Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
frontpageItsSoCheap | Staff posted Feb 05, 2026 05:58 AM
frontpageItsSoCheap | Staff posted Feb 05, 2026 05:58 AM

TP-Link 24-Port Unmanaged Gigabit Desktop/Rackmount Ethernet Metal Switch

+ Free S/H

$65

$90

27% off
Amazon
19 Comments 5,157 Views
Get Deal at Amazon
Good Deal
Save
Share
Deal Details
Amazon has TP-Link 24-Port Unmanaged Gigabit Desktop/Rackmount Ethernet Metal Switch (TL-SG1024S) on sale for $64.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to ItsSoCheap for finding this deal

Note, product must be sold/shipped by Amazon

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff
  • Price Research
    • At the time of research, this product is $14 lower (18.75% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices ranging from $79.99.
  • About the Deal
    • This unmanaged gigabit switch provides an easy way to increase the reliability of your network server connection. Housed in a metal case and offering up to 24 ports (10/100/1000Mbps) RJ45 ports w/ a fanless design ensures reliable performance; fits standard 1U rackmount
    • Product is eligible for refund/replacement within 30-days of purchase
    • Offer valid while pricing/product claim/supplies last
  • Additional Details

Original Post

Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has TP-Link 24-Port Unmanaged Gigabit Desktop/Rackmount Ethernet Metal Switch (TL-SG1024S) on sale for $64.99. Shipping is free.

Thanks to ItsSoCheap for finding this deal

Note, product must be sold/shipped by Amazon

Editor's Notes

Written by Discombobulated | Staff
  • Price Research
    • At the time of research, this product is $14 lower (18.75% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices ranging from $79.99.
  • About the Deal
    • This unmanaged gigabit switch provides an easy way to increase the reliability of your network server connection. Housed in a metal case and offering up to 24 ports (10/100/1000Mbps) RJ45 ports w/ a fanless design ensures reliable performance; fits standard 1U rackmount
    • Product is eligible for refund/replacement within 30-days of purchase
    • Offer valid while pricing/product claim/supplies last
  • Additional Details

Original Post

Community Voting

Deal Score
+23
Good Deal
Get Deal at Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: 24-PORT GIGABIT DESKTOP/RACKMOUNT SWITCH

Deal History 

Sale Price
Slickdeal
  • $NaN
  • Today

Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 2/6/2026, 10:18 PM
Sold By Sale Price
Amazon$64.99
NewEgg$79.99
Lenovo$79.99

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

PennyPincherPro
7 Posts
14 Reputation
I get what you're saying, if this is being framed as enthusiast gear, fine. My worry is that once 1Gb gets labeled "not serious," the cheap, boring, reliable stuff is what disappears first.A lot of real setups still don't have gig+ internet or devices that benefit from more than 1Gb, and these switches solve those problems cleanly. I'd be pretty annoyed if practical, affordable gear vanished just because "future-proof" became the only lens people use. Then all of a sudden my 5 port gig switch options go from $8 to $40 for a 2.5 I can't even get benefit from.
will74
158 Posts
42 Reputation
I think the reality is that this is a nice little switch for someone in a regular sized home. Most devices even if they are gigabit capable won't hit that speed frequently at the same time to saturate the uplink. This isn't for enterprise networks. Even on an enterprise network I see places where they still have many users on 100 meg ports with a 1 gig uplink. For general office work / home network, this covers 99% of most people's needs, so I'm not sure what's sad about that

19 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Feb 05, 2026 08:23 AM
153 Posts
Joined Mar 2023

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Feb 05, 2026 02:46 PM
7 Posts
Joined Jul 2019
PennyPincherProFeb 05, 2026 02:46 PM
7 Posts

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

Quote from aboose :
Ok, I got flamed for saying 5 port gigabit switches are a little outdated in the big 26, but a 24 port 1 gig switch is just sad. That's not modern and this is enthusiast gear I can only assume.
I get what you're saying, if this is being framed as enthusiast gear, fine. My worry is that once 1Gb gets labeled "not serious," the cheap, boring, reliable stuff is what disappears first.A lot of real setups still don't have gig+ internet or devices that benefit from more than 1Gb, and these switches solve those problems cleanly. I'd be pretty annoyed if practical, affordable gear vanished just because "future-proof" became the only lens people use. Then all of a sudden my 5 port gig switch options go from $8 to $40 for a 2.5 I can't even get benefit from.
3
1
Feb 05, 2026 10:51 PM
7,159 Posts
Joined Apr 2017
LikeABadPennyFeb 05, 2026 10:51 PM
7,159 Posts
Quote from aboose :
Ok, I got flamed for saying 5 port gigabit switches are a little outdated in the big 26, but a 24 port 1 gig switch is just sad. That's not modern and this is enthusiast gear I can only assume.
Thought we'd be seeing 2.5's for this price now, but I guess not.
1
Yesterday 12:39 AM
158 Posts
Joined Jul 2009
will74Yesterday 12:39 AM
158 Posts
Quote from aboose :
Ok, I got flamed for saying 5 port gigabit switches are a little outdated in the big 26, but a 24 port 1 gig switch is just sad. That's not modern and this is enthusiast gear I can only assume.
I think the reality is that this is a nice little switch for someone in a regular sized home. Most devices even if they are gigabit capable won't hit that speed frequently at the same time to saturate the uplink. This isn't for enterprise networks. Even on an enterprise network I see places where they still have many users on 100 meg ports with a 1 gig uplink. For general office work / home network, this covers 99% of most people's needs, so I'm not sure what's sad about that
Yesterday 02:34 PM
910 Posts
Joined Jan 2007

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Yesterday 02:40 PM
777 Posts
Joined Aug 2008
Ekeenan86Yesterday 02:40 PM
777 Posts
What I don't understand is why you don't see more 2.5g switches that are also POE+. Unless you go ubiquiti it looks they all tend to be one or the other.
Expert
This user is an Expert in Computers
Yesterday 02:42 PM
11,953 Posts
Joined Oct 2009
TekkenLord
Expert
This user is an Expert in Computers
Yesterday 02:42 PM
11,953 Posts
Attorney General James Uthmeier Issues Subpoena to TP Link Over Cybersecurity Risks, Alleged Data-sharing with Chinese Communist Party

https://www.myfloridalegal.com/ne...rity-risks
1
5

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Yesterday 02:43 PM
34 Posts
Joined Nov 2024
TenderOctopus442Yesterday 02:43 PM
34 Posts
Quote from Orange_Elvis :
everything should be 10G switches by now.
10G often requires special cabling, but 2.5GB can generally be run in Cat5e that people already have in their homes.
3
Yesterday 02:46 PM
1,469 Posts
Joined Sep 2003
UdisYesterday 02:46 PM
1,469 Posts
Quote from aboose :
Ok, I got flamed for saying 5 port gigabit switches are a little outdated in the big 26, but a 24 port 1 gig switch is just sad. That's not modern and this is enthusiast gear I can only assume.
They have 5gb switches available two posts under this. 8 ports is $300
1
Yesterday 02:48 PM
26 Posts
Joined Jan 2012
AtomicrobotYesterday 02:48 PM
26 Posts
Quote from aboose :
Ok, I got flamed for saying 5 port gigabit switches are a little outdated in the big 26, but a 24 port 1 gig switch is just sad. That's not modern and this is enthusiast gear I can only assume.
I get that it seems odd that in 2026 we're still buying unmanaged gigabit switches from TP-Link like it's 2008. It seems like we should have 10G wired up everywhere by now.
But the truth is, these are small, quiet, and sufficient for nearly all home and small business tasks. It has no fan, so unless it ends up with some kind of electrical hum, it's silent. It has non-blocking ports so each port gets the full 1Gbps which is still enough for just about any single device that isn't a NAS or server. Netflix only recommends 25Mbps for 4k streaming, this thing could populate every port to a TV and load up the highest quality streaming on each of them without breaking 5% usage.
I also have seen these TP-link ones operate in offices, on the floor, in a rats nest of cables, covered in dust operating for a decade. So it's basically impossible to kill too.
So i get your point, but 65 bucks is still an amazing deal to set up basic hardwire switching for an entire house or office.
Yesterday 03:30 PM
17 Posts
Joined Nov 2018
ClawSSYesterday 03:30 PM
17 Posts
Quote from Atomicrobot :
I get that it seems odd that in 2026 we're still buying unmanaged gigabit switches from TP-Link like it's 2008. It seems like we should have 10G wired up everywhere by now.
But the truth is, these are small, quiet, and sufficient for nearly all home and small business tasks. It has no fan, so unless it ends up with some kind of electrical hum, it's silent. It has non-blocking ports so each port gets the full 1Gbps which is still enough for just about any single device that isn't a NAS or server. Netflix only recommends 25Mbps for 4k streaming, this thing could populate every port to a TV and load up the highest quality streaming on each of them without breaking 5% usage.
I also have seen these TP-link ones operate in offices, on the floor, in a rats nest of cables, covered in dust operating for a decade. So it's basically impossible to kill too.
So i get your point, but 65 bucks is still an amazing deal to set up basic hardwire switching for an entire house or office.
only thing I've seen kill them is minor weather based power inconsistencies take out a port or 2 with the others still going.
Yesterday 03:54 PM
910 Posts
Joined Jan 2007

This comment has been rated as unhelpful by Slickdeals users.

Pro
Yesterday 04:21 PM
490 Posts
Joined Nov 2012
flyjar
Pro
Yesterday 04:21 PM
490 Posts
Am I the only one that wants the power and ethernet ports on the same side?
1
Yesterday 04:47 PM
906 Posts
Joined Apr 2009
Hotpuck6Yesterday 04:47 PM
906 Posts
Quote from will74 :
I think the reality is that this is a nice little switch for someone in a regular sized home. Most devices even if they are gigabit capable won't hit that speed frequently at the same time to saturate the uplink. This isn't for enterprise networks. Even on an enterprise network I see places where they still have many users on 100 meg ports with a 1 gig uplink. For general office work / home network, this covers 99% of most people's needs, so I'm not sure what's sad about that
Agreed, this is good for 99% of home users. Sometimes you just need a lot of ports.

Even with being a tech enthusiastic, I only have half a dozen devices that even support faster than 1 gig, and unless I'm doing a backup to my NAS, no more than a single device is fully saturating my wired bandwidth at once. If you're a wfh video editor or running a dozen cam 4k security system, yes, this is inadequate for your needs. It's not like more capable equipment doesn't exist, it's just not needed by the average person so it costs more.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Yesterday 05:45 PM
1,158 Posts
Joined May 2010
BuyMoreChuckYesterday 05:45 PM
1,158 Posts
I use a 16 port one to connect up my printer, my IP phone, TV, etc. I come off of this to run a line from the modem downstairs to the equipment in the entertainment center. I also have a desktop computer that is also a Plex server. No need to run everything via wifi.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Popular Deals

Trending Deals