Clarity
Understand the real quality of the WiFi instead of relying only on opinions, assumptions or occasional complaints.
WiFiCert™ is designed to bring clarity, control and credibility to WiFi quality. Instead of relying on opinions, reviews or supplier claims, it introduces a structured process based on objective criteria and verifiable certification.
WiFiCert™ transforms WiFi from opinion into verifiable evidence.
Understand the real quality of the WiFi instead of relying only on opinions, assumptions or occasional complaints.
Use objective evidence to evaluate service quality and discuss performance with providers, installers or technical teams.
Show guests and customers a certification that can be checked publicly, instead of asking them to trust a self-claim.
These are the main questions people usually have when they want to understand whether a WiFi certification can be trusted.
Because a venue’s statement is a self-declared claim. WiFiCert™ is intended to provide a more credible basis by relying on a structured process, objective criteria and verifiable certification rather than a statement made by the venue itself.
No. The badge is only the visible result of a broader verification process. Its value depends on whether it is backed by defined criteria, a structured assessment process and public verification.
Guest reviews describe what users perceive. WiFiCert™ is designed to show what is actually being delivered through measurable criteria and a defined evaluation process.
No. WiFiCert does not require a specific WiFi generation.
WiFi 5, WiFi 6, and WiFi 7 are simply different versions of wireless technology. They define the potential capabilities of the equipment, not the actual performance experienced by users.
A well-designed WiFi 5 network can often deliver a better experience than a poorly configured WiFi 6 or WiFi 7 deployment.
No. Having the latest technology does not guarantee good performance.
For example, a WiFi 7 network with limited internet capacity, network bottlenecks, or poor access point placement may still deliver a poor user experience.
WiFiCert evaluates real-world performance, including throughput, reliability, latency, and coverage quality—not the marketing label of the equipment.
Yes, if your network meets the required performance criteria.
Certification is based on measured performance, the ability to handle real user demand, and consistency of service across the venue.
If your WiFi 5 network performs well, it can still qualify for certification.
Network design is often more important than WiFi generation.
Many performance issues are caused by poor design, such as insufficient backhaul capacity, incorrect access point placement, or lack of proper network management.
Even the most advanced WiFi technology cannot compensate for these limitations.
WiFiCert evaluates real user experience, not just the technology used.
This includes measurable factors such as throughput, latency, reliability, and coverage across the venue, under realistic usage conditions.
No. Payment covers the assessment and certification process, not the result. Certification only has value if it is not automatically granted.
A valid certification should be linked to a unique certificate ID and a public verification record, allowing third parties to check its status and validity.
You can start the WiFiCert™ self-assessment directly online through the official platform.
The process is guided step by step and is designed to be simple to complete but also structured enough to reflect real WiFi performance.
To start, you only need basic information about your property and your WiFi setup.
As you progress, the assessment may also require simple on-site checks and measurements.
This can include:
These activities are part of a structured on-site survey, but they can usually be carried out using common tools such as a smartphone, tablet or laptop.
The assessment will guide you step by step, including how many test points are required based on the size and type of your property.
If needed, you can complete these steps with the help of a technician or another competent person.
No. The self-assessment is designed to be completed by property owners.
If needed, you can complete it with the help of a technician, consultant or another competent person, especially for measurements or on-site survey activities.
The initial part can be completed in a short time, depending on the information available.
Additional steps, such as measurements or on-site survey activities, may take longer depending on the size and complexity of the property.
The self-assessment provides an initial evaluation of your WiFi performance.
It helps you:
This gives you a more concrete basis before moving to formal certification.
No. An on-site visit by a WiFiCert™ auditor is not automatically required in every case.
The essential starting point is the self-assessment, which may include an on-site survey carried out by the venue itself or with the help of a technician, consultant or other competent person.
What matters is that the required information and evidence are provided clearly and reliably.
Yes. The self-assessment does not have to be completed entirely by the venue owner alone.
It may be completed with the support of a technician, consultant, IT contact, or another competent person able to assist with the required checks, measurements and on-site survey activities.
In this context, an on-site survey means gathering information and evidence directly at the property, such as WiFi measurements, coverage observations, service area checks and other relevant technical details.
This does not necessarily mean that a WiFiCert™ auditor must attend in person. In many cases, the survey can be carried out locally by the venue or by a person assisting the venue.
For higher certification levels, such as Guaranteed or Trusted, stronger evidence may be required.
If the venue does not provide sufficient evidence, or if the evidence submitted is not adequate for the level requested, WiFiCert™ may require an on-site visit by an accredited audit partner.
This helps ensure that higher certification levels remain credible and properly supported.
No. In most cases, the correct first step is simply to complete the self-assessment.
You can do this yourself or with help from a technician or another competent person. Only in some cases, especially for higher levels such as Guaranteed or Trusted, may additional evidence or an on-site visit by an accredited audit partner be required.
WiFiCert™ is not presented as a connectivity provider or a WiFi solution. It is presented as an independent verification framework created to bring more clarity and accountability to WiFi quality.
It is designed to solve the uncertainty around WiFi quality. Today, many decisions are based on reviews, impressions or supplier claims, which often leave venue owners without a clear technical basis for understanding what is really being delivered.
Because it is frequently judged through guest comments, personal opinions or commercial promises rather than a structured and objective verification framework.
Do not guess the quality of the WiFi. Verify it.
WiFiCert™ transforms WiFi from opinion into verifiable evidence.
WiFiCert™ is not designed to bring more visitors to your property. Its role is to help you convert existing visitors with greater confidence and trust.
Guests often compare multiple properties with similar prices, similar reviews and similar locations.
In those situations, small signals of trust can make the difference.
If one property shows a WiFiCert™ certification and another does not, the choice becomes clearer for:
WiFiCert™ is not designed to bring more visitors to your property.
It is designed to help you convert the visitors you already have.
Helps guests choose your property with confidence.
In many cases, even a single lost booking per month can cost more than certification.
WiFi is consistently one of the most complained-about aspects in guest reviews. WiFiCert™ helps reduce that uncertainty through independent verification.
WiFiCert™ is not designed to increase traffic to your property.
Its value is in improving conversion.
When guests compare similar properties with similar prices and reviews, a WiFiCert™ certification can help them choose with more confidence.
This is particularly relevant for:
In practical terms, WiFiCert™ helps you convert the visitors you already have into bookings.
These questions explain why an independent framework can offer a more credible basis than a self-declared WiFi claim.
WiFiCert™ is an independent verification and certification framework for assessing real-world WiFi quality in hospitality and professional environments.
Because the venue, installer or supplier may all have a commercial interest in describing the WiFi positively. Independent verification is intended to reduce that bias by using a separate framework and defined evaluation criteria.
Yes, but that remains a self-claim. WiFiCert™ exists because WiFi quality should not depend only on what a venue says about itself.
That is the intended positioning. The credibility of the framework depends on remaining separate from booking platforms, network operators and equipment vendors.
Because a structured external framework is inherently more credible than a self-declared claim. Certification replaces a simple assertion with a more rigorous basis for trust.
Reviews and certification do not do the same job. One shows user perception; the other is meant to show verified service quality.
Reviews are based on subjective experience. They can indicate frustration or satisfaction, but they do not provide a technical explanation or a consistent measurement basis. WiFiCert™ is intended to provide a structured and objective assessment.
No. Reviews can be useful as signals of user perception. They show what people felt or experienced. But they do not replace technical verification.
Reviews show what users perceive. WiFiCert™ is designed to show what is actually being delivered.
Because without an objective basis, a venue owner may be left reacting to opinions without understanding the real technical situation or how to discuss it properly with providers.
WiFiCert™ is designed not only for guests or public trust, but also to help the venue owner understand, manage and communicate WiFi quality more clearly.
It gives the venue owner a more structured way to understand the actual quality of the WiFi instead of relying only on complaints, positive comments or supplier assurances.
It creates a more concrete basis for evaluating service quality and discussing performance with providers, installers or internal technical teams.
It enables the venue to show a certification that can be verified publicly, rather than asking guests to accept a simple self-declared statement.
Yes. One of its key roles is to provide a more objective basis for discussing what level of service is actually being delivered.
The process should be straightforward for applicants, while remaining structured and rigorous behind the scenes.
In general terms: application, technical audit or assessment, review of evidence, certification decision and publication of the result in the public registry.
Yes. The experience should be simple from the applicant’s perspective, even though the framework behind it is structured and rigorous.
Not necessarily. Different levels may involve different evidence and verification requirements.
Certification should not be granted until the required criteria are satisfied.
WiFi quality is broader than a speed result. Real quality depends on multiple measurable factors.
No. Speed is only one aspect. A credible WiFi evaluation should also consider factors such as stability, coverage consistency, signal conditions, latency, jitter and packet loss.
Because a strong result in one moment or one location does not prove consistent performance across rooms, areas or realistic user conditions.
It refers to how the network behaves where people actually use it: in rooms, common areas, workspaces and other service areas, under realistic usage conditions.
It is a way of assessing whether the available internet capacity is proportionate to the expected number of concurrent users, helping show whether the service is realistically adequate for the venue.
The levels are designed to reflect progressively stronger evidence and reliability.
WiFiCert™ uses levels such as Verified, Guaranteed and Trusted, each representing a progressively stronger basis of evidence and confidence.
It indicates that the venue has met a defined baseline under the relevant process and criteria.
It indicates a stronger level of reliability and a more robust basis for confidence.
It represents the most advanced level within the framework, with a stronger standard of evidence and reliability.
Public verification is essential. A certification is more credible when third parties can check it independently.
That is the intended model. A unique certificate ID helps ensure that each certification can be checked individually.
Yes. The certification should be linked to an online registry entry or verification page.
Typically the certificate ID, the certification level, its validity status and the main identifying details of the certified venue.
Yes. The value of the digital badge depends on being linked to a public record that confirms validity.
Impartiality is central. Without it, certification loses much of its credibility.
By relying on predefined criteria, a structured process and a certification decision that should not depend on the venue’s own statements alone.
A venue may provide data and access, but the result should depend on whether the required criteria are met.
Yes, but only if it goes through the same process and criteria as any other applicant. The framework only remains credible if there is no preferential treatment.
Yes. Certification should be time-limited and capable of being updated, suspended or withdrawn if the required conditions no longer apply.
Not perception, but verification.
WiFiCert™ is not a WiFi provider and not a connectivity solution. It is an independent verification framework designed to help venues move from assumptions and opinions to a more credible, verifiable basis for trust.
Do not guess the quality of the WiFi. Verify it.