---
product_id: 37651304
title: "Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router"
brand: "mikrotik"
price: "KD 27.10"
currency: KWD
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 13
category: "Mikro Tik"
url: https://www.desertcart.com.kw/products/37651304-mikrotik-hex-rb750gr3-5-port-ethernet-gigabit-router
store_origin: KW
region: Kuwait
---

# 880MHz dual-core CPU 5 Gigabit Ethernet ports IPsec hardware encryption ~470 Mbps Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router

**Brand:** mikrotik
**Price:** KD 27.10
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

## Summary

> 🚀 The Swiss Army Router: Power, speed, and security in a pocket-sized powerhouse!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router by mikrotik
- **How much does it cost?** KD 27.10 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.com.kw](https://www.desertcart.com.kw/products/37651304-mikrotik-hex-rb750gr3-5-port-ethernet-gigabit-router)

## Best For

- mikrotik enthusiasts

## Why This Product

- Trusted mikrotik brand quality
- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
- 15-day hassle-free returns

## Key Features

- • **Compact & Cool:** Small footprint (113x89x28mm) with passive PoE and ultra-low power consumption keeps your workspace sleek and silent.
- • **Expand & Store:** Full-size USB and microSD slots let you run The Dude server and store configs or logs with lightning-fast read/write speeds.
- • **Rock-Solid Security:** Built-in IPsec hardware encryption ensures your data flows securely at blazing speeds up to 470 Mbps.
- • **Plug & Play Simplicity:** Quick Set wizard and Winbox GUI make setup effortless—get online in under 5 minutes.
- • **Powerhouse Performance:** Dual-core 880MHz CPU with 256MB RAM delivers seamless gigabit routing without breaking a sweat.

## Overview

The Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 is a compact, 5-port Gigabit Ethernet router powered by a robust dual-core 880MHz CPU and 256MB RAM. Designed for wired networks without wireless needs, it supports IPsec hardware encryption at ~470 Mbps and features a full-size USB port plus a microSD slot for enhanced storage and The Dude server functionality. Its passive PoE, low power draw, and advanced RouterOS software make it a reliable, high-performance choice for professionals seeking secure, fast, and stable networking in a minimalist form factor.

## Description

hEX is a five port Gigabit Ethernet router for locations where wireless connectivity is not required. The device has a full size USB port. This new updated revision of the hEX brings several improvements in performance. It is affordable, small and easy to use, but at the same time comes with a very powerful dual core 880MHz CPU and 256MB RAM, capable of all the advanced configurations that RouterOS supports. IPsec Hardware encryption (~470Mbps) and dude server package is supported, microSD slot on it also provides improved r/w speed for database storage on microSD card.

Review: As good as you'll find - Apr 2020 update: I recently added two more RB750Gr3 units to my private stable, I have two RB450Gx4 RouterBOARDs shipping, and I see much bigger Mikrotik boxes in my near future. I have just sold the last of my many Ubiquiti products. What's changed? Well, maybe this is just the natural evolution of a geek. In any event, I'll try to walk you through some of the changes in thinking that have caused me to revisit Mikrotik in earnest. Most recently, I've been deploying pfSense and the odd IPFire box for routing/firewalling. These have almost exclusively been Ivy Bridge or Haswell Core i5 Optiplex boxes with an abundance of fast RAM, Intel NICs, and reliable SATA SSDs. None have given me any fits; they've all done what you'd expect. Part of the reason for using these high-horsepower i5 boxes was due to a need for traffic shaping, in my cases via FQ_Codel, but in recent months some of my users have switched to an ISP serving over fiber. A good percentage of the remaining, including myself, now have gigabit connections via cable. The fiber-connected users have essentially no bufferbloat worries. With the cable users, I don't know if it's the migration to DOCSIS 3.1 and its use of OFDM channels, or if it's pie shaping taking place inside the modem, or some combination thereof, but bufferbloat woes have been substantially mitigated on these gigabit cable connections as well. Sure, I can continue to feather this bufferbloat out with FQ_Codel, cake, or pie, but at what cost? These Optiplex boxes are pretty power thirsty. And the other projects, like pfSense, IPFire, and my roll-your-own Debian routers and whatnot were mostly attractive due to having features/functionality missing from solutions like RouterOS in the Mikrotik products. What functionality? Well, things like Squid, Snort, Suricata, pfBlockerNG, that kind of thing. But these all come with an administrative cost, I've learned. Packages need updates. Gobs of additional rules need to be tweaked, gradually over time. And in today's age of encrypt-all-the-traffic-or-else, I see too much cost (maintenance/breakage) in putting a bump on the wire with fake certificates to be bothered using Squid. Snort and Suricata by themselves don't do anything that's interesting to me (they won't peer into encrypted traffic, and that's all I'd really be concerned with). Even pfBlockerNG (or Pie-hole, or whatever) cause some amount of breakage. Just the fact that most of these network-based ad-block mechanisms will kill affiliate links from a place like dealnews or techbargains is enough of a nuisance that I can't even attempt to deploy them. Even on my own network, the administration overhead became tiring. And the benefits...well....according to my logs, they were all pretty inconsequential. Network IDS/IPS and whatever other fancy fangled thing is no panacea, and I consider my security in layers: my device's permissions are super restrictive, everything is patched and updated regularly, I'm careful where I click and ignore all but the most trusted emails. I'm not super worried about security, since I've been paranoid about it for decades, enough to learn where the real threat actors tend to lie and what tools they'll likely prefer. So what if I could get just the things that I *need*, with all the visibility I could want, with very low power consumption, and a small form factor? What would that look like? A dream? Well, for me, it looked like I'd be revisiting Mikrotik. And it now looks like I'll be here for a good while. And I'm serious about it. I consumed two books on RouterOS, I've read a ton of their online documents, and I've scoured the odd forum. I've tried to figure out what it's like to really understand RouterOS and its tooling. I want to understand how to utilize the software to my every advantage. And I'm impressed. I'm excited. This is genuinely a Swiss Army kniferouter. And try as I did, I couldn't break it. I don't use features that break FastTrack, so the bulk of my traffic passes almost completely without overhead. I think that means I see some 930Mbps over the WAN, instead of the occasional 980Mbps-1Gbps I'd see with my beefier boxes. This is absolutely acceptable for a tiny, cool-running box that's spec'd to max at 5W. Nothing "feels" any different to me. Nothing lags. No performance concerns whatsoever. This hEX works and doesn't bellyache. If you need FastTrack disabled for any reason, you'll want to find a resource that can give you some idea of how overall performance will suffer as a result. The tooling is outrageous. It's almost unimaginably great. There's any amount of visibility you desire. Watch anything you can imagine in real time. And this thing can run the Dude server on a $10 microSD card. The box reboots in no time flat. It'll email you about whatever you want it to. If you really try hard to break it and hold the reset button down for the wrong amount of time, you can take your otherwise "bricked" router back to good with netinstall simply and quickly. Backups and restores can be done multiple ways, and you can even snag a text file of all settings, modify the odd IP address or whatever, and use that revised text file to deploy another hEX. Options galore. Updating the firmware is dead simple. Updating packages is dead simple, and there are multiple tracks (long-term, stable, testing, development). The web interface nearly mimics the Winbox interface (you will almost surely prefer Winbox, and it can run reliably on any desktop OS), and the command line interface neatly follows the same parent>child directory structure as the GUI, which makes it a pleasure to learn, once you've found your way around the GUI. The iOS app I use on my iPhone isn't too shabby, and surely about as good as I could want from a phone app for such a device (and again the same design principles follow, so it feels as cohesive as the other administering methods). This thing just begs to be poked and prodded, which makes it just the most amount of fun a network nerd can have for $60 or so. For newbies, you can do the quick config/wizard setup thing (I don't know what it's called), then walk through the online page "Manual:Securing Your Router" to learn how to change user/password, disable unwanted services, etc., and even stop at the part about configuring the firewall (firewall defaults are already well suited to most homes/small businesses), and you'll have a very nice, suitably secure router for practically any home/SOHO (certainly just as good as any other device, embedded or otherwise, would ship out of the box). Pro tip: from Mikrotik's website, pick a product. Under Support & Downloads for said product, see the block diagram. This will give you some understanding of how the hardware is arranged. Pay careful attention to switches/backplanes/ports. Coupled with an understanding of RouterOS bridges and FastTrack, you can probably suss out whether this or any other Mikrotik box is right sized for your environment. You'll likely find IPsec test results from the product page too, if it's important to you, and some boxes have hardware offloading for this. You'll hear people gripe about anything. But the ones who complain about Winbox confuse me immensely. Winbox is brilliant. You can resize a window, move it around, run it next to another window about a related function...I usually find myself looking at three or four windows simultaneously within Winbox, and it makes life so much nicer when you can take in all the data you need in a single pane. I think this is just the coolest. In terms of overall routing and firewall performance (for most users in most common configurations) I’m convinced this will stomp anything in its class and run with or plain smoke most other embedded boxes at multiples its price. To boot, I very much doubt anything compares in terms of useful tooling. I keep some OpenWRT-flashed field units on hand at all times, usually with 1.2GHz or faster dual-core CPUs, 802.11ac, and all the trimmings. I don’t think routing performance compares. And I’m not knocking the OpenWRT project. I love it. It can do glorious things and provide bleeding edge functionality. I don’t knock many networks devices, since it seems that with only rare exceptions all have their place, for the right user. And nothing stops you from running RouterOS or OpenWRT on bare metal with gobs of compute and memory to level the playing field. Fun fact: you can run OpenWRT on this hEX, too. Um, so....yeah. I like this. ........................ Feb 2019 update: Anything that reads as critical of Ubiquiti can be safely ignored. I now have 0 Mikrotik units in service and dozens of Ubiquiti EdgeRouters deployed, a couple USGs, a couple Cloud Keys, a cloud-hosted controller, various PoE switches, and quite a darn big lot of UAP AC access points (LITE, LR, and PRO models only). This shouldn’t take anything away from my love of Mikrotik, but Ubiquiti is now favored for my deployment needs, and it’s been this way for a little more than a year. ........................ My original review: Amazing, just like practically everything from Mikrotik. Hardware more or less speaks for itself. This thing is an animal, and I don't have the ability to really stress the router at all (largely due to my cable connection being limited to about 90/13Mbps cable, no tunnels running, etc.). The RB750Gr3 is simply best of breed. I've run and deployed competing products, namely EdgeRouter PoE, EdgeRouter Lite, and EdgeRouter X. The EdgeRouters are really nice, and I suspect most or all of the EdgeRouters are more performant in terms of pps routing, but my Mikrotik boxes simply NEVER hiccup (running updates exclusively from the bugfix track and keeping firmware current is my personal policy). On the topic of updates, I've had Ubiquiti AP and EdgeRouter updates bork on me a few times. I've always been able to overcome, but not without some frustration. And I've had a client's EdgeRouter X fall over three times, spaced out 4-5 months per occurrence, reasons as yet unknown. Hasn't happened in 4 years with any of my Mikrotik boxes. Also, updating is dead simple with Mikrotik, click and done. Ubiquiti requires you to fetch the update from the web, save to disk, push to router. Isn't hard, by any means, but it's just an extra step. Mikrotik handles much more nicely. And winbox is the greatest config tool ever devised. To be able to drag windows around the screen for all of the various configs you wish to play with is bliss. No need to memorize IP or MAC addresses for anything, just park the relevant window off to the side to keep in view. It's the bee's knees. This is pretty much a no-limits device that professionals will drool over...backup, export, export compact, scripts...I don't even know where to begin...this does it all. And it runs on almost no power, with no noise, and no discernible heat. So affordable it's stupid. Get it.
Review: Efficient and Versatile Gigabit Router for Small Networks - The Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router has been a reliable addition to my network setup. With its compact design and five Gigabit Ethernet ports, it offers efficient connectivity options for small networks and home offices. I appreciate its robust performance and capability to handle high-speed data transfers seamlessly. The router's advanced features include powerful firewall capabilities and customizable routing options, making it suitable for both basic and more complex network configurations. Setting up the Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 was straightforward, thanks to its user-friendly interface and comprehensive management capabilities. It's proven to be a dependable choice for ensuring stable and secure network connectivity. If you're looking for a cost-effective and versatile Gigabit router for small-scale networking needs, the Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 is an excellent option. It combines performance, reliability, and advanced features to meet various networking requirements effectively. Highly recommended!

## Features

- hEX also known as RB750Gr3 is a five port Gigabit Ethernet router for locations where wireless connectivity is not required
- The device has a full size USB port. This new updated revision of the hEX brings several improvements in performance
- It is affordable, small and easy to use, but at the same time comes with a very powerful dual core 880MHz CPU and 256MB RAM
- IPsec hardware encryption (~470 Mbps) and The Dude server package is supported, microSD slot on it provides improved r/w speed for file storage and Dude
- Dimensions: 113x89x28mm; Storage size: 16 MB; Passive PoE (PoE in); PCB temperature monitor, Voltage monitor and Mode button

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| ASIN | B01MSUMVUB |
| Antenna Location | Home |
| Best Sellers Rank | #1,949 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) #93 in Computer Routers |
| Brand | MikroTik |
| Built-In Media | USB |
| Color | Multicolor |
| Compatible Devices | Personal Computer |
| Connectivity Protocol | Ethernet |
| Connectivity Technology | Ethernet, USB |
| Control Method | App |
| Customer Reviews | 4.6 out of 5 stars 1,347 Reviews |
| Data Transfer Rate | 470 Megabits Per Second |
| Frequency | 880 MHz |
| Frequency Band Class | Single-Band |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00709257380070, 04752224002761, 05395481556784 |
| Is Modem Compatible | No |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 6.5"L x 1.1"W x 9.7"H |
| LAN Port Bandwidth | 1000 Mbps |
| Manufacturer | Mikrotik |
| Maximum Upstream Data Transfer Rate | 470 Megabits Per Second |
| Mfr Part Number | RB750Gr3 |
| Model Name | HEX RB750Gr3 |
| Model Number | RB750Gr3 |
| Number of Ports | 5 |
| Operating System | RouterOS |
| Other Special Features of the Product | WPS |
| RAM Memory Installed | 256 MB |
| Security Protocol | IPsec |
| Special Feature | WPS |
| UPC | 709257380070 619201252721 |
| Unit Count | 1 Count |
| Voltage | 45158 Volts |
| Warranty Description | No Warranty |
| Wireless Communication Standard | 802.11n |
| Wireless Compability | 802.11n |

## Product Details

- **Brand:** MikroTik
- **Color:** Multicolor
- **Compatible Devices:** Personal Computer
- **Connectivity Technology:** Ethernet, USB
- **Frequency Band Class:** Single-Band
- **Included Components:** USB
- **Model Name:** HEX RB750Gr3
- **Recommended Uses For Product:** Home
- **Special Feature:** WPS
- **Wireless Communication Standard:** 802.11n

## Images

![Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/710Vt9f1vEL.jpg)
![Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router - Image 2](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61K2cZriaLL.jpg)
![Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router - Image 3](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61CVhRYk4VL.jpg)
![Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router - Image 4](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/51L-9E3blML.jpg)
![Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router - Image 5](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/61g-essByDL.jpg)

## Questions & Answers

**Q: Is this wired only? How difficult is it to set up? I'm looking for a wired only router, with speeds up to 300mb, that isn't complicated to hook up.**
A: For normal home / small office use (using NAT), _no setup at all_ is actually required on the non-wireless models from Mikrotik. Plug your Internet connection into port #1 and your devices into ports #2-5, and start browsing.

Basic configurations beyond that (custom DHCP, firewall, logging, USB cellular connections, configuration backups) are fairly straightforward. Many users will likely need to browse the manual or a tutorial to update the software; all configuration can be done via a Windows app (WinBox), a web interface, or a CLI. They are currently testing a mobile configuration app for Android as of late 2017.

Advanced configuration (custom routing and bridging, VPN, etc.) can have a fairly steep learning (but better than Cisco IOS), especially if you don't have prior networking knowledge. There's plenty of room to grow here as your needs evolve, and as long as it is not physically damaged this should still be operational after ten or even twenty years. The software is common across all of the company's routers, so as long as they remain in business you should get free updates, too -- more than can be said for almost any other manufacturer.

(Disclaimer: I have no business interest with the manufacturer or distributors.. just a satisfied customer for a few years now. - Jim)

**Q: Does this equipment can do content filtering?**
A: Easiest is to use OpenDNS as DNS settings and do content filtering from there.

**Q: What's best speed we can out of our gigabit fios connection out of this router?**
A: I've seen speeds over 900Mbps with this model, but with very few firewall rules. Not sure if the lower speed was due to the router itself or something with the connection / upstream.  If you don't have fasttrack enabled (which it is by default last I knew), you can potentially have deplorable speeds. 

If you have a bunch of rules, you may need a model with a beefier CPU.

**Q: Are any VPN services built in? if so, is gateway2gateway with a cisco RV series router or Shrew Soft Mobile2Gateway client connections possible ?**
A: Yes, there is a Quickset function in Winbox configuration tool that will setup a preliminary VPN template for you.  You can then tweak it for your needs.  The Mikrotik wiki and Reddit are best sources of information.  I have hooked this to Cisco many times as well as VPN software tools.  PPTP, L2TP, SSTP, IPSEC, OpenVPN, etc.

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ As good as you'll find
*by D***J on October 18, 2017*

Apr 2020 update: I recently added two more RB750Gr3 units to my private stable, I have two RB450Gx4 RouterBOARDs shipping, and I see much bigger Mikrotik boxes in my near future. I have just sold the last of my many Ubiquiti products. What's changed? Well, maybe this is just the natural evolution of a geek. In any event, I'll try to walk you through some of the changes in thinking that have caused me to revisit Mikrotik in earnest. Most recently, I've been deploying pfSense and the odd IPFire box for routing/firewalling. These have almost exclusively been Ivy Bridge or Haswell Core i5 Optiplex boxes with an abundance of fast RAM, Intel NICs, and reliable SATA SSDs. None have given me any fits; they've all done what you'd expect. Part of the reason for using these high-horsepower i5 boxes was due to a need for traffic shaping, in my cases via FQ_Codel, but in recent months some of my users have switched to an ISP serving over fiber. A good percentage of the remaining, including myself, now have gigabit connections via cable. The fiber-connected users have essentially no bufferbloat worries. With the cable users, I don't know if it's the migration to DOCSIS 3.1 and its use of OFDM channels, or if it's pie shaping taking place inside the modem, or some combination thereof, but bufferbloat woes have been substantially mitigated on these gigabit cable connections as well. Sure, I can continue to feather this bufferbloat out with FQ_Codel, cake, or pie, but at what cost? These Optiplex boxes are pretty power thirsty. And the other projects, like pfSense, IPFire, and my roll-your-own Debian routers and whatnot were mostly attractive due to having features/functionality missing from solutions like RouterOS in the Mikrotik products. What functionality? Well, things like Squid, Snort, Suricata, pfBlockerNG, that kind of thing. But these all come with an administrative cost, I've learned. Packages need updates. Gobs of additional rules need to be tweaked, gradually over time. And in today's age of encrypt-all-the-traffic-or-else, I see too much cost (maintenance/breakage) in putting a bump on the wire with fake certificates to be bothered using Squid. Snort and Suricata by themselves don't do anything that's interesting to me (they won't peer into encrypted traffic, and that's all I'd really be concerned with). Even pfBlockerNG (or Pie-hole, or whatever) cause some amount of breakage. Just the fact that most of these network-based ad-block mechanisms will kill affiliate links from a place like dealnews or techbargains is enough of a nuisance that I can't even attempt to deploy them. Even on my own network, the administration overhead became tiring. And the benefits...well....according to my logs, they were all pretty inconsequential. Network IDS/IPS and whatever other fancy fangled thing is no panacea, and I consider my security in layers: my device's permissions are super restrictive, everything is patched and updated regularly, I'm careful where I click and ignore all but the most trusted emails. I'm not super worried about security, since I've been paranoid about it for decades, enough to learn where the real threat actors tend to lie and what tools they'll likely prefer. So what if I could get just the things that I *need*, with all the visibility I could want, with very low power consumption, and a small form factor? What would that look like? A dream? Well, for me, it looked like I'd be revisiting Mikrotik. And it now looks like I'll be here for a good while. And I'm serious about it. I consumed two books on RouterOS, I've read a ton of their online documents, and I've scoured the odd forum. I've tried to figure out what it's like to really understand RouterOS and its tooling. I want to understand how to utilize the software to my every advantage. And I'm impressed. I'm excited. This is genuinely a Swiss Army kniferouter. And try as I did, I couldn't break it. I don't use features that break FastTrack, so the bulk of my traffic passes almost completely without overhead. I think that means I see some 930Mbps over the WAN, instead of the occasional 980Mbps-1Gbps I'd see with my beefier boxes. This is absolutely acceptable for a tiny, cool-running box that's spec'd to max at 5W. Nothing "feels" any different to me. Nothing lags. No performance concerns whatsoever. This hEX works and doesn't bellyache. If you need FastTrack disabled for any reason, you'll want to find a resource that can give you some idea of how overall performance will suffer as a result. The tooling is outrageous. It's almost unimaginably great. There's any amount of visibility you desire. Watch anything you can imagine in real time. And this thing can run the Dude server on a $10 microSD card. The box reboots in no time flat. It'll email you about whatever you want it to. If you really try hard to break it and hold the reset button down for the wrong amount of time, you can take your otherwise "bricked" router back to good with netinstall simply and quickly. Backups and restores can be done multiple ways, and you can even snag a text file of all settings, modify the odd IP address or whatever, and use that revised text file to deploy another hEX. Options galore. Updating the firmware is dead simple. Updating packages is dead simple, and there are multiple tracks (long-term, stable, testing, development). The web interface nearly mimics the Winbox interface (you will almost surely prefer Winbox, and it can run reliably on any desktop OS), and the command line interface neatly follows the same parent>child directory structure as the GUI, which makes it a pleasure to learn, once you've found your way around the GUI. The iOS app I use on my iPhone isn't too shabby, and surely about as good as I could want from a phone app for such a device (and again the same design principles follow, so it feels as cohesive as the other administering methods). This thing just begs to be poked and prodded, which makes it just the most amount of fun a network nerd can have for $60 or so. For newbies, you can do the quick config/wizard setup thing (I don't know what it's called), then walk through the online page "Manual:Securing Your Router" to learn how to change user/password, disable unwanted services, etc., and even stop at the part about configuring the firewall (firewall defaults are already well suited to most homes/small businesses), and you'll have a very nice, suitably secure router for practically any home/SOHO (certainly just as good as any other device, embedded or otherwise, would ship out of the box). Pro tip: from Mikrotik's website, pick a product. Under Support & Downloads for said product, see the block diagram. This will give you some understanding of how the hardware is arranged. Pay careful attention to switches/backplanes/ports. Coupled with an understanding of RouterOS bridges and FastTrack, you can probably suss out whether this or any other Mikrotik box is right sized for your environment. You'll likely find IPsec test results from the product page too, if it's important to you, and some boxes have hardware offloading for this. You'll hear people gripe about anything. But the ones who complain about Winbox confuse me immensely. Winbox is brilliant. You can resize a window, move it around, run it next to another window about a related function...I usually find myself looking at three or four windows simultaneously within Winbox, and it makes life so much nicer when you can take in all the data you need in a single pane. I think this is just the coolest. In terms of overall routing and firewall performance (for most users in most common configurations) I’m convinced this will stomp anything in its class and run with or plain smoke most other embedded boxes at multiples its price. To boot, I very much doubt anything compares in terms of useful tooling. I keep some OpenWRT-flashed field units on hand at all times, usually with 1.2GHz or faster dual-core CPUs, 802.11ac, and all the trimmings. I don’t think routing performance compares. And I’m not knocking the OpenWRT project. I love it. It can do glorious things and provide bleeding edge functionality. I don’t knock many networks devices, since it seems that with only rare exceptions all have their place, for the right user. And nothing stops you from running RouterOS or OpenWRT on bare metal with gobs of compute and memory to level the playing field. Fun fact: you can run OpenWRT on this hEX, too. Um, so....yeah. I like this. ........................ Feb 2019 update: Anything that reads as critical of Ubiquiti can be safely ignored. I now have 0 Mikrotik units in service and dozens of Ubiquiti EdgeRouters deployed, a couple USGs, a couple Cloud Keys, a cloud-hosted controller, various PoE switches, and quite a darn big lot of UAP AC access points (LITE, LR, and PRO models only). This shouldn’t take anything away from my love of Mikrotik, but Ubiquiti is now favored for my deployment needs, and it’s been this way for a little more than a year. ........................ My original review: Amazing, just like practically everything from Mikrotik. Hardware more or less speaks for itself. This thing is an animal, and I don't have the ability to really stress the router at all (largely due to my cable connection being limited to about 90/13Mbps cable, no tunnels running, etc.). The RB750Gr3 is simply best of breed. I've run and deployed competing products, namely EdgeRouter PoE, EdgeRouter Lite, and EdgeRouter X. The EdgeRouters are really nice, and I suspect most or all of the EdgeRouters are more performant in terms of pps routing, but my Mikrotik boxes simply NEVER hiccup (running updates exclusively from the bugfix track and keeping firmware current is my personal policy). On the topic of updates, I've had Ubiquiti AP and EdgeRouter updates bork on me a few times. I've always been able to overcome, but not without some frustration. And I've had a client's EdgeRouter X fall over three times, spaced out 4-5 months per occurrence, reasons as yet unknown. Hasn't happened in 4 years with any of my Mikrotik boxes. Also, updating is dead simple with Mikrotik, click and done. Ubiquiti requires you to fetch the update from the web, save to disk, push to router. Isn't hard, by any means, but it's just an extra step. Mikrotik handles much more nicely. And winbox is the greatest config tool ever devised. To be able to drag windows around the screen for all of the various configs you wish to play with is bliss. No need to memorize IP or MAC addresses for anything, just park the relevant window off to the side to keep in view. It's the bee's knees. This is pretty much a no-limits device that professionals will drool over...backup, export, export compact, scripts...I don't even know where to begin...this does it all. And it runs on almost no power, with no noise, and no discernible heat. So affordable it's stupid. Get it.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Efficient and Versatile Gigabit Router for Small Networks
*by S***S on July 24, 2024*

The Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router has been a reliable addition to my network setup. With its compact design and five Gigabit Ethernet ports, it offers efficient connectivity options for small networks and home offices. I appreciate its robust performance and capability to handle high-speed data transfers seamlessly. The router's advanced features include powerful firewall capabilities and customizable routing options, making it suitable for both basic and more complex network configurations. Setting up the Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 was straightforward, thanks to its user-friendly interface and comprehensive management capabilities. It's proven to be a dependable choice for ensuring stable and secure network connectivity. If you're looking for a cost-effective and versatile Gigabit router for small-scale networking needs, the Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 is an excellent option. It combines performance, reliability, and advanced features to meet various networking requirements effectively. Highly recommended!

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great value for the money, capable of 1 Gbps full-duplex on 2 of the 4 LAN ports
*by G***4 on October 10, 2020*

Update: 8/7/2024. After nearly 4 years of nonstop usage I can say this is the best (inexpensive, high performance and trouble-free) home networking product I have used in the past 25 years, because 1) I have never needed to reboot it (it would run for hundreds of days until a power outage or an ISP outage), 2) I have never needed to update the firmware to fix a problem - not once, and 3) it's got excellent performance. It's been simply setup-and-forget. Now that I have upgraded to 1 Gig fiber up/down, it is still keeping up. During a speed test, it gets ~940/930 up/down and would only use about 40% of the CPU during the test. Here's a detailed review: Great value for the money. Can do 1 Gbps full-duplex on 2 of the 4 LAN ports (eth2 and eth4, more details later) and runs fairly cool. I bought an Edgerouter ER-X, but returned it because it can't do 1Gbps full-duplex, and was looking at EdgeRouter ER-Lite and ER-4 routers. But those cost 2 to 3 times as much, run quite warm, and are much bigger in size. Even though the Web (and Windows) interface is pretty complex, I was able to get online within 5 minutes using the Quick Set setup page (just set WAN IP to automatic and change LAN IP, DCHP range and password). This default configuration sets up a firewall that blocks all external WAN traffic not originated from LAN. The only additional setup I did was to enable UPNP (WebFig IP->UPNP->Enabled=Check. Then Add Interface: bridge=internal, ether1=external). Initial speed test using iperf3 showed WAN->LAN speed as only 1Gbps half-dulex. When using iperf3 in bi-directional test, the speed was only 450/450 up/down simultaneously. This was with WAN connected to eth1 port and LAN connected to eth3 port. After looking at the Mikrotik online document "Block Diagram with disabled switching", I realized that I need to move the LAN plug to either eth2 or eth4 port to get the full 2 Gbps CPU to Ethernet bandwidth. This is because the CPU has 2 lanes of 1 Gbps each, with one lane connected to odd numbered ports (eth1, eth3 and eth5) and the other to even numbered ports (eth2, eth4). This means to get 2 Gbps bandwidth, the CPU must read from one lane (eth1/eth3/eth5) and write to the other (eth2/eth4) simultaneously, or vise versa. I tested this theory and found that it is true. With WAN at eth1 (default config), when I moved the LAN plug to eth2 or eth4, I got 920/920 up/down simultaneously, but only 450/450 up/down simultaneously when I moved the LAN plug to eth3 or eth5. Test setup: iperf3 in bidirectional mode, using a Synology NAS and an Asus desktop connected to WAN port via a switch, and a MacBook Pro connected to LAN port. Overall, I think this port/bandwidth limitation could be easily overcome, and this router is a great value for the money/space/power. Update: 10/31/2020. Discovered that in the default setup, hardware switching is disabled, which means that LAN to LAN traffic is handled by CPU, and WAN to LAN upload/download speed will be affected by LAN to LAN traffic, i.e., eth2 to eth3 traffic. To check: Click Bridge->Ports->ether2->Status->Hw. Offload (check or unchecked, default is unchecked). There are 2 ways around this: 1) Use a 5 or 8 port switch for ALL LAN devices and then connect the switch to the RB750Gr3 (eth2 or eth4), or 2) change the bridge Protocol Mode from RSTP to none (don't do this if you are not sure you should). RSTP protocol is used for loop prevention in large networks by automatically disabling certain ports in smart switches (or routers) that cause the loop. But using this protocol disables hardware switching on the MT7621A chip in RB750Gr3. If you only have unmanaged switches then they probably don't support RSTP anyway (unless you have a mesh network in your home.)

## Frequently Bought Together

- Mikrotik hEX RB750Gr3 5-port Ethernet Gigabit Router
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