MediaTek unveils Filogic 8000 Wi-Fi 8 family at CES 2026 – new chipsets expected to arrive later this year
Wi-Fi 8 is the most exciting revision to the spec since the mid-2010s, and MediaTek is one of the first to announce real hardware for it.
At CES 2026, MediaTek just threw its considerable weight behind the next chapter in wireless networking, which is of course Wi-Fi 8. The MediaTek Filogic 8000 family is now officially out of the gate as one of the first chip platforms aimed at powering the upcoming Wi-Fi 8 ecosystem. Like Wi-Fi 8 itself, the Filogic 8000 parts are less about headline gigabits and more about real-world reliability and low latency.
Wi-Fi has already hit absurd peak speeds with Wi-Fi 7. You can achieve multi-gigabit link rates thanks to huge channels and fancy multi-link tricks, but in everyday life, we often care more about stability, responsiveness, and staying connected when spectrum is crowded, congested, or we're moving around. Wi-Fi 8 (IEEE 802.11bn, part of the "Ultra High Reliability" generation) doubles down on exactly those things.
MediaTek's press announcement emphasizes this point. The Filogic 8000 family is positioned as a foundational platform that will seed both ends of the connectivity stack, from gateways and enterprise access points, to client gadgets like phones, tablets, TVs, streaming boxes, laptops, and IoT devices.
It's not just shiny specs on paper; at CES 2026 right now, the company is demoing multi-AP coordination features such as Coordinated Beamforming, Spatial Reuse, and Multi-AP Scheduling that help access points play nicely together rather than fight for airspace. That leads to smoother connections, less interference, better performance when lots of devices are talking at once, and more predictable quality of service, which is vital for things like AR/VR, cloud gaming, or industrial automation.
On the media side, the Filogic 8000 announcement at CES makes a point that Wi-Fi 8 is tuned for the AI era, where low latency and robust links are critical. When your laptop, phone, and a dozen IoT sensors are all streaming data into a machine learning pipeline or a cloud service, having a "best-effort" network just doesn't cut it anymore. Improved power efficiency, bandwidth management, and connectivity optimizations are also core to the platform. It's about handling the mess of real environments, not just bench test numbers — updates that the Wi-Fi ecosystem has sorely needed for a few revisions now.
For context on where this fits in the standards timeline, Wi-Fi 8 hasn't been officially ratified yet. That's still slated for sometime in 2028, but draft specifications and early silicon are already rolling out. The industry often trots ahead of formal ratification: Wi-Fi 7 products hit the market in 2023 even though the standard wasn't finalized until July 2025. Early Wi-Fi 8 chips and prototypes are already in play, and MediaTek says first customer shipments of Filogic 8000 silicon will happen later this year.
Why should you care? Well, Wi-Fi 8 could mark a real shift. It won't be like dropping Wi-Fi 7 and suddenly having triple the peak bandwidth in your home, but in practical, day-to-day use, where latency spikes and disconnects are the real frustration, these improvements could matter way more. Mesh networks with smarter coordination, seamless roaming as you move through a space, and stronger links in dense environments could make Wi-Fi feel closer to wired Ethernet in its predictability and responsiveness.
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In other words, MediaTek's Wi-Fi 8 story starts here at CES: not with new eye-popping peak throughput numbers, but instead, streamlined baseline behavior. For content creators, gamers, XR/AR users, and anyone tired of the wireless handshake dance in a crowded apartment or office, Wi-Fi 8 could just end up being the biggest improvement to this technology since MU-MIMO was added in Wi-Fi 5.
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Zak is a freelance contributor to Tom's Hardware with decades of PC benchmarking experience who has also written for HotHardware and The Tech Report. A modern-day Renaissance man, he may not be an expert on anything, but he knows just a little about nearly everything.
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thestryker I mostly hope this means they'll have hardware for routers available right out of the gate. They're generally more open software wise than any alternative so it would be nice to see them get a foothold.Reply -
emike09 I've been looking forward to this spec since the first drafts were released. Managing thousands of APs and end users is always a headache, and having a focus on reliability and stability can't come soon enough.Reply