- Quick answer: which deals fit which use case
- All seven TP-Link deals compared
- EAP772-Outdoor for tri-band outdoor Wi-Fi
- EAP725-Outdoor for lower-cost directional coverage
- Indoor Wi-Fi 7: EAP720 vs EAP770
- 2.5G switching: TL-SG105S-M2 vs TL-SG108S-M2
- Point-to-point links: Beam Bridge 5 UR KIT
- Three complete setups under this promotion
- Buying checklist before July 1
- FAQs
- References and price check
Quick answer: which deals fit which use case
These TP-Link Omada Prime Day deals cover several different network jobs. The right choice depends on the problem you are solving:
- Buy the EAP772-Outdoor at $209.99 when you need a tri-band outdoor access point with 6 GHz support through AFC.
- Buy the EAP720 at $84.99 when you want an inexpensive indoor Omada Wi-Fi 7 access point and do not need a 6 GHz radio.
- Buy the TL-SG108S-M2 at $49.99 when you need eight silent, unmanaged 2.5GbE ports for wired devices. It does not supply PoE.
The Amazon Creator Connections pricing supplied for this campaign is scheduled to expire July 1, 2026. Prices and inventory can change before the stated deadline, so verify the product model and final price at checkout. Because TP-Link's own similar monthly promotion is labeled through June 30, buying by June 30 avoids cutoff-time ambiguity.
The TL-SG105S-M2 and TL-SG108S-M2 are non-PoE switches. They can carry 2.5GbE data to an access point, but an outdoor AP still needs a compatible PoE+ injector or PoE+ switch. The promoted EAP720 and EAP770 variants include DC adapters, which makes a low-cost non-PoE pairing practical indoors.
All seven TP-Link deals compared
| Product | Deal price | Campaign reference | Best for | Important caveat |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EAP772-Outdoor | $209.99 | $249.99 | Premium patio, yard, courtyard, or exterior Wi-Fi | Needs PoE+ and AFC setup for outdoor 6 GHz |
| EAP725-Outdoor | $149.99 | $179.99 | Lower-cost outdoor coverage with directional flexibility | Dual-band only; no 6 GHz |
| Beam Bridge 5 UR KIT | $126.99 | $149.99 | Point-to-point link to a barn, shop, gate, or remote building | Not a client Wi-Fi AP; needs clear line of sight |
| EAP770 | $159.99 | $189.99 | Higher-capacity indoor tri-band Wi-Fi 7 | 6 GHz is shorter range and the AP needs a 2.5G path to avoid a 1G ceiling |
| EAP720 | $84.99 | $99.99 | Budget indoor Wi-Fi 7 | Dual-band only |
| TL-SG105S-M2 | $39.99 | $59.99 | Compact five-port 2.5GbE desk or media-room upgrade | Unmanaged and no PoE |
| TL-SG108S-M2 | $49.99 | $69.99 | Eight-port 2.5GbE home or small-office edge switch | Unmanaged and no PoE |
These are not seven interchangeable products. The EAP models provide client Wi-Fi, the switches provide wired multi-gig connectivity, and the Beam Bridge creates a directional link between two locations. Start with the job, then choose the hardware.
EAP772-Outdoor for tri-band outdoor Wi-Fi
The EAP772-Outdoor is the higher-tier outdoor access point in this campaign. It fits a large patio, pool area, courtyard, outdoor workspace, hospitality area, or property edge that needs a purpose-built access point rather than signal leaking through an exterior wall.
TP-Link specifies tri-band BE11000 Wi-Fi 7, one 2.5GbE PoE+ port, IP68 protection, AFC-enabled outdoor 6 GHz, and 3,200 sq. ft. of recommended omnidirectional coverage. The Amazon listing may advertise a larger figure, but we use TP-Link's official 3,200 sq. ft. planning number. Even that is not a guarantee: mounting height, trees, masonry, neighboring interference, client antennas, and the shape of the yard all affect the result.
At $209.99 versus the campaign's $249.99 reference price, the discount is $40, or 16%. Pay the premium over the EAP725-Outdoor when you specifically want:
- the additional 6 GHz band for compatible clients
- a tri-band AP in a current Omada design
- the stronger IP68 enclosure rating
- a straightforward omnidirectional coverage pattern
Do not place it low behind furniture, under a metal deck, or inside a utility room and expect the coverage figure to survive. Outdoor Wi-Fi works best when the AP has a clean view of the area it is meant to serve. Read our outdoor Wi-Fi planning comparison before deciding on the mounting location.
TP-Link Omada EAP772-Outdoor Wi-Fi 7 Access Point
The campaign's strongest outdoor AP: tri-band Wi-Fi 7, AFC-enabled 6 GHz, a 2.5G PoE+ port, and an IP68 enclosure.
- Tri-band BE11000 Wi-Fi 7 with 6 GHz through AFC
- 1 x 2.5GbE 802.3at PoE+ port
- IP68 weatherproof enclosure
- TP-Link recommends 3,200 ft² of omnidirectional coverage
EAP725-Outdoor for lower-cost directional coverage
The EAP725-Outdoor at $149.99 is the better value when outdoor 6 GHz is not a requirement. It is a dual-band BE5000 Wi-Fi 7 access point with a 2.5G PoE port, IP66 weather protection, and software-selectable directional or omnidirectional antenna behavior.
That antenna flexibility is the reason to choose it. Use the omnidirectional mode when the AP can sit near the center of the outdoor area. Use a directional pattern when it mounts on the building edge and needs to push coverage toward a patio, yard, parking area, or outbuilding.
TP-Link recommends roughly 3,229 sq. ft. in omnidirectional mode and up to 5,500 sq. ft. in directional mode. Those figures describe different coverage shapes, not a promise that one AP will deliver the same speed everywhere in the area.
Choose EAP725-Outdoor over EAP772-Outdoor when:
- most outdoor clients use 2.4 GHz or 5 GHz
- you want to save $60
- a directional pattern fits the property better than a 360-degree pattern
- IP66 is sufficient for the planned mounting location
Choose EAP772-Outdoor when tri-band capacity, outdoor 6 GHz, or IP68 is worth the extra cost.
TP-Link Omada EAP725-Outdoor Wi-Fi 7 Access Point
A flexible dual-band outdoor AP with switchable coverage patterns, a 2.5G PoE port, and IP66 weather protection.
- Dual-band BE5000 Wi-Fi 7
- Switchable directional and omnidirectional antenna modes
- 1 x 2.5GbE 802.3at PoE port
- IP66 weatherproof enclosure
Indoor Wi-Fi 7: EAP720 vs EAP770
The EAP720 and EAP770 serve two different indoor budgets.
The EAP720 is the value pick. At $84.99, it provides dual-band BE5000 Wi-Fi 7, one 2.5GbE port, 802.3at PoE support, and a DC adapter in the promoted US package. It is a practical choice for an office, apartment, or one-AP zone where 5 GHz performance matters more than having a separate 6 GHz band.
The EAP770 costs $75 more at $159.99. That buys a tri-band BE11000 design with 6 GHz and substantially more aggregate radio capacity. It is the better choice for a busier office, a tech-heavy home, or a multi-AP design where newer 6 GHz clients can be moved away from crowded 5 GHz channels.
| Decision | EAP720 | EAP770 |
|---|---|---|
| Deal price | $84.99 | $159.99 |
| Wi-Fi tier | BE5000 dual-band | BE11000 tri-band |
| 6 GHz | No | Yes |
| Wired uplink | 1 x 2.5GbE | 1 x 2.5GbE |
| Power flexibility | 802.3at PoE or included DC adapter | PoE or included DC adapter on promoted variant |
| Best fit | Budget rooms and lighter-density sites | Higher-capacity indoor zones and 6 GHz clients |
Do not buy the EAP770 solely because its headline number is larger. A 1GbE switch path, poor AP placement, older clients, or an internet plan below 1Gbps can hide much of the difference. The Omada Wi-Fi 7 deployment guide explains where the AP, switch, gateway, and controller fit together.
For office-specific placement and model choices, see our Omada access point guide for small offices. If you are still choosing a managed networking platform, compare UniFi and TP-Link Omada before committing to the controller and switching ecosystem.
TP-Link Omada EAP720 BE5000 Wi-Fi 7 Access Point
The low-cost indoor pick: dual-band Wi-Fi 7, a 2.5G port, PoE+ support, and a DC adapter in the promoted US package.
- Dual-band BE5000 Wi-Fi 7
- 1 x 2.5GbE port
- 802.3at PoE or DC power
- DC adapter included with the promoted US variant
TP-Link Omada EAP770 BE11000 Wi-Fi 7 Access Point
The stronger indoor pick: tri-band BE11000 Wi-Fi 7, 6 GHz, a 2.5G port, and flexible PoE or DC power.
- Tri-band BE11000 Wi-Fi 7
- Separate 6 GHz radio for compatible clients
- 1 x 2.5GbE port
- DC adapter included with the promoted US variant
2.5G switching: TL-SG105S-M2 vs TL-SG108S-M2
The switch deals are the easiest purchases in the group to understand. Both models are fanless, unmanaged, plug-and-play 2.5GbE switches. The five-port TL-SG105S-M2 costs $39.99 and the eight-port TL-SG108S-M2 costs $49.99.
For only $10 more, the eight-port model is the better default unless desk space is unusually tight. After reserving one port for the router or upstream switch, the five-port unit leaves four device ports while the eight-port unit leaves seven.
Good uses include:
- connecting a 2.5GbE NAS and workstation at the same desk
- giving a gaming PC, media server, and Wi-Fi 7 AP a multi-gig path
- upgrading one room without replacing the whole network
- aggregating several 2.5GbE devices before a faster core uplink
The limitation is power. These are not PoE switches. An EAP720 or EAP770 can use its included DC adapter while carrying data through one of these switches. The outdoor APs generally call for a properly planned PoE+ path.
Also check the uplink. If the switch connects to the router through a 1GbE port, devices on the same switch can still exchange local traffic above 1Gbps, but internet traffic and traffic leaving that switch remain limited by the 1GbE uplink. Use the 2.5GbE no-rewire upgrade guide to trace the full path before buying.
This card highlights the product details most relevant to this section.
- Five 2.5GbE RJ45 ports
- Fanless plug-and-play desktop or wall-mount design
- Good first switch when the router, NAS, desktop, or AP already supports 2.5GbE
TP-Link TL-SG108S-M2 8-Port 2.5G Ethernet Switch
Eight unmanaged 2.5GbE ports for $10 more than the five-port model. It carries data but does not provide PoE.
- 8 x 100M/1G/2.5GbE auto-negotiating ports
- 40 Gbps switching capacity
- Fanless plug-and-play operation
- No Power over Ethernet
Point-to-point links: Beam Bridge 5 UR KIT
The Beam Bridge 5 UR KIT at $126.99 solves a different problem: carrying a network between two points without trenching a cable route.
TP-Link rates the preconfigured kit for up to 15 km under suitable conditions. It uses directional 23 dBi antennas, a 5 GHz 867 Mbps radio link, one Gigabit Ethernet port per bridge, 802.3af or passive PoE, IP65 enclosures, and app-guided alignment. A passive PoE adapter is included.
The 15 km figure is a maximum link-distance rating, not a typical backyard performance promise. Trees, terrain, buildings, Fresnel-zone obstruction, interference, mounting stability, and alignment can reduce reliability long before the rated distance. The Gigabit Ethernet port also makes clear that this is not a multi-gig bridge.
Use it for:
- a detached garage, barn, workshop, gate, or camera location with clear line of sight
- a temporary site where trenching is not justified
- a path where properly installed fiber is impractical
Do not confuse the bridge with an outdoor access point. The bridge moves the network to the far building. You may still need a switch and an indoor or outdoor AP at that end to provide Wi-Fi to phones, laptops, cameras, and other clients.
For permanent inter-building links, fiber remains the cleanest wired option because it avoids a conductive copper path between buildings. Our detached-building network guide compares fiber, copper, and wireless bridge designs in detail.
TP-Link Omada Beam Bridge 5 UR KIT
A preconfigured 5 GHz bridge pair with directional antennas, app-guided alignment, and up to 15 km rated range.
- Preconfigured point-to-point bridge pair
- 5 GHz 867 Mbps radio with 23 dBi directional antennas
- 1 x Gigabit PoE port per bridge
- IP65 enclosure and up to 15 km rated range under suitable conditions
Three complete setups under this promotion
| Setup | Products | Hardware total | What it solves |
|---|---|---|---|
| Budget indoor Wi-Fi 7 | EAP720 + TL-SG105S-M2 | $124.98 | One AP plus a compact 2.5G wired edge; use the EAP720's included DC adapter |
| Better indoor Wi-Fi 7 edge | EAP770 + TL-SG108S-M2 | $209.98 | Tri-band indoor AP plus seven usable downstream 2.5G ports after uplink |
| Premium outdoor Wi-Fi | EAP772-Outdoor | $209.99 plus PoE hardware | Purpose-built tri-band exterior coverage; budget separately for PoE+ and outdoor cabling |
The under-$150 build is a practical starting point, but it is not a complete router replacement. You still need a gateway/router, Ethernet cabling, and either an Omada controller or standalone configuration appropriate to the site. The non-PoE switch works in that package because the promoted EAP720 includes a DC adapter.
Buying checklist before July 1
- Match the exact model number and ASIN; similarly named EAP models have different radios, ports, and power requirements.
- Verify the live price and seller at checkout because campaign inventory and pricing can change.
- Confirm whether the AP package includes a DC adapter or requires PoE.
- Do not expect TL-SG105S-M2 or TL-SG108S-M2 to power an access point.
- Use outdoor-rated cable, correct weather sealing, and surge-aware grounding practices for exterior hardware.
- Check that the router-to-switch and switch-to-AP paths are 2.5GbE if multi-gig throughput is the goal.
- For a wireless bridge, verify clear line of sight and stable mounting at both ends before ordering.
If you are designing a multi-AP property or business network rather than adding one device, request a network assessment. AP placement, PoE budget, controller choice, cable paths, and switch uplinks decide whether the hardware performs as intended.
FAQs
When do these TP-Link Omada deal prices end?
The Amazon Creator Connections campaign supplied to us lists the deal-price window through July 1, 2026. TP-Link's similar direct-store monthly promotion is labeled through June 30. Verify the live Amazon price at checkout and order by June 30 if you want to avoid cutoff-time ambiguity.
Does the EAP772-Outdoor cover 4,000 square feet?
TP-Link's official product page recommends 3,200 sq. ft. of omnidirectional coverage. Amazon listing copy may show a larger figure. Real coverage varies with placement, obstacles, interference, clients, and the shape of the outdoor area.
Can the TL-SG105S-M2 or TL-SG108S-M2 power an Omada access point?
No. These are non-PoE switches. They carry data only. Use the AP's compatible DC adapter when included, or add an appropriate PoE injector or PoE switch.
Is the EAP725-Outdoor better than the EAP772-Outdoor?
It is a better value for many 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz outdoor deployments, especially when directional coverage helps. EAP772-Outdoor is the higher-tier choice for tri-band operation, AFC-enabled outdoor 6 GHz, and IP68 protection.
Will the Beam Bridge provide Wi-Fi inside my detached garage?
The bridge carries the network between two points. Connect a switch or access point at the remote end if devices inside the garage need wired ports or local Wi-Fi coverage.
References and price check
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