Whole Home Networking

Your Network, Built the Right Way

In 2026, a home network has to handle work, streaming, cameras, gaming, smart devices, and guests at the same time. Wired and wireless should be designed together, not patched together.

What the Network Has to Cover

One router is not a home network

A single box from the ISP can be fine for a small apartment. It is not a plan for a busy house with offices, TVs, security cameras, gaming systems, smart devices, and outdoor spaces.

Homes built with no low-voltage plan

One coax drop, one random Ethernet jack, and no real plan for offices, TVs, cameras, or access points.

Everything is fighting over wireless

Phones, TVs, consoles, cameras, smart devices, and work laptops all compete on the same weak airspace.

Smart home gear is scattered everywhere

Lighting, thermostats, cameras, and hubs end up split across apps, passwords, and half-working networks.

ISP routers and leased mesh pucks are limited

They are built for convenience and support calls, not for wired backhaul, clean roaming, segmentation, or busy homes.

Drywall makes late planning expensive

Pulling cable after the fact is possible, but it costs more and forces compromises that could have been avoided.

Network gear has no proper home

Modems, switches, hubs, and power bricks stacked on a shelf turn into heat, dust, mystery cables, and reboots.

Our Work

What we actually do

Design to the floor plan

Coverage, cable paths, rack location, access point placement, and future expansion planned before hardware is ordered.

Cat6 / Cat6A where it matters

Hardwired runs for offices, TVs, access points, cameras, gaming setups, and any room that needs reliable speed.

Rack or enclosure with patch panel

Clean termination, labeling, cable management, and a proper home for the equipment.

Switches, APs, and firewall as one system

A network that is managed together instead of five apps, three passwords, and mystery pucks.

Separated networks

Guest, work, IoT, cameras, and personal devices can be segmented instead of dumped onto one flat network.

Documented and tested

Every drop, port, access point, and critical setting documented after install.

Network Blueprint

A whole-home network starts room by room.

Before hardware, we decide what should be wired, where access points belong, where the equipment should live, and how the devices should be organized.

Wired Backbone

Rooms and devices that deserve cable

Offices, TVs, gaming setups, access points, and cameras are planned before cable is pulled.

Wireless Plan

Access points placed from the floor plan

Access point locations are chosen around layout, materials, room use, and outdoor coverage needs.

Device Groups

Guest, work, camera, and smart-home groups

The network can be organized so everything works without everything needing the same level of access.

Equipment Home

A clean place for the gear

Modem, router, switches, patch panel, power, and labels should be serviceable after the install.

Wire the rooms that matter
Separate the right devices
Label and document the system
Infrastructure

Clean wiring, labeled gear, and a network you can service later.

When we are done, the setup should make sense: ports labeled, equipment organized, settings documented, and the important gear in one clean spot.

  • Cat6 / Cat6A runs for rooms that need wired reliability
  • PoE switches for access points and cameras
  • Patch panel, rack, or wall enclosure when the job calls for it
  • UPS battery backup for critical network gear
  • Ceiling-mount access points placed for real coverage
  • Labeled wiring, port map, and plain setup notes

Simple, straightforward process. No surprises.

How this works

Start Here
1

Site visit and goals

We walk the home or review plans, then map the rooms, devices, dead spots, and priorities.

Design
2

Network plan

Cable runs, rack layout, hardware, Wi-Fi coverage, and segmentation are planned before install.

Approval
3

Install and test

We build, label, test, document, and hand off the finished network.

How Pricing Works

Transparent pricing

Standard Rate
Standard Labor
$200 / hour

Primary technician on-site.

Additional Tech
Additional Technician
+$50 / hour

Per additional tech on-site.

Larger Jobs
Project Work
Quoted per job

Larger installs and custom setups.

Final pricing confirmed before work begins.

Build it once. Build it right.

Full home infrastructure. Designed, wired, configured, and documented.

Frequently Asked Questions