Commercial WiFi Installation Cost Southern California 2026 | WCC
Cost Guide · Updated 2026

Commercial WiFi Installation Cost in Southern California

Real cost ranges for commercial WiFi installation across Los Angeles, Orange, San Diego, Riverside, San Bernardino, and Ventura counties — broken out by AP count, platform choice, and what actually drives your quote. From a CSLB-licensed integrator with Ekahau site survey certification.

TL;DR

Commercial WiFi Installation Cost — At a Glance

Commercial WiFi installation typically costs $1,400 to $3,500 per access point installed in Southern California, including AP hardware, structured cabling drop, POE switching, controller licensing, installation labor, and Ekahau site survey. Total project cost depends on AP count, density requirements, and platform choice.

Per AP (Installed)
$1,400–$3,500
All-in: hardware + cabling + labor + 1st year licensing
Small Office (5 APs)
$7,500–$20,000
Single-suite professional or retail
Mid-Size (25 APs)
$42,000–$95,000
Corporate office, school, mid-size facility
Critical First Step

Why Every Commercial WiFi Project Starts With an Ekahau Site Survey

Before getting into AP counts and pricing tiers, here's the most important thing to understand about commercial WiFi cost: the single biggest determinant of WiFi performance and cost is whether a proper site survey was performed before installation. Skipping the site survey is the #1 reason commercial WiFi deployments underperform — and it's also the reason WiFi projects routinely come back to integrators for expensive remediation 6-12 months after install.

An Ekahau site survey uses specialized RF measurement software and hardware to map your specific building's wireless coverage requirements based on floor plans, building materials, ceiling height, density needs, and existing RF interference. The survey produces a heat map of expected signal strength, exact AP placement recommendations, channel/power planning, and a validated AP count.

Without a survey, integrators (or you) are guessing AP count from rough rules of thumb like "1 AP per 2,500 square feet." That works for vanilla open-floor offices. It doesn't work for warehouses with metal racking, hospitals with concrete walls and dense devices, schools with thick masonry, or any environment with high user density. Guesswork produces under-coverage in some areas and waste in others — both of which cost real money.

Why It's Worth the Cost

An Ekahau Site Survey Saves 20-40% on AP Count and Labor

Site surveys typically cost $1,500 to $8,000 depending on building size and complexity. That sounds like a lot — until you realize most under-surveyed deployments end up with 25-40% more APs than needed (over-deployment in low-density areas), AND coverage gaps in high-density areas requiring expensive remediation. The math heavily favors the survey on any deployment over 15 APs.

WCC includes an Ekahau site survey on every commercial WiFi project. It's not a separate sales line item we're trying to upsell — it's how we make sure the network actually works on day one. We also provide post-deployment validation surveys to verify coverage matches design.


Cost by Project Size

Cost Ranges by AP Count

Commercial WiFi projects are typically priced based on AP count, but per-AP cost actually decreases as deployment size grows. Larger projects benefit from economies of scale on site surveys, controller licensing, and installation labor. Below are typical Southern California ranges:

Small Office

5 Access Points

$7,500–$20,000
Total project cost installed

Typical fit: small professional office, retail store, medical clinic, restaurant, single-suite tenant. Covers approximately 12,500-17,500 sq ft of office space or 25,000+ sq ft of warehouse/open space.

  • $1,500–$4,000 per AP installed
  • 3–5 business days to deploy
  • Wi-Fi 6 or 6E standard
  • Cloud-managed controller
Mid-Size

25 Access Points

$42,000–$95,000
Total project cost installed

Typical fit: corporate office, multi-tenant suite, healthcare clinic, mid-size school, warehouse, or retail HQ. Covers approximately 60,000-87,500 sq ft of office space or 125,000+ sq ft of warehouse.

  • $1,680–$3,800 per AP installed
  • 2–4 weeks to deploy
  • Wi-Fi 6E typical, Cat6/6A cabling
  • Mixed indoor + some outdoor APs
Enterprise

75 Access Points

$125,000–$290,000
Total project cost installed

Typical fit: large corporate campus, hospital, multi-building school, large warehouse, manufacturing plant, or multi-floor office building. Covers 200,000+ sq ft of space, often multi-building.

  • $1,665–$3,870 per AP installed
  • 4–8 weeks to deploy
  • Wi-Fi 6E or Wi-Fi 7, Cat6A cabling
  • Indoor + outdoor + high-density

AP density planning rule of thumb: General office environments need approximately 1 AP per 2,500–3,500 sq ft. High-density environments (call centers, classrooms, conference centers, retail) need 1 AP per 1,000–1,500 sq ft. Warehouses with high ceilings and metal racking need 1 AP per 5,000–10,000 sq ft but with directional antennas. The only way to know exact AP count and placement for your specific building is an Ekahau site survey — guesswork from floor plans alone produces underperforming networks.


What Drives the Cost

The 6 Factors That Determine Your Quote

Two buildings with the same square footage can have wildly different WiFi costs depending on six key factors. Understanding what drives the price helps you evaluate quotes and identify where you can flex on scope.

1. AP Count & Density

The biggest single driver. Density requirements come from user count per square foot, not just total square footage. A 10,000 sq ft call center with 80 employees needs 6-8 APs. A 10,000 sq ft warehouse with 5 people needs 1-2 APs. Site surveys translate user density into accurate AP counts.

2. WiFi Generation (Wi-Fi 6 / 6E / 7)

Wi-Fi 6 APs cost $400-$800 each. Wi-Fi 6E APs (which add the 6 GHz band) cost $600-$1,200 each. Wi-Fi 7 APs cost $1,000-$2,000+ each. For most 2026 commercial deployments, Wi-Fi 6E is the sweet spot — meaningfully better than Wi-Fi 6 without the Wi-Fi 7 premium that isn't yet justified for most use cases.

3. Platform Choice

Cisco Meraki, Aruba, Fortinet, and Ubiquiti all have different price points and licensing models. Meraki's mandatory subscription adds 5-year cost vs Aruba's perpetual licensing option. Ubiquiti is significantly cheaper but with different management capabilities. See our Cisco Meraki vs Aruba comparison for a detailed platform breakdown.

4. Structured Cabling

Every AP needs a Cat6 or Cat6A cable run from the AP to the IDF closet. New cable runs cost $150-$400 per AP (similar to standard data drops). For Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 7 deployments, Cat6A is recommended — it costs 30-60% more than Cat6 but supports the full bandwidth potential. See our structured cabling cost guide for details.

5. POE Switching Capacity

Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 7 APs require POE+ (802.3at, 30W) or POE++ (802.3bt, 60-90W) switches. Most legacy 802.3af PoE switches cannot power modern APs at full performance. Plan $600-$2,000 per 24-port POE+ switch and $1,500-$4,500 per 24-port POE++ switch as part of the WiFi project scope.

6. Outdoor APs & Special Environments

Outdoor APs cost 50-100% more than indoor APs due to weatherproofing, mounting hardware, surge protection, and conduit-protected cabling. Special environments (high ceilings, hazardous locations, high-EMI) require ruggedized APs and engineered antennas. These add 20-40% to per-AP cost in their respective areas.


WiFi Generation Decision

Wi-Fi 6 vs Wi-Fi 6E vs Wi-Fi 7 — Which Should You Specify?

The WiFi generation decision affects 20-40% of your AP hardware cost and determines what bandwidth your wireless network can deliver for the next 5-7 years. For most 2026 commercial deployments, Wi-Fi 6E hits the right balance. Here's the breakdown:

WiFi Generation Per-AP Hardware Best For / Specifications
Wi-Fi 5 (802.11ac)$300–$600Legacy/budget deployments only. Approaching end-of-life. Not recommended for new commercial installations in 2026 — Wi-Fi 6 is now the minimum standard.
Wi-Fi 6 (802.11ax)$400–$800Acceptable for budget-conscious deployments. Supports 1 GbE backhaul over Cat6. Still appropriate for offices with moderate device density and standard usage patterns.
Wi-Fi 6E$600–$1,200Sweet spot for most 2026 commercial deployments. Adds 6 GHz band over Wi-Fi 6, dramatically reducing congestion. Best price/performance for new installs.
Wi-Fi 7 (802.11be)$1,000–$2,000+Cutting-edge but expensive. Justified for high-density healthcare imaging, R&D facilities, and environments with current Wi-Fi 7 client devices. Most offices don't need it yet.
Choose Wi-Fi 6E

When Wi-Fi 6E Is the Right Call

For most 2026 commercial deployments, Wi-Fi 6E is the right choice. The 6 GHz band adds real performance value at a modest premium over Wi-Fi 6.

  • Standard offices, retail, restaurants, healthcare
  • K-12 and higher education environments
  • Multi-tenant office buildings
  • 5-7 year deployment horizon
  • Mix of old and new client devices
Choose Wi-Fi 7

When Wi-Fi 7 Is Worth the Premium

Wi-Fi 7 costs significantly more per AP, but the bandwidth and latency improvements justify it in specific environments with current Wi-Fi 7 client device adoption.

  • Healthcare imaging, video-heavy environments
  • Stadium, conference center, large-venue WiFi
  • R&D facilities with high-bandwidth applications
  • Class A office build-outs with 10+ year horizon
  • High-density device environments (1,000+ concurrent)
Vertical-Specific Costs

Cost by Building Type and Industry

Per-AP cost varies significantly by environment. Warehouses, hospitals, schools, and high-density retail each have distinct cost profiles driven by AP density requirements, environmental conditions, and coverage challenges.

Vertical / Building Type Per-AP Range Cost Drivers Specific to This Environment
Corporate Office$1,400–$2,800Standard density (1 AP per 2,500-3,500 sq ft), open-ceiling pathways, Wi-Fi 6E typical, mix of conference room and workstation coverage. Easiest environment to deploy.
Warehouse / Distribution$1,800–$4,200High ceilings (24-40 ft), metal racking creates RF dead zones, directional antennas needed, 1 AP per 5,000-10,000 sq ft with Ekahau RF planning critical. Outdoor coverage at loading docks.
Hospital / Healthcare$2,200–$4,500High-density device requirements, Cat6A cabling, dense walls, infection-control finishes, integration with medical devices, often Wi-Fi 6E or Wi-Fi 7 for imaging workflows.
K-12 School / District$1,600–$3,2001 AP per classroom typical (high density, 30+ students each), thick masonry walls, multi-building campuses, outdoor coverage for athletic facilities. E-Rate Category 2 eligible.
High-Density Retail$1,800–$3,500Customer + employee devices, POS integration, guest network requirements, AP per ~1,500 sq ft, often paired with mobile POS and inventory scanning systems.
Manufacturing$2,000–$4,200Industrial-rated APs, high EMI from machinery, gate/yard outdoor coverage, plenum-rated cable, often paired with IIoT sensor networks and machine vision systems.
Multi-Tenant Office$1,800–$3,500Common-area coverage, tenant-specific build-outs, riser cabling between floors, separation of management and tenant SSIDs, building-wide unified controller.

Detailed Cost Breakdowns

Itemized Cost Examples by Project Size

Below are typical line-item breakdowns for three common project sizes. These reflect Wi-Fi 6E APs, Cat6A cabling, cloud-managed platforms, Ekahau site surveys, and CSLB-licensed labor in Southern California. Your actual quote will vary based on the factors listed above.

Example 1: 5-AP Small Office (Wi-Fi 6E, Cloud-Managed)

Typical fit: a single-location professional office, medical clinic, retail store, or restaurant. Standard density, Cat6 cabling, cloud-managed platform.

Line Item Low Range High Range
Wi-Fi 6E APs (5 units)$3,000$6,000
Cloud licensing (Year 1)$500$1,500
POE+ switch (24-port)$700$1,800
Cat6 cabling drops (5 × 150 ft)$750$1,800
Ekahau site survey$1,500$3,500
Installation labor$2,000$4,500
Configuration & commissioning$800$2,000
Total project (Year 1)$9,250$21,100
Annual licensing (Years 2-5, each)$500$1,500

Example 2: 25-AP Mid-Size Office (Wi-Fi 6E, Cat6A, Cloud)

Typical fit: a mid-size corporate office, school refresh, healthcare clinic, or warehouse retrofit. Mixed indoor density, Cat6A cabling for future-proofing.

Line Item Low Range High Range
Wi-Fi 6E APs (25 units)$15,000$30,000
Cloud licensing (Year 1)$3,000$6,500
POE++ switching (1× 48-port)$2,500$5,500
Cat6A cabling (25 × 175 ft)$6,000$12,500
Ekahau site survey + design$3,500$6,500
Installation labor (APs + mounting)$8,000$18,000
Configuration & tuning$2,500$5,500
Post-deploy validation survey$1,500$3,000
Total project (Year 1)$42,000$87,500
Annual licensing (Years 2-5, each)$3,000$6,500

Example 3: 75-AP Enterprise (Wi-Fi 6E, Multi-Building, High-Density)

Typical fit: a large corporate campus, hospital, multi-building school, or warehouse. Mix of indoor/outdoor, high-density classrooms or work areas, multiple IDFs.

Line Item Low Range High Range
Wi-Fi 6E APs (75 units, mix indoor/outdoor)$48,000$95,000
Cloud licensing (Year 1)$9,000$18,000
POE++ switching (3× 48-port)$8,000$16,500
Cat6A cabling (75 × 200 ft)$18,000$38,000
Outdoor AP mounting + conduit$5,000$15,000
Ekahau site survey + design (multi-building)$6,500$14,000
Installation labor$22,000$50,000
Configuration & integration$6,000$14,000
Post-deploy validation surveys$3,500$7,000
Total project (Year 1)$126,000$267,500
Annual licensing (Years 2-5, each)$9,000$18,000

Note on quote accuracy: Real quotes from a CSLB-licensed integrator should align with these ranges within roughly 15-25% on either side, depending on platform choice, Wi-Fi generation, and site conditions. Quotes that come in dramatically lower than the low range typically have scope exclusions, no site survey, residential-grade equipment, or unlicensed labor. Request a free site evaluation for an actual quote.


What to Watch For

What's Typically NOT in Initial Quotes

Commercial WiFi quotes vary significantly in what they include. The lowest quote isn't always the best value — sometimes critical scope items are excluded that get added as change orders during the project. Here's what to verify is actually included:

  • Ekahau site survey. Some quotes skip the site survey to look cheaper. This is the single biggest source of WiFi project failure. Always verify a pre-deployment site survey is in scope, plus post-deployment validation.
  • Structured cabling drops to APs. Some quotes assume cabling is "by others" or pre-existing. New AP locations usually need new Cat6 or Cat6A drops. Verify cabling is in scope.
  • POE switching upgrades. Wi-Fi 6E and 7 APs require POE+ or POE++ switches. Legacy switches often can't power modern APs. Verify whether switch upgrades are in scope.
  • Software licensing beyond year 1. Cloud-managed platforms (Meraki, Aruba Central) require ongoing per-AP subscriptions. Confirm whether the quote covers 1, 3, or 5 years of licensing.
  • Outdoor AP mounting and conduit. Outdoor APs need weatherproof mounting hardware, conduit-protected cabling, and surge protection. These items are often "by others" in cheap quotes.
  • Configuration and integration. SSIDs, VLAN configuration, RADIUS integration, certificate-based auth, captive portal, and guest network setup take real time. Verify configuration scope, not just hardware install.
  • Post-deployment validation survey. A quality WiFi project includes a post-install Ekahau survey to validate that real-world coverage matches design. Some quotes skip this — but if they do, you have no proof the network actually works as specified.
  • Permits and inspections. Some Southern California jurisdictions require permits for low-voltage and outdoor mounting work. CSLB-licensed contractors handle this — unlicensed installers may not.

WCC's quotes break out every line item: AP hardware, cabling, POE switching, Ekahau site surveys (pre and post), cloud or on-prem licensing, installation labor, configuration, and integration. You'll see exactly what drives the total cost — no surprise change orders during the project. Request a free site evaluation.

Why WCC

Why Get Your WiFi Quote From WCC?

WCC Technologies Group has installed commercial WiFi across Southern California since 2003, including over 500 K-12 schools, major airports including LAX, warehouses and distribution centers, hospitals, and enterprise corporate campuses. We hold CSLB License #819788 (C-7, C-10, C-28).

Our wireless team is Ekahau certified — every commercial WiFi project includes a pre-deployment site survey and post-deployment validation as standard scope, not an add-on. We're certified installers for Cisco Meraki, Aruba, Fortinet, and other major wireless platforms — so we recommend the right system for your environment, not the one we're trying to push. Our quotes are line-item transparent. Every drop we install is Fluke-certified, every AP is verified at deployment, and every project includes RF coverage maps.


Service Areas

Commercial WiFi Installation Across Southern California

WCC installs commercial WiFi across six Southern California counties. View regional service pages:


FAQs

Commercial WiFi Installation Cost — Frequently Asked Questions

Commercial WiFi installation typically costs $1,400 to $3,500 per access point installed in Southern California, including AP hardware, structured cabling drop, POE switching, controller licensing, installation labor, and Ekahau site survey. A typical 5-AP small office runs $7,500 to $20,000. A 25-AP mid-size deployment runs $42,000 to $95,000. A 75-AP enterprise deployment runs $125,000 to $290,000.
The biggest cost drivers are: AP count and density requirements, AP generation (Wi-Fi 6 vs Wi-Fi 6E vs Wi-Fi 7), platform choice (Cisco Meraki, Aruba, Ubiquiti, etc.), controller architecture (cloud-managed vs on-premises), structured cabling requirements (Cat6 vs Cat6A), POE switching capacity, and whether an Ekahau site survey is performed before installation. Skipping a site survey is the #1 reason commercial WiFi deployments underperform.
For general office environments, plan approximately 1 access point per 2,500-3,500 sq ft of usable space. High-density environments (call centers, classrooms, conference centers) need 1 AP per 1,000-1,500 sq ft. Warehouses with high ceilings and metal racking need 1 AP per 5,000-10,000 sq ft but with directional antennas. The only way to know exact AP count and placement is an Ekahau site survey — guesswork from floor plans alone produces underperforming networks.
An Ekahau site survey uses specialized RF measurement software and hardware to map your building's wireless coverage requirements based on floor plans, building materials, and density needs. Surveys cost $1,500 to $8,000 depending on building size, but typically save 20-40% on AP count and labor by preventing over-deployment, identifying RF dead zones before installation, and validating coverage after deployment. WCC includes Ekahau site surveys on commercial WiFi projects.
For most commercial buildings deploying WiFi in 2026, Wi-Fi 6E hits the sweet spot of price and performance — it adds the 6 GHz band over Wi-Fi 6 for less RF congestion. Wi-Fi 7 is available but the price premium isn't justified for most office environments yet. Wi-Fi 6 is acceptable for budget-conscious deployments. The cost difference between Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 6E APs is typically $200-$400 per AP.
Yes. Commercial wireless access points and the structured cabling that supports them are eligible for E-Rate Category 2 funding for K-12 schools and libraries. WCC has helped Southern California school districts deploy E-Rate-funded WiFi infrastructure including high-density classroom coverage and outdoor wireless for athletic facilities.
Commercial WiFi installation timelines depend on AP count and whether new structured cabling is required. A 5-AP small office takes 3-5 business days. A 25-AP mid-size deployment takes 2-4 weeks including Ekahau site survey, cable installation, AP mounting, and configuration. A 75-AP enterprise deployment takes 4-8 weeks. Multi-site projects are typically phased over 6-12 weeks.
Yes. WCC Technologies Group performs Ekahau site surveys as part of every commercial WiFi project, including pre-deployment planning surveys, post-deployment validation, and troubleshooting surveys for underperforming networks. Our wireless team is certified on Ekahau, Cisco Meraki, Aruba, and Fortinet wireless platforms. CSLB #819788.

Related Resources

Related Cost Guides & Comparisons

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Every facility is different. The ranges above are starting points — your actual quote depends on AP count, building characteristics, density requirements, and platform choice. WCC provides free Ekahau site surveys and line-item-transparent quotes across Southern California.

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