TP-Link Archer AX1500
Security Analysis Report
TP-Link Archer AX1500
F
HIGH RISK
The algorithm scores this router 13/100 - an F. This router model was used to break into US military and government networks.
  • This router model was used to break into US military and government networks - This router model was specifically weaponized to infiltrate US military and government networks. The same firmware architecture runs on devices in people's homes.
  • A US ban could cut off firmware updates with little warning, leaving this router permanently exposed - A US government ban or forced sale could cut off firmware updates with little warning. Once that happens, this router is permanently unprotected.
  • Your home network is more exposed than it should be - Your home network is more exposed than it should be. Your work laptop, banking sessions, security cameras, and smart home devices all pass through this router - a flaw here gives an attacker leverage over all of them at once.
  • TP-Link is legally required to share your network data with the Chinese government if asked - The manufacturer is legally required to share your network data with the Chinese government if asked. This isn't theoretical - it's a legal obligation that can't be refused.
FCC & Ban Risk
10 /100 F
Supply chain · FCC status · CVEs · Patch support
Security Capabilities
19 /100 F
Zero-Trust · VPN · Segmentation · Monitoring
Device context
Manufacturer Chinese-owned - TP-Link Technologies Co., Ltd., Shenzhen, China
FCC status Authorized - under federal review - New models blocked from FCC authorization ↗
Made in China
Patch support Active
Everything on this network shares the exposure
💻 Work laptop & remote access 🏦 Online banking & passwords 📷 Security cameras & smart locks 👧 Kids’ devices & school logins 📱 Every phone & tablet at home 🔊 Smart speakers & streaming
What to do. Start here.
1Replace - even budget alternatives from Netgear or Asus represent a major security upgrade
2Update firmware if temporarily keeping
3Disable remote management and change default admin password
4We built Rio to score 8/8 on this framework - it’s the only router we track that does
Security features
Zero-Trust Device Admission
~Network Segmentation (VLANs)
Router-Level VPN for All Devices
Domain Allowlisting
~Granular Password Control
Guest Auto-Expiry
Clean Supply Chain
~Active Threat Monitoring
TP-Link Archer AX1500
Security Analysis Report

TP-Link Archer AX1500

Last reviewed: March 2026 · ismyroutersafe.com

TP-Link Made in China
Permanent URL - bookmark it or forward it
F
HIGH RISK
The Verdict

This router has documented security problems. Every device on this network - your work laptop, banking app, Ring camera, smart lock - is running at higher risk than it should be.

An F is not a warning - it’s a finding that the router has been independently flagged for security or supply-chain concerns serious enough to warrant action.

  • This router model was used to break into US military and government networks

    This router model was specifically weaponized to infiltrate US military and government networks. The same firmware architecture runs on devices in people's homes.

    Show technical detail

    Volt Typhoon - TP-Link named by FBI: Chinese state hackers specifically used TP-Link routers as infrastructure to attack US government and military networks. Budget and flagship models share the same platform.

  • A US ban could cut off firmware updates with little warning, leaving this router permanently exposed

    A US government ban or forced sale could cut off firmware updates with little warning. Once that happens, this router is permanently unprotected.

    Show technical detail

    The US government is investigating this company and may force a ban: DOJ and FCC investigations into TP-Link's ownership structure. A ban or forced sale is under active consideration.

  • Your home network is more exposed than it should be

    Your home network is more exposed than it should be. Your work laptop, banking sessions, security cameras, and smart home devices all pass through this router - a flaw here gives an attacker leverage over all of them at once.

    Show technical detail

    FCC DA 26-278: New TP-Link models are blocked from FCC authorization - signaling active federal regulatory action.

  • TP-Link is legally required to share your network data with the Chinese government if asked

    The manufacturer is legally required to share your network data with the Chinese government if asked. This isn't theoretical - it's a legal obligation that can't be refused.

    Show technical detail

    Chinese National Intelligence Law: TP-Link must legally cooperate with PRC intelligence agencies under Chinese law.

Everything on this network shares the exposure
💻 Work laptop & remote access 🏦 Online banking & passwords 📷 Security cameras & smart locks 👧 Kids' devices & school logins 📱 Every phone & tablet at home 🔊 Smart speakers & streaming

An A-rated alternative is shown below.

FCC & Ban Risk
10 /100 F
Supply chain · FCC status · CVEs · Patch support
Security Capabilities
19 /100 F
Zero-Trust · VPN · Segmentation · Monitoring
FCC & Ban Risk measures supply-chain exposure, government flags, and CVE history. Security Capabilities measures what the router can actually do to protect your network. How we score →
Device context
Manufacturer Chinese-owned - TP-Link Technologies Co., Ltd., Shenzhen, China
Country of origin Built in China
US gov status Authorized - under federal review - New models blocked from FCC authorization ↗
Security patches Active (parent co. under investigation)
📋 What to do. Start here.
1
Replace - even budget alternatives from Netgear or Asus represent a major security upgrade
2
Update firmware if temporarily keeping
3
Disable remote management and change default admin password
4
We built Rio to score 8/8 on this framework. It’s the only router we track that does - and we’d tell you if another one did
We make Rio. We rate it A. Here’s why.
Rio scores 8/8. This router doesn’t come close - and we’d tell you if it did.
No Chinese jurisdiction, no investigation, zero CVEs. We built Rio to score 8/8. It’s the only router we track that does.
Every device protected automatically - Ring camera, smart lock, work laptop, baby monitor. No app required.
Trusted by PCMatic and Sony VAIO. Purpose-built for security from day one.
Set up in under 10 minutes. Same cables, same internet provider - no tech skills needed.
Free US shipping · 30-day money-back · Any internet provider
Rio Router
🔒 Security capabilities comparison
Here's how your router compares to Rio across the 8 dimensions we built our framework around. (Yes, we made Rio.)
TP-LINK
your router
Rio Router
full standard
Zero-Trust Device Admission
Every new device is blocked by default - admin must approve it once, even if it has the right password
Not available
Available
Network Segmentation (VLANs)
Devices on your network are isolated from each other, so a hacked smart TV can't reach your laptop
Partial
Available
Router-Level VPN for All Devices
All traffic - including smart devices that can't run VPN apps - is encrypted before leaving your home
Not available
Available
Domain Allowlisting
Block everything except approved sites; more effective than trying to blacklist billions of harmful URLs
Not available
Available
Granular Password Control
Separate passwords per network zone - changing one doesn't affect others
Partial
Available
Guest Auto-Expiry
Guest devices are automatically removed when they leave; neighbors can't reconnect without re-approval
Not available
Available
Clean Supply Chain
Manufactured outside Chinese legal jurisdiction - not subject to China's National Intelligence Law
Not available
Available
Active Threat Monitoring
Real-time detection of suspicious device behavior, unusual traffic patterns, and known attack signatures on your network
Partial
Available
Rio scores 8/8 - we built it to hit every dimension on this framework. Know a router that does? Tell us and we’ll add it. Get Rio →
You’ve seen the comparison. Rio covers every gap above.
Free US shipping · 30-day money-back · Works with any internet provider
Replace it with Rio ↗
Want to also check your current network in real time? BETA

The report above is based on your router’s model record. This optional check runs live probes against your current network to detect DNS hijacking and admin interface exposure - things static analysis can’t catch.

🔍
DNS HIJACK CHECK
Detects if your DNS has been silently rerouted to intercept your traffic
🌐
WAN EXPOSURE
Tests if your router admin panel is reachable from outside your home
No data stored · Runs entirely in your browser · ~5 seconds
FBI Confirmed Volt Typhoon
Chinese state hackers used this router brand to attack US infrastructure
The FBI and CISA documented Operation Volt Typhoon, a Chinese government campaign that specifically targeted TP-Link routers to infiltrate US critical infrastructure - water utilities, power grids, and military networks. The same firmware vulnerabilities that made them useful for nation-state hackers are present on home networks. CISA advisory ↗
Entry-level price, same national security classification.
Replace it with Rio ↗
How this was scored · verified March 2026: This rating combines FCC authorization status, manufacturer legal jurisdiction, CVEs from NIST NVD, active patch support status, and CISA advisory mentions. See full methodology →
Reference Data
Known CVEs - TP-Link brand history
From the NIST National Vulnerability Database. Your specific model may or may not be affected.
CVE-2023-1389 High · CVSS 8.8 Archer AX21
Command injection via country form parameter. CISA Known Exploited Vulnerabilities (KEV) listed April 2023. Actively exploited in the wild.
CVE-2022-4499 High · CVSS 7.5 TL-WR940N, TL-WR841N
Side-channel timing attack allows remote recovery of admin credentials - no authentication required.
CVE-2022-42402 Medium · CVSS 6.5 Multiple models
Authenticated remote command execution via crafted HTTP request.
Other TP-Link models
Archer AX21FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer C7FEnd of security support
Deco XE75FActive
Deco M5FLimited
Deco W7200FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Deco XE200FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Deco BE85FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer AX6000FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer AX11000FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer AX3000FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer AXE75FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Deco X20FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Deco X55FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Deco W3600FActive (parent co. under investigation)
OmadaFActive (parent co. under investigation)
ER605FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer AX1800FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer AC1200 (A6)FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer AC1750FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer AC1900FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Deco AX55FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer BE230FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer BE550FActive (parent co. under investigation)
Archer GE800FActive (parent co. under investigation)
ER706WFActive (parent co. under investigation)
Sources & evidence
All findings trace to publicly verifiable primary sources - US government databases, official FCC filings, and NIST CVE records. No proprietary or anonymous sources are used.
  1. CISA Advisory AA23-144A · 2023 ↗
  2. FCC Equipment Authorization Database ↗
  3. FCC Covered List · National Security Designation ↗
Full data source documentation: Scoring Methodology & Citations →
🦾 Scorecards like this one are why we built Rio - a consumer router that ships secure, stays patched, and earns an A. See Rio →