I understand you'd like to connect your Fire TV Stick to a 5Ghz Wi. Go to the Fire Stick's Wi. Learn why your Fire Stick isn't detecting 5GHz Wi-Fi and simple solutions to fix it, ensuring smooth streaming with your 5GHz network.
Using the FireStick 5GHz network speed, you can say goodbye to excess buffering and peripheral noises when watching your favorite videos. Also, with a 5GHz network signal, you'll unleash the full functions Fire Stick has to offer. So, if you're interested in utilizing the Fire TV device at full capacity, keep reading this article.
A 5GHz network will typically deliver much faster internet speeds to your devices - including an Amazon Fire TV. But 5GHz networks are intended for short distances, while 2.4GHz are better are delivering internet more widely across a home. If your Fire TV Stick won't connect to 5GHz Wi-Fi, this guide explains compatibility issues, channel settings, router configuration fixes, and how to switch to the best Wi.
In summary, if your TV is far from the router or there are many obstacles (like walls), the 2.4GHz network may be more reliable. If the TV is closer to the router and you require higher speeds for better streaming quality, the 5GHz network is preferable. My 4k Fire Cube connects to the 5Ghz version, as do all my other devices.
Rebooted router, Fire TV stick, made it forget the network and connect again, but still only joins the 2.4Ghz version. A 5GHz network will typically deliver much faster internet speeds to your devices - including an Amazon Fire TV. But 5GHz networks are intended for short distances, while 2.4GHz are better are.
In fact, every Fire TV device from Amazon can connect to 5GHz networks, tracing all the way back to the original Fire TV streaming box released in April 2014.