TP-Link Deco BE63 vs TP-Link AXE5400 comparison

When choosing between the TP‑Link Deco BE63 and the TP‑Link Archer AXE5400 (often branded as XE75/XE75 Pro), the decision mostly comes down to mesh‑vs‑standalone setup and whether you need Wi‑Fi 7’s future‑proofing for your large home. Both are high‑end TP‑Link systems with tri‑band radios and strong multi‑device performance, but they solve slightly different problems.


Core differences at a glance

Feature TP‑Link Deco BE63 (Wi‑Fi 7 mesh) TP‑Link Archer AXE5400 (Wi‑Fi 6E standalone)
Wi‑Fi standard Wi‑Fi 7 (802.11be) tri‑band Wi‑Fi 6E (802.11ax) tri‑band
Max combined speed Around BE10000 (theoretical) Around AXE5400 (theoretical)
Ethernet ports 4 (Gigabit) per unit 4 (Gigabit or 2.5G on XE75 Pro variant)
Use case focus Mesh‑style whole‑house coverage High‑performance single‑unit router
Best for Large homes needing multi‑node coverage Single‑room‑or‑medium‑home setups, central placement
Range and coverage character Stronger interior range due to mesh‑optimized design Very good, but more suited to compact layouts

The Deco BE63 is a Wi‑Fi 7 tri‑band mesh router designed to be the backbone of a multi‑unit Deco mesh network. It supports 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 6 GHz bands with MLO (Multi‑Link Operation), which lets the mesh nodes bond multiple bands for faster, lower‑latency back‑hauls even when client devices are not yet Wi‑Fi 7‑ready.

  • Strengths:

    • Excellent interior range and better coverage when using multiple Deco units.

    • Ideal for large homes or multi‑floor layouts where one router cannot reach every room.

    • Clean, vertical design and easy setup via the Deco app, with strong parental controls and QoS.

  • Weaknesses:

    • Around the same price or slightly higher than AXE5400, so you pay a premium for Wi‑Fi 7 and mesh.

    • For a small house you can “lose” the mesh advantage if you only use a single unit.


The Archer AXE5400 (XE75/XE75 Pro) is a Wi‑Fi 6E tri‑band router meant as a monster single‑box solution. It features a 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz, and 6 GHz radio, with many models adding a 2.5 Gbps WAN/LAN port for higher‑speed internet plans and wired backbones.

  • Strengths:

    • Very high throughput and stability for heavy 4K streaming, gaming, and remote‑work loads.

    • Great if you can place it near the center of a medium‑sized home or single‑floor building.

    • More traditional “gaming‑style” router look with extra LAN and advanced features such as QoS, VPN‑routing, and MU‑MIMO.

  • Weaknesses:

    • Coverage is limited to what one box can deliver; adding extra nodes is less native than in a Deco system.

    • Uses Wi‑Fi 6E rather than Wi‑Fi 7, so you are not future‑proofed for the latest MLO and next‑gen chipsets.


When to pick which

  • Choose Deco BE63 if:

    • You live in a large, multi‑floor, or sprawling home and want an easy‑to‑expand mesh network.

    • You want Wi‑Fi 7 now and value improved back‑haul and MLO benefits for your home network and future devices.

  • Choose Archer AXE5400 if:

    • You have a medium‑sized home or apartment where one strong router plus some wired‑backhaul points is enough.

    • You care more about raw speed and wired features (2.5 Gbps, extra LAN ports, firmware‑rich controls) than a sleek mesh‑style UI.

In short, the TP‑Link Deco BE63 is better for large‑home mesh coverage and future‑ready Wi‑Fi 7, while the TP‑Link AXE5400 is better for power‑users who want a high‑spec standalone Wi‑Fi 6E router with strong throughput and wired‑network flexibility.

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