Documentation
Eero router support
Network Weather works with Eero routers. Integration level: Deep.
What you'll see
Without logging in, Network Weather automatically picks up:
- Your Eero model and serial number
- Your external IP address
- Basic traffic data (how much is flowing through your network)
What you'll see with login
Logging in connects Network Weather to your Eero account and unlocks the full picture:
- Your network name and account info
- Status of every Eero node: model, software version, how many devices are connected, and Ethernet port speeds
- Security settings: whether features like WPA3, bufferbloat management (SQM), and IPv6 are turned on
- Per-device WiFi details: signal strength, connection speed, data usage, and which band each device is using
- Mesh health: which nodes are connected by wire vs. wirelessly, and how the mesh is structured
- Whether a firmware update is available
How to log in
Eero uses your Amazon/Eero account for login — it's the same process as the Eero app. Enter your phone number or email address, and Eero sends you a one-time verification code.
Sessions last about 7 days before you need to verify again.
What problems can be detected
- Devices with weak WiFi signal or slow connection speeds
- Mesh nodes that are too far apart or have poor backhaul connections
- Security settings that could be improved (like enabling WPA3)
- Whether your firmware is out of date
- Devices using an unusual amount of data
Tested on
- eero 6+
Good to know
- Firmware version isn't available through your account. Eero will tell you if an update is available, but doesn't share the exact firmware version number.
- Traffic totals show packet counts, not data amounts. Due to a quirk in how Eero reports data, Network Weather uses packet counts for traffic monitoring rather than bytes.