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expiredphoinix | Staff posted Dec 03, 2025 07:33 PM
expiredphoinix | Staff posted Dec 03, 2025 07:33 PM

[AC] $98.30: ASUS RT-BE55 Dual-Band WiFi 7 (802.11be) Smart AiMesh Extendable Router at Amazon

$98

$128

23% off
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Amazon [amazon.com] has ASUS RT-BE55 Dual-Band WiFi 7 (802.11be) Smart AiMesh Extendable Router for $128.30 - $30.00 when you 'clip' the coupon on product page = $98.30.
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$30 lower (23% savings) than the list price of $128.30
$31.69 lower (24% savings) than the previous price of $129.99

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Saving $30.00 (check and activate [amazon.com])

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3.6⭐ / 4

amazon.com/dp/B0FQF2YP82 [amazon.com]

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Amazon [amazon.com] has ASUS RT-BE55 Dual-Band WiFi 7 (802.11be) Smart AiMesh Extendable Router for $128.30 - $30.00 when you 'clip' the coupon on product page = $98.30.
Shipping is free.

Price
$30 lower (23% savings) than the list price of $128.30
$31.69 lower (24% savings) than the previous price of $129.99

Savings
Saving $30.00 (check and activate [amazon.com])

Customer reviews
3.6⭐ / 4

amazon.com/dp/B0FQF2YP82 [amazon.com]

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Model: ASUS RT-BE55 Dual-Band WiFi 7 (802.11be) Smart AiMesh Extendable Router, 3600 Mbps, 2.5G Port, Up to 3 SSIDs for IoT Devices, Parental Controls & VPNs, Advanced Network Security

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Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 12/29/2025, 07:33 AM
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19 Comments

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Dec 03, 2025 11:01 PM
417 Posts
Joined Jul 2006
ct witterDec 03, 2025 11:01 PM
417 Posts

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

I'd check out the RT-BE58U for the same price. It has larger memory, USB 3.2 port and ability for WAN 5G Tethering. https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-RT-BE...B0DHWBS9G6 It does lack 6 GHz, so if that is must then skip.
2
Dec 04, 2025 01:07 AM
7,986 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
someoneslickDec 04, 2025 01:07 AM
7,986 Posts
Quote from ct witter :
I'd check out the RT-BE58U for the same price. It has larger memory, USB 3.2 port and ability for WAN 5G Tethering. https://www.amazon.com/ASUS-RT-BE...B0DHWBS9G6 It does lack 6 GHz, so if that is must then skip.
I don't get what the point of a router even having memory is (beyond a tiny amount). why need much RAM on it when anything you do when using a router would just use the pc RAM?
I want an asus of $100 or less, but not sure either of these is a good deal.
Dec 04, 2025 02:11 AM
127 Posts
Joined Nov 2022
SkillfulMask719Dec 04, 2025 02:11 AM
127 Posts
Quote from someoneslick :
I don't get what the point of a router even having memory is (beyond a tiny amount). why need much RAM on it when anything you do when using a router would just use the pc RAM?
I want an asus of $100 or less, but not sure either of these is a good deal.
not claiming this one does this, but aren't there routers that can act as NAS with a storage device on them?
Pro
Dec 04, 2025 03:21 AM
696 Posts
Joined Jan 2016
wildbird12
Pro
Dec 04, 2025 03:21 AM
696 Posts
Quote from someoneslick :
I don't get what the point of a router even having memory is (beyond a tiny amount). why need much RAM on it when anything you do when using a router would just use the pc RAM?
I want an asus of $100 or less, but not sure either of these is a good deal.
These routers are built on a small computer with an OS (like a raspberry pi for example). They do need a small amount for the OS and then also some to store device settings, routing functions and tables, and also to do all the security functions, like firewall and intrusion detection
Dec 04, 2025 04:09 AM
1,004 Posts
Joined Aug 2021
tropicalbDec 04, 2025 04:09 AM
1,004 Posts
Quote from wildbird12 :
These routers are built on a small computer with an OS (like a raspberry pi for example). They do need a small amount for the OS and then also some to store device settings, routing functions and tables, and also to do all the security functions, like firewall and intrusion detection
Well explained. And more RAM = larger cache, which helps the router handle networking for more devices.
Dec 04, 2025 04:13 AM
179 Posts
Joined Jan 2014
slimpymanDec 04, 2025 04:13 AM
179 Posts
Still using a 15 year old router. Rock solid and got it used for 30 bones. I'm sure if I wanted to blow 100 bucks, this would be pretty sweet. But it does 1000mbps wired from compy, and my ISP only provides 300 Mbps. I wonder if people just wanna do networking as a hobby , or if they think they need it.
Dec 04, 2025 04:27 AM
22 Posts
Joined Jun 2024
NewKitchenFixturesDec 04, 2025 04:27 AM
22 Posts
Quote from slimpyman :
Still using a 15 year old router. Rock solid and got it used for 30 bones. I'm sure if I wanted to blow 100 bucks, this would be pretty sweet. But it does 1000mbps wired from compy, and my ISP only provides 300 Mbps. I wonder if people just wanna do networking as a hobby , or if they think they need it.
How is it for security vulnerabilities though?
This might be a decent deal for you. For me, I've had trouble with my now older children overloading an older router while the internet connection is not tapped out fully.

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Dec 04, 2025 05:51 AM
1,044 Posts
Joined Jan 2007
Oneill5491Dec 04, 2025 05:51 AM
1,044 Posts
I honestly believe that all WiFi 7 routers should standardize to 2.5g ethernet ports for all LAN ports and not just the WAN port
Dec 04, 2025 06:00 AM
7,986 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
someoneslickDec 04, 2025 06:00 AM
7,986 Posts
Quote from slimpyman :
Still using a 15 year old router. Rock solid and got it used for 30 bones. I'm sure if I wanted to blow 100 bucks, this would be pretty sweet. But it does 1000mbps wired from compy, and my ISP only provides 300 Mbps. I wonder if people just wanna do networking as a hobby , or if they think they need it.
My router stopped working a few months ago during a storm. I happened to find an old one in a box from when I moved.... it was likely close to 15 years old too and it is actually doing fine. lol. BUT the only reason i am still wanting a router is because if I do download anything it's going to be much slower with this old one. My wifi is getting like 40mbps when my internet speed would normally be 10x that (and some months I had a plan that was around 25-30x that). So I just hate to not be getting what I am paying for, due to using the old router.
Dec 04, 2025 06:02 AM
7,986 Posts
Joined Dec 2014
someoneslickDec 04, 2025 06:02 AM
7,986 Posts
Quote from NewKitchenFixtures :
How is it for security vulnerabilities though?
This might be a decent deal for you. For me, I've had trouble with my now older children overloading an older router while the internet connection is not tapped out fully.
I never really hear of anyone having actual issues due to security issues in routers. Everyone is always saying they need top security, but when is the last time you've heard of anything happening to anyone due to router security issues?
Dec 04, 2025 06:18 AM
2,015 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
bieberwhole69Dec 04, 2025 06:18 AM
2,015 Posts
Quote from someoneslick :
I never really hear of anyone having actual issues due to security issues in routers. Everyone is always saying they need top security, but when is the last time you've heard of anything happening to anyone due to router security issues?
u don't... bc they be gone... bc they had bad security... they gone up
1
Dec 04, 2025 07:12 AM
900 Posts
Joined Oct 2003
Chuck LunchDec 04, 2025 07:12 AM
900 Posts
Quote from slimpyman :
Still using a 15 year old router. Rock solid and got it used for 30 bones. I'm sure if I wanted to blow 100 bucks, this would be pretty sweet. But it does 1000mbps wired from compy, and my ISP only provides 300 Mbps. I wonder if people just wanna do networking as a hobby , or if they think they need it.
Bro… if it's a 802.11g router, your bottleneck is not the 300mbps on the wan port, it's the 54mbps wireless. Even if it's an N router.. Replace that shit.
Dec 04, 2025 07:20 AM
2,015 Posts
Joined Jun 2014
bieberwhole69Dec 04, 2025 07:20 AM
2,015 Posts
Quote from Chuck Lunch :
Bro… if it's a 802.11g router, your bottleneck is not the 300mbps on the wan port, it's the 54mbps wireless. Even if it's an N router.. Replace that shit.
let them be happy.. they're clearly very proud of their 20 year old $30 router
Dec 04, 2025 11:52 AM
67 Posts
Joined Aug 2009
bls9701Dec 04, 2025 11:52 AM
67 Posts
I have an ASUS ecosystem so when I see something like this, I tend to grab it as a reliable mesh node. However, I'm fully covered right now unless I want to start giving free wifi to the neighbors.

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Dec 06, 2025 08:06 PM
688 Posts
Joined Apr 2006
noctshadowDec 06, 2025 08:06 PM
688 Posts
Quote from someoneslick :
I don't get what the point of a router even having memory is (beyond a tiny amount). why need much RAM on it when anything you do when using a router would just use the pc RAM?
I want an asus of $100 or less, but not sure either of these is a good deal.
Because like a computer, the more devices it's connected to, the more memory it needs. That's why some routers claim it can support up to x number of devices. Also, these routers have built in security like antivirus and parental control and VPN. All those require memory to run properly without slowing down the router.

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