Ethernet cables lose signal strength over distance. The longer the cable, the higher the attenuation and the greater the potential drop in performance. This can affect real world network speeds, latency and overall reliability. Cable category, bandwidth, environment and interference levels all contribute to how much signal is lost.
This Ethernet Signal Loss Calculator makes it easy to estimate attenuation and identify the maximum recommended cable length for your network. Enter your cable type, length and expected speed to see how much signal strength is lost and whether the run is within acceptable performance limits.
Ethernet Signal Loss Calculator
Different Ethernet cable types are designed to carry data over varying distances with minimal loss. For example, Cat 5e and Cat 6 are suitable for most home and small office networks, while Cat 6a and Cat 7 offer improved shielding and better performance over long runs. Understanding signal loss helps choose the right cable and avoid slowdowns, packet loss or connection instability.
Typical Maximum Ethernet Distances
| Cable Type | Recommended Max Distance | | ---------- | ----------------------------------- | | Cat 5e | 100 meters | | Cat 6 | 55 to 100 meters depending on speed | | Cat 6a | 100 meters | | Cat 7 | 100+ meters with proper shielding |
To optimize network performance, keep cable runs within recommended limits, avoid running cables near strong electrical interference and use high quality connectors. If a cable run must exceed standard distance, adding a switch, repeater or upgrading to a higher category cable may reduce loss and maintain speed.
This tool is valuable for network engineers, IT planners, home installers and anyone building or upgrading a wired network.
