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GuideMay 9, 2026· 8 min read
ByPong.com Editorial Team· Editorial Team

Ethernet Cable Types Explained: Cat5e vs Cat6 vs Cat6a vs Cat8 — Which One Do You Need?

Not all Ethernet cables deliver the same speed. Cat5e caps at 1 Gbps, Cat6 handles 10 Gbps at short runs, and Cat8 supports 25–40 Gbps. Here is exactly which cable you need for gaming, streaming, home networking, and future-proofing — with real performance differences explained.

You plugged in an Ethernet cable expecting gigabit speeds. Instead, your speed test shows 95 Mbps. The cable you grabbed from a drawer might be the problem — it could be a Cat5 relic from 2008 that physically cannot carry more than 100 Mbps.

The cable between your router and your device is often the weakest link in your home network. A $3 cable difference can mean 10× the speed. Here is a straightforward breakdown of every Ethernet cable category, what each one actually delivers, and the only two you should be buying in 2026.

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Ethernet cable categories at a glance

Every Ethernet cable has a "Category" rating (Cat) printed on its jacket. Higher numbers mean higher maximum speeds and frequencies. Here is what each one supports:

CableMax speedMax frequencyMax distance (full speed)ShieldingStill worth buying?
Cat5100 Mbps100 MHz100 mUnshielded (UTP)No — obsolete
Cat5e1 Gbps100 MHz100 mUnshielded (UTP)Budget option only
Cat610 Gbps*250 MHz55 m (10G) / 100 m (1G)UTP or STPYes — best value
Cat6a10 Gbps500 MHz100 mShielded (STP)Yes — future-proof
Cat710 Gbps600 MHz100 mShielded (S/FTP)Skip it
Cat825–40 Gbps2000 MHz30 mShielded (S/FTP)Overkill for homes

Cat5 and Cat5e: the cables you probably already have

Cat5 is the original Ethernet cable standard from the 1990s. It maxes out at 100 Mbps (Fast Ethernet). If your ISP plan is anything above 100 Mbps, a Cat5 cable is physically bottlenecking your speed. Check the tiny text printed along the cable jacket — if it says "Cat5" without the "e," replace it immediately.

Cat5e (enhanced) raised the ceiling to 1 Gbps by reducing crosstalk — the electrical interference between the four twisted pairs inside the cable. For a 200 Mbps or even 500 Mbps plan, Cat5e works perfectly. It only becomes a bottleneck when your plan exceeds 1 Gbps or when you need to transfer large files between devices on your local network.

Cat6: the best value for most homes in 2026

Cat6 is the sweet spot for the majority of home users. It supports 1 Gbps at the full 100-meter distance and 10 Gbps for runs under 55 meters. Since most home cable runs are under 30 meters (router to office, router to gaming setup), you effectively get 10 Gbps capability at a price only slightly above Cat5e.

The key improvement over Cat5e is bandwidth frequency — 250 MHz vs 100 MHz. Higher frequency means the cable can carry more data simultaneously, which reduces latency and jitter even when you are not saturating the full speed. This is why gamers on Cat6 often see slightly lower ping and more consistent jitter than on Cat5e, even at the same speed tier.

ScenarioCat5e performanceCat6 performance
500 Mbps plan, 10m run~490 Mbps, 0.3ms jitter~495 Mbps, 0.1ms jitter
1 Gbps plan, 20m run~940 Mbps, 0.5ms jitter~960 Mbps, 0.2ms jitter
1 Gbps plan, 50m run~920 Mbps, 0.8ms jitter~950 Mbps, 0.3ms jitter
2 Gbps plan, 15m runCapped at ~940 Mbps~1.8 Gbps

Cat6a: future-proofing for multi-gig internet

Cat6a (augmented) is the cable to buy if you are running in-wall wiring or setting up a network you do not want to touch for 10 years. It guarantees 10 Gbps at the full 100-meter distance by doubling the frequency to 500 MHz and adding tighter twist rates plus optional shielding.

Multi-gig internet plans (2 Gbps, 5 Gbps) are rolling out across the U.S. in 2026. If you are pulling cable through walls or running conduit, Cat6a makes sense because ripping out and replacing wall cable later is expensive and painful. For patch cables (desk to wall jack, router to switch), standard Cat6 is fine.

The downsides of Cat6a are practical: the cable is thicker (harder to bend around tight corners), heavier, and roughly 40% more expensive per foot than Cat6. For runs under 30 meters — which covers most apartments and small homes — Cat6 delivers the same real-world speed.

Cat7: why you should skip it

Cat7 is the awkward middle child of Ethernet cables. It offers 10 Gbps at 600 MHz with individual pair shielding (S/FTP), but it was never ratified by TIA/EIA (the standards body for cabling in the U.S.). It uses a non-standard GG45 or TERA connector instead of the standard RJ45.

In practice, every "Cat7" cable sold on Amazon with RJ45 connectors is actually a Cat6a cable with extra shielding and a Cat7 label. You are paying a Cat7 premium for Cat6a performance. Buy real Cat6a instead and save money.

Cat8: data center cable, not for your house

Cat8 supports 25 Gbps (Cat8.1) or 40 Gbps (Cat8.2) at 2000 MHz, but only at distances up to 30 meters. It is designed for short runs between switches in data centers and server rooms, not for home networking.

There is no consumer router, modem, or NIC in 2026 that supports 25 or 40 Gbps over Ethernet. Buying a Cat8 cable for your gaming setup is like putting racing fuel in a Honda Civic — the hardware cannot use what the cable delivers. Your money is better spent on Cat6 or Cat6a.

Which Ethernet cable should you buy?

For gaming

Buy Cat6. Gaming cares more about low latency and low jitter than raw bandwidth. A competitive Fortnite match uses about 5 Mbps — even Cat5e handles that. But Cat6 delivers measurably lower jitter at high frequencies, which translates to more consistent hit registration and fewer micro-stutters. A 10-foot Cat6 cable costs under $10 and is the single cheapest upgrade that makes a real difference.

For streaming and home theater

Buy Cat6. A 4K HDR stream uses 25 Mbps. 8K (where available) uses about 50 Mbps. Cat6 handles both effortlessly. Hardwiring your smart TV or streaming stick removes WiFi interference entirely, which eliminates buffering mid-stream.

For home office and video calls

Buy Cat6. Zoom, Teams, and Google Meet use 3–8 Mbps but are extremely sensitive to jitter and packet loss. A wired Cat6 connection eliminates the WiFi variability that causes frozen screens and audio drops during important meetings.

For in-wall wiring (new construction or renovation)

Buy Cat6a. You are running cable once. Multi-gig internet is coming (AT&T Fiber already offers 5 Gbps in some markets). Cat6a guarantees 10 Gbps at any distance and will not need replacing for at least a decade. The extra cost per foot is trivial compared to the labor of pulling new cable later.

For a NAS, server, or local file transfers

Buy Cat6a. If you transfer large video files, back up machines to a NAS, or run a Plex server, 10 Gbps local transfers are a night-and-day difference over 1 Gbps. A 50 GB file takes 7 minutes on 1 Gbps vs 40 seconds on 10 Gbps. You will also need a 10 Gbps NIC and switch to unlock this — the cable alone is not enough.

5 common Ethernet cable mistakes

  1. Using an old Cat5 cable and blaming your ISP for slow speeds. Check the text printed on every cable in your setup. One Cat5 cable anywhere in the chain limits your entire connection to 100 Mbps.
  2. Buying Cat7 or Cat8 for a home network. You are paying 3–5× more for zero real-world benefit. No consumer hardware can use their speed ceiling. Buy Cat6 or Cat6a.
  3. Running Ethernet cables next to power cables. Unshielded Ethernet picks up electromagnetic interference from power lines. Keep at least 6 inches of separation, or use shielded (STP) cable if they must run parallel.
  4. Using a 50-foot cable when 10 feet will do. Longer cables add tiny amounts of latency and signal degradation. Use the shortest cable that reaches comfortably.
  5. Ignoring the cable between modem and router. The short patch cable bundled with your router is often Cat5e or even Cat5. If your plan exceeds 1 Gbps, replace this cable first.

How to check what Ethernet cable you currently have

Look at the outer jacket of the cable. Manufacturers are required to print the category on the cable itself — look for text like "CAT5E," "CAT.6," "Category 6a," or similar markings. It is usually printed in small white or grey text, repeated every few feet along the cable length.

If you cannot find markings (some very cheap cables omit them), you can identify the approximate category by the cable's thickness and stiffness. Cat5/5e cables are thin and very flexible. Cat6 is slightly thicker with a center spine separator. Cat6a is noticeably thicker and stiffer. If you are unsure, replace it — a Cat6 cable costs less than a cup of coffee.

Shielded (STP) vs unshielded (UTP): does it matter at home?

For most homes, unshielded (UTP) is fine. Shielded cables (STP, FTP, S/FTP) add a foil or braided metal layer around the twisted pairs to block electromagnetic interference. This matters in data centers where hundreds of cables run in tight bundles next to high-power equipment. In a home, the interference sources are too weak to affect performance unless you are running cable directly alongside high-voltage power lines or inside an electrical conduit.

If you do buy shielded cable, you must also use shielded connectors, a shielded patch panel, and proper grounding — otherwise the shield can actually make interference worse by acting as an antenna. This is called a "ground loop" and it is a common mistake in DIY installations.

Frequently asked questions

?>Does a better Ethernet cable lower my ping?
Marginally. The cable itself adds microseconds of latency — a difference you cannot feel. But upgrading from Cat5 (100 Mbps max) to Cat6 eliminates the bottleneck that can cause bufferbloat and queue-induced latency spikes, which indirectly lowers ping during heavy traffic.
?>Can I use Cat6a cable with my Cat5e router?
Yes. All Ethernet cable categories are backward compatible. A Cat6a cable plugged into a Cat5e port will work perfectly — it just runs at the speed of the slowest device in the chain (in this case, 1 Gbps).
?>Are flat Ethernet cables worse than round ones?
Flat cables are more susceptible to crosstalk and interference because the pairs are not twisted as tightly. For short runs (under 10 feet) across a desk, flat cables are fine. For longer runs or in-wall installation, use round cable.
?>Do I need Cat8 for WiFi 7?
No. WiFi 7 connects wirelessly — no Ethernet cable needed on the client side. The cable you need is between your modem/ONT and your WiFi 7 router. Cat6 handles up to 10 Gbps for that short run, which exceeds any consumer internet plan in 2026.
?>How long can an Ethernet cable be before speed drops?
Cat5e and Cat6a support full speed up to 100 meters (328 feet). Cat6 supports 10 Gbps up to 55 meters and 1 Gbps up to 100 meters. Cat8 supports full speed only up to 30 meters. For home use, almost every cable run is well under 55 meters.

Bottom line

For 90% of homes in 2026, Cat6 is the right cable. It costs almost nothing, supports speeds up to 10 Gbps at typical home distances, and delivers measurably better jitter performance than Cat5e. If you are pulling cable through walls, upgrade to Cat6a for future-proofing. Skip Cat7 entirely. Ignore Cat8 unless you work in a data center.

The most important thing is not which category you buy — it is making sure you do not have a single old Cat5 cable hiding in your setup and silently capping your entire connection at 100 Mbps. Check your cables, run a speed test on pong.com, and replace anything that is holding you back.

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