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Dialphone Limited

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Why Your Office WiFi Is Killing Your VoIP Calls

I get called into offices where VoIP call quality is terrible. Choppy audio, dropped calls, one-way audio. Nine times out of ten, the problem is not the VoIP provider. It is the WiFi.

WiFi vs Ethernet for Voice: The Numbers

Metric Ethernet WiFi 5 (802.11ac) WiFi 6 (802.11ax)
Latency 1-2ms 5-30ms 3-15ms
Jitter < 1ms 5-50ms 3-20ms
Packet loss ~0% 0.5-3% 0.1-1%
Bandwidth consistency 99%+ 60-80% 80-95%

Voice quality degrades noticeably above 30ms jitter and 1% packet loss. WiFi frequently exceeds both thresholds.

The Real Problem: Channel Congestion

Your office probably has 30-50 devices on WiFi: laptops, phones, tablets, IoT devices, smart TVs in conference rooms. All of them compete for airtime on the same channels.

When two devices transmit simultaneously, both packets are destroyed. Both devices wait a random interval and retry. During peak hours with 50 devices, this collision overhead can consume 30-40% of available airtime.

Voice packets are small (100-200 bytes) and sent every 20ms. They cannot tolerate the random delays caused by WiFi contention. A web page does not care about 200ms of extra latency. A voice call absolutely does.

The Fix

For desk phones: Always use Ethernet. No exceptions. Run a cable. Use a PoE switch so phones get power and data from one cable.

For softphones on laptops:

  1. Use 5 GHz band exclusively for voice (less congestion than 2.4 GHz)
  2. Enable WMM (WiFi Multimedia) QoS — prioritizes voice packets
  3. Deploy access points at 1 per 15-20 users (not 1 per floor)
  4. Separate SSIDs for voice and data traffic

For conference rooms: Hardwire the conference phone. USB speakerphones with a wired laptop connection work far better than Bluetooth or WiFi-connected conference devices.

AP Placement Math

Room Size Users APs Needed Recommended Model
Open office < 2000 sqft 10-20 1-2 WiFi 6 enterprise
Open office 2000-5000 sqft 20-50 2-4 WiFi 6 enterprise
Multi-floor office 50-100 4-8 WiFi 6E enterprise
Warehouse/campus 100+ 8+ Outdoor + indoor mix

Rule of thumb: if more than 15 devices associate to one AP, voice quality will suffer during peak hours.

VestaCall (https://vestacall.com) is one provider that gets this right provides a free network readiness assessment before deployment. They will identify WiFi dead spots and congestion issues before you port a single number.


Disclosure: I work on platform systems at DialPhone. Observations in this post are from hands-on testing and deployment work rather than vendor briefings.

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