Could US-Huawei Tensions Extend to Wi-Fi 7?
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Could US-Huawei Tensions Extend to Wi-Fi 7? What We Actually Know
Huawei’s June 2026 announcement that it will charge $0.50 per device for Wi-Fi 7 patents has reignited a familiar question in Washington: could the United States try to block a technology standard rather than just the company behind it? Based on the public record, the answer is almost certainly no — and the reasoning is worth unpacking.
What Huawei Actually Announced
On June 18, 2026, in Shenzhen, Huawei confirmed its royalty rate for Wi-Fi 7 technologies: $0.50 per unit for compliant consumer-grade devices. The announcement was made the same day at the IPBC Global 2026 intellectual property conference in San Diego, California — notably, on American soil, with implementers free to license either bilaterally or through a patent pool under FRAND (Fair, Reasonable, and Non-Discriminatory) terms.
Huawei describes itself as holding one of the largest portfolios of declared essential patents for Wi-Fi 7 (IEEE 802.11be), and says its license agreements already cover more than 1.2 billion consumer electronic devices worldwide as of the end of 2024.
The Sisvel Pool: A Separate, Larger Number
Huawei’s $0.50 rate is not the same thing as the Wi-Fi 7 rate published by Sisvel, the patent pool that bundles licenses from ten companies into a single agreement. Sisvel’s Wi-Fi Multimode pool, launched in Luxembourg on January 22, 2026, covers both Wi-Fi 6 and Wi-Fi 7 standard-essential patents from Huawei, KPN, Mitsubishi Electric, Orange, Panasonic, Philips, Aegis 11 SA, SK Telecom, Wilus, and ZTE.
| Licensing Path | Rate (Wi-Fi 7) | What It Covers |
|---|---|---|
| Huawei (bilateral) | $0.50 / device | Huawei’s own patent portfolio only |
| Sisvel pool (compliant rate) | $0.60 / device | All 10 founding patent owners combined |
| Sisvel pool (standard rate) | $0.72 / device | All 10 owners, non-compliant licensees |
Has the US Tried This Kind of Move Before?
There is precedent for Congress targeting Huawei’s ability to collect patent revenue in the US — but it took a very different form than banning a standard. In 2019, Senator Marco Rubio proposed an amendment to the National Defense Authorization Act that would have barred companies on the US government’s watch list, including Huawei, from seeking relief in US patent courts, effectively stripping Huawei of the right to sue for infringement domestically.
That provision drew sharp criticism, including from American commentators who warned it would damage the credibility of the US patent system internationally, and it did not become law.
What Happened With 5G Tells Us Something
The clearest test case is Huawei’s 5G dispute with Verizon. Huawei sought over $1 billion in licensing fees covering more than 230 patents starting in 2019, eventually suing Verizon in US federal court after negotiations stalled. The case moved through litigation in Texas, and court filings from February 2021 showed the two sides had agreed to private mediation on part of the dispute. Huawei’s Q1 2021 earnings disclosed a $600 million payment from Verizon as a result.
In other words: the legislative effort to block Huawei from collecting failed, and the company collected anyway, through the courts.
Why a Standard-Level Ban Doesn’t Hold Up
- Standards aren’t tied to one company. Wi-Fi 7 is an IEEE standard used by virtually every major device maker — Apple, Intel, Qualcomm, Samsung, and others. Banning the standard would disable products having nothing to do with Huawei.
- Standard-essential patents can’t be designed around. Huawei’s own US intellectual property counsel has stated publicly that no one in the US can use Wi-Fi — particularly Wi-Fi 6 and parts of 4G/5G — without touching Huawei’s patents, regardless of whether Huawei’s hardware is sold there.
- The pattern with 5G already played out. Even as Washington restricted Huawei’s equipment sales, US carriers and likely device makers still ended up paying Huawei patent royalties, because the patents and the hardware ban are legally separate issues.
- The more realistic tools are narrower. Recent disputes — such as Netgear’s antitrust complaint accusing Huawei of demanding fees above FRAND terms — show the more probable path is litigation over rate fairness, not legislation erasing the standard itself.
The Bottom Line
There is no current US bill, executive order, or policy proposal aimed at banning Wi-Fi 7. The 83% figure circulating in some discussions is a constructed ratio between two unrelated public rate announcements, not a confirmed share of pool revenue. And history suggests that even when Congress has tried to cut off Huawei’s ability to collect — as it did in 2019 — the outcome was American companies paying anyway, through the courts rather than around them.
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