TP-Link TL-WA1201 AC1200 Wireless Access Point
TL-WA1201 | AC1200 Wireless Access Point
TL-WA1201 | AC1200 Wireless Access Point
TL-WA1201 | AC1200 Wireless Access Point
TL-WA1201 | AC1200 Wireless Access Point
in 35 offers
The lowest price for TP-Link TL-WA1201 AC1200 Wireless Access Point right now is $64.90 at eBay.com.au, compared across 15 retailers.
The all-time low was $7.70 on 18 Dec 2025 — today's price is 743% above the lowest ever. It has been notably cheaper before — worth setting a price alert.
Prices last updated 8 June 2026.
Last updated at 08/06/2026 05:38:33
TP-Link AC1200 Wireless Access Point, Dual Band, Gigabit Port, Passive PoE, MU-MIMO, Supports Access Point, Range Extender, Multi-SSID & Client Modes,
Free delivery
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Tp-link Tl-wa1201 Ac1200 Wireless Access Point Dual Band Gigabit Range
Delivery $10
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Tp-link Tl-wa1201 Ac1200 Wireless Access Point Dual Band Gigabit Range
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
TP Link AC1200 Wi Fi Access Point TL WA1201 - Wireless Access Points (WAP)
Delivery $13.71
TP Link AC1200 Wi Fi Access Point TL WA1201 - Wireless Access Points (WAP)
Delivery $13
TP-Link TL-WA1201 Wireless AC1200 Access Point | Best Online Computer Store
Delivery $12.12
TP-Link TL-WA1201 AC1200 Wireless Access Point Dual Band 1 Gigabit Ethernet Port External Power
Delivery between 11–19 June $12.95
TP-Link TL-WA1201 AC1200 Wireless Access Point, AC1200 Dual-Band Wi-Fi, Passive POE, Multiple Modes, MU-MIMO, Boosted Coverage, Captive Portal
Delivery $11.99
TP-Link AC1200 Wi-Fi Access Point (TL-WA1201)
Delivery $10
TP-Link TL-WA1201 AC1200 Wireless Access Point
Delivery $10
originally posted on pbtech.co.nz
Brought this AP a week ago to extend the WiFi coverage in my house and it's working great. I've run a cable from my ISP supplied Router to this AP and I gave it the same SSID and password. Now I can seamlessly walk around and have my phone and other devices automatically switch over to the strongest signal. Setup was very easy too via the web page interface. Hopefully I won't need it but it's satisfying to know that this AP also comes with a 3yr warranty.PROS: Easy to setup, great price and warranty, great WiFi range.CONS: Not the prettiest device with it's 4 aerials sticking up but that wasn't a problem for my installation.
originally posted on digitec.ch
UPDATE: RMA'ing this since it keeps disconnecting users. Only fix is to manually turn router off/on. Lately this happens almost daily. This is a known issue, with the only fix being a beta firmware (which doesnt fix the issue). See TP-Link forums: https://community.tp-link.com/en/home/forum/topic/215894Don't buy this until the firmware issue is fixed!OLD REVIEW:Upgraded from my Salt router's wifi signal to this access point. I could not reach 2.4Ghz or 5Ghz signal behind three walls in my apartment with Salt, but this on works perfectly.Speeds are roughly as advertised, and several rooms (concrete walls) I am still able to -56db (2.4Ghz) and -68db (5Ghz) signal, whereas I was only able to get -78db for the 2.4Ghz network, and unreachable network. Signal ... MoreUPDATE: RMA'ing this since it keeps disconnecting users. Only fix is to manually turn router off/on. Lately this happens almost daily. This is a known issue, with the only fix being a beta firmware (which doesnt fix the issue). See TP-Link forums: https://community.tp-link.com/en/home/forum/topic/215894Don't buy this until the firmware issue is fixed!OLD REVIEW:Upgraded from my Salt router's wifi signal to this access point. I could not reach 2.4Ghz or 5Ghz signal behind three walls in my apartment with Salt, but this on works perfectly.Speeds are roughly as advertised, and several rooms (concrete walls) I am still able to -56db (2.4Ghz) and -68db (5Ghz) signal, whereas I was only able to get -78db for the 2.4Ghz network, and unreachable network. Signal strength is measured with the Airport App wifi scan. Basically, this has a better signal far away from the router, than being next to the Salt router.The top speed is somewhat slower (450/450mbit up/down for TP-Link, and 640/500 up/down for Salt when you are next to the router). Speeds are measured from my iPhone 8 with Ookla Speedtest. Speeds might be higher with a better wifi device. For anything substantially faster I find it hard to justify paying >200CHF for a Wifi6 accesspoint which is basically the only faster option.Several rooms away, I still get ~100mbit up and down measured on both the 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz networks.Comes with power over ethernet, which makes it easier to pull only one cable to where the access point is placed.It was easy to set up by plugging in and logging on to the default wireless network and open the setup page. I used the "Access Point" mode as any router should already have DHCP, so not sure what the other modes are useful for for most people.
originally posted on bhphotovideo.com
Bought a pair of these to replace some 2.4 GHz APs that were started needing to get rebooted every so often due to not allowing tablets or phones to connect, at usually the worst time. Those APs used dipole antennas which helped beam coverage to the patio and backyard. These APs have better coverage than the old APs even at 5 GHz. Theses APs are rock stable and allow phones and tablets to seamlessly hand off to one another as you walk across the property, which my old APs only sometimes did. As when setting up any WiFi use an app on your phone to determine which channels have the least interference on the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. I also set them to different channels than each other so they would not interfere with each other. Set your SSIDs to the same for the 2.4 and ... MoreBought a pair of these to replace some 2.4 GHz APs that were started needing to get rebooted every so often due to not allowing tablets or phones to connect, at usually the worst time. Those APs used dipole antennas which helped beam coverage to the patio and backyard. These APs have better coverage than the old APs even at 5 GHz. Theses APs are rock stable and allow phones and tablets to seamlessly hand off to one another as you walk across the property, which my old APs only sometimes did. As when setting up any WiFi use an app on your phone to determine which channels have the least interference on the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. I also set them to different channels than each other so they would not interfere with each other. Set your SSIDs to the same for the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. I set the bandwidth to 20 MHz for the 2.4 and 40 MHz for the 5 as that seems to be a good trade off of reducing interference and keeping good bandwidth. They offer a lot of performance for the money and are very easy to set up as an AP.
| General | |
| Device Type | Radio access point |
| Width | 40 cm |
| Depth | 25.5 cm |
| Height | 7.2 cm |
TP-Link AC1200 Wireless Access Point, Dual Band, Gigabit Port, Passive PoE, MU-MIMO, Supports Access Point, Range Extender, Multi-SSID & Client Modes,
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Tp-link Tl-wa1201 Ac1200 Wireless Access Point Dual Band Gigabit Range
Delivery $10
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
Tp-link Tl-wa1201 Ac1200 Wireless Access Point Dual Band Gigabit Range
Free delivery
Affiliate Disclosure: We may receive a small commission for purchases made through this link at no extra cost to you. This helps support our site. Thank you!
TP Link AC1200 Wi Fi Access Point TL WA1201 - Wireless Access Points (WAP)
Delivery $13.71
TP Link AC1200 Wi Fi Access Point TL WA1201 - Wireless Access Points (WAP)
Delivery $13
Brought this AP a week ago to extend the WiFi coverage in my house and it's working great. I've run a cable from my ISP supplied Router to this AP and I gave it the same SSID and password. Now I can seamlessly walk around and have my phone and other devices automatically switch over to the strongest signal. Setup was very easy too via the web page interface. Hopefully I won't need it but it's satisfying to know that this AP also comes with a 3yr warranty.PROS: Easy to setup, great price and warranty, great WiFi range.CONS: Not the prettiest device with it's 4 aerials sticking up but that wasn't a problem for my installation.
UPDATE: RMA'ing this since it keeps disconnecting users. Only fix is to manually turn router off/on. Lately this happens almost daily. This is a known issue, with the only fix being a beta firmware (which doesnt fix the issue). See TP-Link forums: https://community.tp-link.com/en/home/forum/topic/215894Don't buy this until the firmware issue is fixed!OLD REVIEW:Upgraded from my Salt router's wifi signal to this access point. I could not reach 2.4Ghz or 5Ghz signal behind three walls in my apartment with Salt, but this on works perfectly.Speeds are roughly as advertised, and several rooms (concrete walls) I am still able to -56db (2.4Ghz) and -68db (5Ghz) signal, whereas I was only able to get -78db for the 2.4Ghz network, and unreachable network. Signal ... MoreUPDATE: RMA'ing this since it keeps disconnecting users. Only fix is to manually turn router off/on. Lately this happens almost daily. This is a known issue, with the only fix being a beta firmware (which doesnt fix the issue). See TP-Link forums: https://community.tp-link.com/en/home/forum/topic/215894Don't buy this until the firmware issue is fixed!OLD REVIEW:Upgraded from my Salt router's wifi signal to this access point. I could not reach 2.4Ghz or 5Ghz signal behind three walls in my apartment with Salt, but this on works perfectly.Speeds are roughly as advertised, and several rooms (concrete walls) I am still able to -56db (2.4Ghz) and -68db (5Ghz) signal, whereas I was only able to get -78db for the 2.4Ghz network, and unreachable network. Signal strength is measured with the Airport App wifi scan. Basically, this has a better signal far away from the router, than being next to the Salt router.The top speed is somewhat slower (450/450mbit up/down for TP-Link, and 640/500 up/down for Salt when you are next to the router). Speeds are measured from my iPhone 8 with Ookla Speedtest. Speeds might be higher with a better wifi device. For anything substantially faster I find it hard to justify paying >200CHF for a Wifi6 accesspoint which is basically the only faster option.Several rooms away, I still get ~100mbit up and down measured on both the 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz networks.Comes with power over ethernet, which makes it easier to pull only one cable to where the access point is placed.It was easy to set up by plugging in and logging on to the default wireless network and open the setup page. I used the "Access Point" mode as any router should already have DHCP, so not sure what the other modes are useful for for most people.
Bought a pair of these to replace some 2.4 GHz APs that were started needing to get rebooted every so often due to not allowing tablets or phones to connect, at usually the worst time. Those APs used dipole antennas which helped beam coverage to the patio and backyard. These APs have better coverage than the old APs even at 5 GHz. Theses APs are rock stable and allow phones and tablets to seamlessly hand off to one another as you walk across the property, which my old APs only sometimes did. As when setting up any WiFi use an app on your phone to determine which channels have the least interference on the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. I also set them to different channels than each other so they would not interfere with each other. Set your SSIDs to the same for the 2.4 and ... MoreBought a pair of these to replace some 2.4 GHz APs that were started needing to get rebooted every so often due to not allowing tablets or phones to connect, at usually the worst time. Those APs used dipole antennas which helped beam coverage to the patio and backyard. These APs have better coverage than the old APs even at 5 GHz. Theses APs are rock stable and allow phones and tablets to seamlessly hand off to one another as you walk across the property, which my old APs only sometimes did. As when setting up any WiFi use an app on your phone to determine which channels have the least interference on the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. I also set them to different channels than each other so they would not interfere with each other. Set your SSIDs to the same for the 2.4 and 5 GHz bands. I set the bandwidth to 20 MHz for the 2.4 and 40 MHz for the 5 as that seems to be a good trade off of reducing interference and keeping good bandwidth. They offer a lot of performance for the money and are very easy to set up as an AP.
I have a studio in my back yard that's too far from our router to reliably received a good signal. An ethernet cable runs from the router to the studio for my desktop computer. But I sometimes want wi-fi there as well for my laptop and and phone. Just tested it with the speedtest.net website. My wired laptop has a download speed of 92 Mbps, my phone using the Wi-Fi signal, 63 Mbps. That's of course very close to the router, sitting at my desk. It goes down to 55 to 58 on the other side of the room, and to 35 at the opposite corner partially obstructed by a wall, about 25 feet away. For my purposes, this works fine. Note it offers an N wireless connection with 2.4 gh signal, it does not offer a 5 gh signal. But I don't need that. Setup was simple if you know the IP ... MoreI have a studio in my back yard that's too far from our router to reliably received a good signal. An ethernet cable runs from the router to the studio for my desktop computer. But I sometimes want wi-fi there as well for my laptop and and phone. Just tested it with the speedtest.net website. My wired laptop has a download speed of 92 Mbps, my phone using the Wi-Fi signal, 63 Mbps. That's of course very close to the router, sitting at my desk. It goes down to 55 to 58 on the other side of the room, and to 35 at the opposite corner partially obstructed by a wall, about 25 feet away. For my purposes, this works fine. Note it offers an N wireless connection with 2.4 gh signal, it does not offer a 5 gh signal. But I don't need that. Setup was simple if you know the IP address your router has assigned to the access point, which is easy if you go to your routers web page set up and look at the table of attached devices. Then you can just type the IP address of the access point into your web browser and access the set up page for the access point. It's default settings work fine for use as an access point, but that way you can provide your own name and password for the signal.
I set mine up in a hurry. I was in a hurry. Getting started guide made it super easy, got into the web interface, connected to the existing wifi and after a min or so I had "wired" internet in my bedroom for my gaming PC. Added a 8 port switch, plugged port 1 into the TP-Link, now my secondary PC and my M1 Mac Mini are all "hard wired". Using it on 5Ghz and have a great signal going through 2 walls. AP (bridge) is sitting ontop of one of my PC towers a few inches from the wall my desk is against. No problems. One cool feature I really like is you can schedule turning off the little green LED's between certain times. Just a really neat little feature for someone like me who's using it in a bedroom. It's DHCP server is set to AUTO by default. It was thankfully smart ... MoreI set mine up in a hurry. I was in a hurry. Getting started guide made it super easy, got into the web interface, connected to the existing wifi and after a min or so I had "wired" internet in my bedroom for my gaming PC. Added a 8 port switch, plugged port 1 into the TP-Link, now my secondary PC and my M1 Mac Mini are all "hard wired". Using it on 5Ghz and have a great signal going through 2 walls. AP (bridge) is sitting ontop of one of my PC towers a few inches from the wall my desk is against. No problems. One cool feature I really like is you can schedule turning off the little green LED's between certain times. Just a really neat little feature for someone like me who's using it in a bedroom. It's DHCP server is set to AUTO by default. It was thankfully smart enough not to enable it since the router is already handing out IP addresses. I hard set it to OFF anyway. One little "gotcha", and not worth loosing a star over is the web interface URL no longer works after putting it into bridge mode. Instead you have to figure out what it's IP address is and go to it that way. But once you have it setup you shouldn't need to fuss with it. Been going for a week so far with no issues. I was planning on eventually running some Ethernet down the hall eventually, and I still might, but for now, this thing is faster than our Internet access anyway so may not do that for a long time. Hope this is helpful. Happy customer. <3
I use this configured as a client to connect my PC to wireless. My Wifi Router is 3 floors down on the other side of house. This is faster than my Intel wifi 6 card, several phones, and Qualcomm Atheros card. It is at least 1.5x faster than all of them. Update: Knocking down two stars because I no longer use it. It constantly queries bing, netflix, linkedin, yahoo, several time servers, etc. They may be doing it to check for internet connectivity or they may be doing it to data mine connectivity and sell the data. I don't care why they do it: it pollutes my logs and I don't want my AP talking to anything on the internet I haven't told it to. It is not really worth the extra speed. It is a security risk, it would be like someone pointing a unloaded gun at you every 6 ... MoreI use this configured as a client to connect my PC to wireless. My Wifi Router is 3 floors down on the other side of house. This is faster than my Intel wifi 6 card, several phones, and Qualcomm Atheros card. It is at least 1.5x faster than all of them. Update: Knocking down two stars because I no longer use it. It constantly queries bing, netflix, linkedin, yahoo, several time servers, etc. They may be doing it to check for internet connectivity or they may be doing it to data mine connectivity and sell the data. I don't care why they do it: it pollutes my logs and I don't want my AP talking to anything on the internet I haven't told it to. It is not really worth the extra speed. It is a security risk, it would be like someone pointing a unloaded gun at you every 6 seconds, but you cant be 100% sure it is unloaded.
N300 (Newer Model) = TL-WA801N Looks nice. Setup was easy, but.... I am NOT seeing anything near the advertised speed. I plug the ethernet cable into my laptop, run a speed test, and see 288 Mbps download speed. I move the ethernet cable from my laptop to the N300, connect my laptop to the N300 via WiFi, and see less than 30 Mbps. This is less than 10% of the advertised speed. (Laptop was 3 feet away from the N300 for this test.) There may be some things that I need to tweak, but this is way slower than I would have ever expected. I will scan the comments to see if others encountered this problem and if there is a fix. I will update this review if I manage to get better throughput. I am attaching an image showing the bandwidth monitor plus results from the Ookla ... MoreN300 (Newer Model) = TL-WA801N Looks nice. Setup was easy, but.... I am NOT seeing anything near the advertised speed. I plug the ethernet cable into my laptop, run a speed test, and see 288 Mbps download speed. I move the ethernet cable from my laptop to the N300, connect my laptop to the N300 via WiFi, and see less than 30 Mbps. This is less than 10% of the advertised speed. (Laptop was 3 feet away from the N300 for this test.) There may be some things that I need to tweak, but this is way slower than I would have ever expected. I will scan the comments to see if others encountered this problem and if there is a fix. I will update this review if I manage to get better throughput. I am attaching an image showing the bandwidth monitor plus results from the Ookla Speedtest (Windows 10 application) running through the N300. Very unhappy with this performance. I did try setting this N300 up in "Client Mode" to provide a WiFi connection to a desktop running Windows 10. The results of this test were even worse; I was seeing less than 10 Mbps during this test, but to be fair, this was not a very extensive test. On the plus side, the "Quick Installation Guide" included in the box was very easy to follow and gave me exactly the info I needed to get things up and running. Just wish the performance was a lot better. Minor Update: I have been letting the N300 throughput monitor run as I have been writing this review. The monitor does show a max of 177 Mbps transmit (download), but this was only a single spike. I have no idea why it is able to jump this high at one point in time, but yields such poor results when running the Ookla Speedtest. The device appears to be capable of much higher speeds, but Speedtest is not seeing these higher speeds. Bigger Update: Purchased TP-Link AC1900 and configured as Access Point rather than router. Just ran a few speedtests. This product; TL-WA801N (which claims up to 300 Mbps) is giving me 22 Mbps download speed. The AC1900 is giving me 220 Mbps download speed. (It is likely our 300 Mbps internet connection that is limiting us here). If you care about speed, I would skip the TL-WA801N and go for the AC1900 instead.
APs work great for my home network set-up (CenturyLink service; C3000Z Modem/Router combo; Netgear GS316 switch). I was looking for something that would allow me to run one seamless network from one end of my house to the other. From scrolling CenturyLink's website it appeared they support (if not favor) TP Link equipment. With a basic understanding of WiFi and IP settings I'm by no means an expert. I was looking for something simple I could set-up without hiring out and these APs did just that! With new construction our only phone line is in the basement- terrible for WiFi! We also have wired ethernet ports at the farthest extent of the house and garage. Because of this, I didn't have to be within broadcast range of the current Wifi router. Install: I started with ... MoreAPs work great for my home network set-up (CenturyLink service; C3000Z Modem/Router combo; Netgear GS316 switch). I was looking for something that would allow me to run one seamless network from one end of my house to the other. From scrolling CenturyLink's website it appeared they support (if not favor) TP Link equipment. With a basic understanding of WiFi and IP settings I'm by no means an expert. I was looking for something simple I could set-up without hiring out and these APs did just that! With new construction our only phone line is in the basement- terrible for WiFi! We also have wired ethernet ports at the farthest extent of the house and garage. Because of this, I didn't have to be within broadcast range of the current Wifi router. Install: I started with the router. I ordered two APs, recorded the MAC addresses, then assigned them a specific IP within my router management dashboard. I then plugged in the first AP (power and ethernet) and turned it on. Network connection is Modem/Router > Switch > APs. Once the AP fired up, I changed the network SSID and password to match my current home network. When the system refreshed, I confirmed it was in the right IP from my router and repeated for second AP. I tested with a YouTube video from one end of the house all the way through to the other AP. There was some lag between my phone pinging one AP to the next, but overall I'm extremely satisfied with the APs as I did not have to manually transition networks. Managing APs moving forward: As long as I'm connected to any portion of my home network I can manage either AP individually (note- I did set up different passwords for APs as a failsafe to ensure I was manipulating the right one!) by entering their respective IP in any internet browser address bar (just like accessing router). This would then take me to the original TPnet login page. If you don't know the IP address, you can likely find within your router (find connected devices, find the AP MAC address, record IP address). By assigning a specific IP by AP during installation I pre-staged a starting point for managing APs in the future. Moreover, if APs should ever fall off the network (i.e. power outage), they'll reconnect in to the same IP every time. Hope this helps the next simple DIYer like me!
It was super easy to seup via the web interface & gives me far better WiFi signal strength compared to my old TL-WA801ND which started dropping connections after 10 years solid use. Some things just don't last LOL. Upload/Download speeds & latency are also improved over my old WAP device.I know Ubiquiti is the new flavour of the month but I've always found TP-Link gear to be good value for money & reliable for many years use. I recommend this device.
I have a new house with installed CAT 6 wiring to a central network hub. The wireless network was unusably weak in one corner of the house. I deployed the TP-Link AC1200 as a wireless access point with wired backhaul in that corner. Setup was easy with a few small glitches that were fairly obvious to resolve. I gave the TP-Link AC1200 the same SSID as the central wireless. My laptop switches seamlessly between them (which depends on the laptop's wireless software). The product description doesn't mention the lengths of cords. Both the Ethernet and the power cords were too short to reach from the wall outlets to the top of the book case where I placed the TP-Link AC1200, requiring me to acquire a longer Ethernet cord and to add a clunky power extension cord. The Web ... MoreI have a new house with installed CAT 6 wiring to a central network hub. The wireless network was unusably weak in one corner of the house. I deployed the TP-Link AC1200 as a wireless access point with wired backhaul in that corner. Setup was easy with a few small glitches that were fairly obvious to resolve. I gave the TP-Link AC1200 the same SSID as the central wireless. My laptop switches seamlessly between them (which depends on the laptop's wireless software). The product description doesn't mention the lengths of cords. Both the Ethernet and the power cords were too short to reach from the wall outlets to the top of the book case where I placed the TP-Link AC1200, requiring me to acquire a longer Ethernet cord and to add a clunky power extension cord. The Web administration connects immediately from a computer using the TP-Link AC1200 for its network, but requires a lookup of the TP-Link AC1200 IP address from any other spot. This is confusing when using the same SSID for different wireless points, so it's not immediately obvious which one is active. Overall, the TP-Link AC1200 remains my choice for wireless access, and I will try to get another if I find another location with a weak signal. Unfortunately, it looks as though TP-Link may have discontinued the item. Several retailers are out of stock, and TP-Link encouraged me to switch to a ceiling mount version, which I do not want.
| General | |
| Device Type | Radio access point |
| Width | 40 cm |
| Depth | 25.5 cm |
| Height | 7.2 cm |