You do not need fiber in every unit to deliver a modern resident experience.
In most buildings, outcomes are driven by network design, WiFi placement, electronics, monitoring, and support.
Cabling still matters, .
But pathways and architecture matter more.
Split the network into three layers.
Fiber usually earns its keep in Layer 1.
Cat6a usually shines in Layer 2.
Layer 3 is about reliability and simplicity, not hype.
Pathways decide how painful the next upgrade will be.
If you get pathways right, you can refresh electronics and WiFi generations with less disruption.
If you get pathways wrong, even “premium” cabling will not save the project.
Cat6 = copper twisted pair. Common for 1Gb. Can support 10Gb on shorter distances.
Cat6a = copper twisted pair built for stronger noise margin. Designed to support 10Gb to full structured-cabling distances.
Fiber = glass. Immune to electromagnetic interference. Scales cleanly with optics.
Cat6a is usually the best “standard” for multifamily horizontal runs.
The reasons it tends to win include:
If you want one copper standard that ages well, Cat6a is the safe bet.
Cat6 can be a rational choice in constrained retrofits.
Use it when:
Cat6 is not “bad.”
It is just easier to outgrow if you later need 10Gb at distance.
Fiber is excellent technology.
It is just not automatically required everywhere.
Fiber is typically the right move for:
This is where fiber earns its reputation, with distance and scalability.
Residents do not rate your property based on “fiber” or “copper.”
They rate it on:
A beautifully cabled network will still underperform with poor WiFi design.
A well-designed Cat6a network with strong monitoring and support can feel premium every day.
Use these questions to choose intelligently without getting dragged into buzzwords.
If you cannot answer Q6 and Q7 clearly, pause.
Those two questions drive the long-term outcome.
Cable type feels like the big decision.
Pathways decide your flexibility.
Residents live on WiFi, not ethernet ports.
Design around coverage, capacity, and interference.
Support is part of the infrastructure.
If it is slow, the resident experience degrades no matter what is in the walls.
Elauwit focuses on reliable resident experience.
That means design, monitoring, and support are treated as first-class requirements.