguard, while the Slate can achieve up to 68 megabytes/sec for OpenVPN and Wireguard.

The Slate is slightly larger by about 1/5".

In practice... while using this with airport/hotel WiFi? None of those theoretical maximums are going to matter. 😂

I consider myself as hitting the jackpot if I'm ever at a hotel that can get anywhere near that OpenVPN maximum on the Beryl.

But if you'll be stationary in places with gigabit or 2.5 gigabit ethernet you can plug it into? Maybe the above will matter more.

For reference, gigabit internet is 125 megabytes/sec, and 2.5 gigabit would be 312 megabytes/sec.

tl;dr the Beryl is a big upgrade from the older Glinet travel routers that could do closer to 3 megabytes/sec on OpenVPN and 10 megabytes/sec on Wireguard, but the difference between the Beryl AX MT3000 and the Slate AXT1800 won't be noticeable for the average person, IMO. Unless there's a specific metric above that applies to your specific use.
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Nov 21, 2025 03:24 AM
26 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
UniqueCreator907Nov 21, 2025 03:24 AM
26 Posts
Quote from Spacey123 :
After writing that post, I decided to go take advantage of the Black Friday sales and upgrade today. I'll be going from the single-band "Mango" to the "Opal". That one is only $30 and has dual band support. I don't need lots of performance like the Beryl has (especially not for >2x the price), but I would like dual band. When possible, it's nice if the upstream and downstream aren't both on the same radio/channel.
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B09N72FMH5
The one big downside is size. My new one will be more than double the size. In the pics below, I'm moving from the 1st one on top to the 3rd one down. So maybe sometimes I'll still carry the old one when space is tight.
https://forum.gl-inet.com/t/size-...ison/21756
I find myself constantly upgrading these routers, all the way back from the Mango, haha. I actually just sold mine on eBay!

I'd say the jump to the Beryl AX (the Slate Plus and non-AX Beryl are more lateral upgrades to the Opal) would be worth the extra cost if you make use of OpenVPN or Wireguard, even over the Opal.

If that won't apply to you though, the Opal's a solid upgrade over the Mango, for that sweet sweet 5Ghz band. 😊

It is decently bigger though, about twice and wide and 1.5 times as deep. So not something you can stick in a pocket like the Mango.

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