FCC Router Import Ban: What It Means for MikroTik, ISPs, and Your Network
Understanding how new FCC restrictions affect ISP-grade equipment and consumer routing platforms.
The FCC has expanded its Covered List to include foreign-made consumer routers, effectively restricting approval and import of new devices in this category.
This action does not impact currently deployed equipment, but it introduces long-term considerations for supply chain availability, especially for providers relying on cost-effective edge hardware such as MikroTik hAP and hEX platforms.
What the FCC Import Ban Does
The FCC is not banning routers already in use. Instead, it is:
Blocking new equipment authorizations
Restricting the import of new foreign-made consumer routers
Expanding enforcement through the Covered List
Without FCC approval, new devices cannot legally be imported or sold in the U.S.
What Is Not Affected
Existing deployed routers
The current inventory is already in distribution
Previously approved hardware models
Your current network remains fully operational and compliant.
Impact on ISP-Grade MikroTik Equipment (CCR / CRS)
Core MikroTik platforms such as CCR (Cloud Core Routers) and CRS switching systems are not the primary targets of this FCC action.
Classified as enterprise or ISP infrastructure
Not considered consumer-grade routers
No immediate deployment or compliance impact
However, long-term policy expansion could bring additional scrutiny to foreign-manufactured infrastructure platforms.
Impact on Consumer and CPE Devices (hAP / hEX)
Consumer and subscriber-edge devices are where the impact becomes operationally significant.
hAP and hEX devices fall into consumer router categories
New models may face approval or import restrictions
Future availability may become limited
WISPs relying on these platforms for customer deployments should monitor supply closely.
Operational Impact for ISPs and WISPs
Short-Term:
No immediate disruption
Normal operations continue
Mid-Term:
Supply tightening
Increased hardware costs
Long-Term:
Potential vendor diversification
Mixed hardware environments
Recommended Actions
Maintain inventory of critical CPE hardware
Monitor FCC Covered List updates
Evaluate alternative vendor options for edge devices
Avoid over-dependence on new, unproven hardware models
Final Thoughts
The FCC router import restriction is a forward-looking policy targeting future supply chains rather than existing deployments. For MikroTik users, core infrastructure remains unaffected today, but consumer and subscriber-edge devices represent the primary area of risk moving forward.
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