Wi-Fi

Two views onto the same scan data — a sortable list of every visible SSID and a frequency graph that shows who's crowding which channel. Shared infrastructure; what you see in one is in the other.

Wi-Fi scan

A live list of access points the device can hear. Updates every few seconds as the OS delivers new scan results.

Sorting and filtering

Wi-Fi channels

The same scan data plotted as channel occupancy. Pick a band from the segmented control at the top — 2.4 GHz, 5 GHz (if supported), 6 GHz (Wi-Fi 6E / Wi-Fi 7 hardware only).

Shape options

The visual style is configurable in Settings → Wi-Fi channels shape:

Choosing the least-congested channel

On 2.4 GHz only channels 1, 6 and 11 are non-overlapping. If three APs are sitting on 1, 6 and 11 with -40 dBm each, picking any fourth channel is still a bad idea — you'll conflict with two of them at once.

On 5 GHz the spectrum is much wider but DFS channels (radar-shared, 52–144 typically) can go silent without warning when the AP detects radar. If you need steady high throughput, consider UNII-1 (36–48) or UNII-3 (149–165) first.

On 6 GHz congestion is typically the fewest in a given environment — but not all devices support it.

Access-point placement tips

Permissions

Android and iOS both require location permission for Wi-Fi scanning — SSIDs and BSSIDs are considered location data by the platforms. The app prompts once; if denied, the scan tabs show a permission request card.

Desktop — Wi-Fi scan is available where the OS exposes it. macOS requires Location Services for SSID visibility starting in recent releases; Windows reads from netsh wlan; Linux uses the nl80211/iw path where present.

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