TP-Link Archer AX10 vs AX20 vs AX55: Which Wifi 6 router should you buy?
Get the AX10 if you are on a 100-200 Mbps plan with a standard 2-3BHK and most of your devices connect on 5 GHz. Get the AX20 (or its newer replacement, the AX23) if you want Wi-Fi 6 on both bands, a USB port, and better multi-device handling for a growing household on 200-500 Mbps. Get the AX55 if you are on a 500 Mbps or Gigabit plan, want 160 MHz channel support for maximum wireless throughput, USB 3.0 for network storage, and HomeShield security features. These three sit at three distinct price and capability tiers in TP-Link's India lineup, and the right pick depends on your broadband plan and how many devices you run.
The one spec that separates AX10 from the other two
The AX10's 2.4 GHz band runs Wi-Fi 4 (802.11n), not Wi-Fi 6. Only its 5 GHz band is Wi-Fi 6. The AX20 and AX55 run Wi-Fi 6 on both bands.
This matters because most IoT devices (smart bulbs, plugs, basic cameras, smart speakers) connect on 2.4 GHz. On the AX10, these devices do not benefit from Wi-Fi 6's OFDMA efficiency at all. On the AX20 and AX55, they do. If your home has 10+ IoT devices on 2.4 GHz, this is a meaningful difference in network efficiency.
What changes as you step up?
| Feature | Archer AX10 | Archer AX20 | Archer AX55 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Speed class | AX1500 | AX1800 | AX3000 |
| 5 GHz speed | 1201 Mbps | 1201 Mbps | 2402 Mbps |
| 2.4 GHz speed | 300 Mbps (Wi-Fi 4) | 574 Mbps (Wi-Fi 6) | 574 Mbps (Wi-Fi 6) |
| 160 MHz support | No | No | Yes |
| Processor | 1.5 GHz triple-core | 1.5 GHz quad-core | 1 GHz dual-core (Qualcomm) |
| RAM | Not published | Not published | 512 MB |
| USB port | No | USB 2.0 | USB 3.0 |
| LAN ports | 4 Gigabit | 4 Gigabit | 4 Gigabit |
| HomeShield | No | No | Yes (free + Pro) |
| Price (India approx.) | Rs 6,400 | Rs 8,400 (or AX23 at Rs 5,100) | Rs 9,000-10,000 |
AX20 availability note
The AX20 is increasingly hard to find in India. TP-Link has replaced it with the Archer AX23, which delivers the same AX1800 performance at a lower price (around Rs 5,100 on FGTech). The AX23 uses a MediaTek dual-core chip instead of the AX20's Broadcom quad-core, has no USB port, and lacks 160 MHz support, but per TP-Link's own testing and Digital Citizen's review, it matches the AX20 in Wi-Fi speed and coverage for most homes. If you are shopping today, the AX23 is the practical AX1800 option.
The AX55 tier jump
The AX55's 160 MHz channel support is where the real speed jump happens. On 5 GHz with a Wi-Fi 6 client that supports 160 MHz, the AX55 can deliver up to 2402 Mbps, double the AX10 and AX20. On a 500 Mbps or Gigabit Jio Fiber or Airtel plan, this is the difference between your router being the ceiling and your ISP plan being the ceiling.
The USB 3.0 port lets you plug in an external drive for basic NAS functionality: shared storage accessible by all devices on your network. The AX10 has no USB. The AX20 has USB 2.0, which is usable but noticeably slow for large file transfers.
HomeShield on the AX55 provides free basic network scanning and parental controls. The Pro tier (paid subscription) adds intrusion detection and DDoS protection.
Which one is for you?
AX10 (or AX12): Budget-friendly Wi-Fi 6 for a standard home on a 100-200 Mbps plan where most devices use 5 GHz. The most affordable entry into Wi-Fi 6.
AX23 (AX1800, successor to AX20): The step up for growing households with 15-25 devices, especially if you have IoT devices on 2.4 GHz that benefit from Wi-Fi 6. The current price-to-performance sweet spot in TP-Link's India lineup.
AX55 (AX3000): For 500 Mbps and Gigabit plans, homelab users who want USB 3.0 storage, or anyone who needs 160 MHz channel support for maximum wireless throughput. The extra Rs over the AX23 buys more capability meaningfully.


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