Interference Factor in WiFi Evaluation

Overview

The Interference Factor is a crucial metric for evaluating your WiFi network's performance within the CONTROL portal. It quantifies the impact of other WiFi networks and devices operating on the same or adjacent channels as your network. Lower interference levels correlate directly with better overall WiFi performance.

Technical Foundation

The Interference Factor calculation is based on several core technical concepts from WiFi standards:

  1. Channel Overlap: WiFi channels can overlap, particularly in the 2.4 GHz band. This overlap is a primary source of interference between networks.

  2. Signal Strength of Neighboring Networks: The received signal strength from nearby WiFi networks directly impacts the level of interference experienced by your network.

  3. Operating Channel Bandwidth: Wider channel bandwidths (such as 40 MHz compared to 20 MHz) increase the likelihood of interference with neighboring networks due to greater spectrum occupancy.

Measurement Methodology

Data Collection

The CONTROL system analyzes your WiFi environment and calculates an interference score based on data obtained from the TR-181 parameter:

Device.WiFi.NeighboringWiFiDiagnostic.Result.

This parameter provides a "Neighboring SSID table" that models all WiFi SSIDs detectable by your device. At most one entry in this table can exist with a given value for BSSID.

Calculation Process

To calculate the Interference Factor, the system:

  1. Retrieves the neighboring WiFi networks table
  2. Compares this data with your CPE (Customer Premises Equipment) transmission channels (2.4 GHz and/or 5.0 GHz)
  3. Analyzes the "Current Operating Channel Bandwidth"
  4. Evaluates the overlap and signal strength relationships

The system considers multiple factors during calculation:

Scoring Scale

The resulting interference score is translated into a user-friendly scale from 2 to 10:

Interpreting Your Interference Factor

Understanding your Interference Factor score helps you assess your WiFi environment:

Impact on Network Performance

Why Interference Factor Matters

Relationship to Other Metrics

The Interference Factor works alongside other metrics like Signal Factor and Noise Factor. While a strong signal can sometimes overcome interference, reducing interference is often the key to improving overall WiFi performance, especially in densely populated areas.

Remember that Interference Factor is just one component of a comprehensive WiFi evaluation that helps you understand and optimize your network's capabilities.

Optimization Strategies

If your Interference Factor score is lower than desired, consider these improvement strategies:


References

  1. TR-181 Issue 2 Amendment 15
  2. IEEE 802.11 standards

Revision #2
Created 2026-02-13 22:42:06 UTC by ipena@zequenze.com
Updated 2026-04-09 03:17:18 UTC by mauro@zequenze.com