Do you have coax in all the rooms. You could also try MoCA.
Home Networking
A community to help people learn, install, set up or troubleshoot their home network equipment and solutions.
Rules
- Please stay on topic.
- Please use the search function to look for keywords related to what you want to ask before posting since most common issues have been answered.
- No Ads. This community is for support and discussion. Ads and self promotion are not welcome here.
- No product reviews or announcements. If you have a question about a product, be specific about what you want to know.
- Be civil. Don't be a jerk. Not being a jerk is surprisingly easy.
- No URL shorteners. URL shorteners tend to hide the real use of a link. For this reason, please use normal links, even if they're long.
- No affiliate links.
- No gatekeeping. With profession shall come professionalism. Extend help without judging others for their ignorance. The same goes for downvoting of comments or posts for "stupid questions" or not being as knowledgeable as others.
There are far too many variables to tell online.
Find someone that can come and take a look at your specific home and seek their advice.
This largely depends on how classy you are, and what materials you need to go through.
The cheapest and least-classy option, is just a long cable.
The step-up is something like Powerline, where you use an adaptor that uses the power lines in your house. Still no contractor needed.
The next step is to actually wire through walls/ceilings, or to run a bunch of conduits.
If you go the powerline route, you are looking as cheap as $50-$100.
If you do the contractor route, well, it could be thousands if you run into a bunch of problems. It might only be a couple hundred though.
Depends on how your house is set up and whether you have a clear shot between the router and the room through the walls/ceiling/basement. I just moved my router to the basement and ran cat6 to an AP on the second floor for better connection in my office. Took me a day to figure out after the route I figured I could go didn’t pan out and I had to do a big loop instead of tearing through drywall… completely dependant on your layout!
From the square foot thing, I assume you're in America?
This post is an automated archive from a submission made on /r/HomeNetworking, powered by Fediverser software running on alien.top. Responses to this submission will not be seen by the original author until they claim ownership of their alien.top account. Please consider reaching out to them let them know about this post and help them migrate to Lemmy.
Lemmy users: you are still very much encouraged to participate in the discussion. There are still many other subscribers on [email protected] that can benefit from your contribution and join in the conversation.
Reddit users: you can also join the fediverse right away by getting by visiting https://portal.alien.top. If you are looking for a Reddit alternative made for and by an independent community, check out Fediverser.
I'd be surprised if you get a quote for less than $350 for a single cable run, depending on location and complexity of the house.
Very little if you don’t mind the cable being on the outside of your walls…
To many variables to give a solid answer. But there are questions. Do you have basement or attic access between the two locations? The cable could be run through those spaces, then up or down the wall.
You might search for low-voltage/network cable installers in your area. Because it’s a single cable run, you may not get much of a response, or a crazy expensive cost.
If you have a friend, or friend of friend who does network work, you might be able to get them to help, for the cost of material and beer.
$250-350 average in my area but there’s a lot of factors we don’t have.
You should really be posting this on NextDoor or local forum/subreddit, & get some referrals at the same time.
That said:
- Single story home implies you at least have an easy cable run in the attic. Depending on construction basement/crawlspace could be easy too (unless it's a slab).
- Low voltage contractor is generally a better bet than electrician for the termination and materials choice. Unless you have the networking knowledge and social skills/gumption/experience with contractors to micromanage a electrician into do the right thing (and you need all those skills, even though I can research the technical info in more detail than contractors on some types of projects I cannot always convince them to do it the way I want)