NetGear
NetGear is a networking hardware company that provides wired and wireless connectivity products and network management platforms for consumer, business, and service provider environments.
- Enterprise and Server Message Block (SMB) network infrastructure: Ethernet switches, wireless access points, and routers (networking)
- Wireless Local Area Network (LAN) solutions: WiFi access points, mesh systems, and controllers for indoor and outdoor deployments (wireless networking)
- Network Attached Storage (NAS) appliances for file sharing, backup, and media across IP networks (data storage)
- Cloud-based monitoring and configuration tools for centralized management of distributed devices (network management)
- Security and remote access features integrated into routers, gateways, and managed networks (network security)
More About NetGear
NetGear focuses on IP networking hardware and software that support connectivity and network services across home, business, and service provider environments. For enterprise and institutional buyers, the company positions its portfolio around Ethernet switching, WiFi infrastructure, NAS, and centralized management layers that fit into standard IP-based architectures. Offerings are designed to interoperate with widely used networking protocols such as Ethernet, Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol (TCP/IP), Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol (DHCP), VLANs (IEEE 802.1Q), and common WiFi standards under IEEE 802.11.
In the business networking category (networking), NetGear supplies managed and unmanaged Ethernet switches for LAN aggregation, access, and small core deployments. These switches typically support features relevant to enterprise and campus use, including Virtual LAN (VLAN) segmentation, Quality of Service (QoS) configuration, link aggregation, and PoE/PoE+ power delivery for devices such as access points, IP phones, and cameras. This hardware is often deployed in branch offices, small data rooms, retail sites, and distributed campuses that require standards-based switching without extensive custom integration.
NetGearās wireless portfolio (wireless networking) includes WiFi access points and related controllers that implement mainstream WiFi standards for 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands, and in newer platforms also 6 GHz where applicable. These devices are used to extend LAN connectivity to mobile and Internet of Things (IoT) endpoints in offices, schools, hospitality properties, and public venues. Support for WPA2/WPA3, captive portal integration, and multiple SSIDs enables alignment with enterprise security policies and guest access requirements. Mesh-capable products can be used to cover larger or more complex floor plans without extensive cabling.
In storage, NetGear offers NAS systems (data storage) that connect directly to IP networks for centralized file services, backup targets, and local content delivery. These appliances support standard file-sharing protocols such as SMB/CIFS and NFS, enabling integration with Windows, macOS, and Linux clients, as well as use as backup repositories for third-party software. In smaller offices or departmental settings, these NAS platforms can serve as on-premises (on-prem) storage that complements or bridges to cloud-based storage workflows.
NetGear also provides cloud-based management and monitoring capabilities (network management) that allow administrators to configure, update, and observe distributed networks from a single web interface or mobile application. Through these platforms, IT teams can provision SSIDs, adjust switch configurations, monitor device health, and push firmware updates remotely. This supports centralized oversight of many small or medium sites, which is common in franchise, retail, and multi-branch scenarios.
Across its portfolio, NetGear embeds routing, Virtual Private Network (VPN), and firewall capabilities in select devices (network security), enabling site-to-site tunnels, remote worker connectivity, and basic perimeter protection. These functions often rely on standard protocols such as IPsec, SSL/TLS, and Network Address Translation (NAT). For enterprise and institutional environments, NetGear offerings typically fit within broader multi-vendor architectures, providing access and edge capabilities that integrate with existing identity services, upstream security appliances, and core networking platforms.