On the surface, Wi-Fi® and Bluetooth® seem to do virtually the same thing at first, so it can be tricky when considering between a Wi-Fi speaker vs. a Bluetooth speaker. However, while they’re both wireless speakers, there are some important differences. Both use radio waves to connect devices, but Wi-Fi relies on an internet connection. Wi-Fi is a wireless signal from a network, like the one supplied by your internet router at home. Bluetooth connections work directly between paired devices, without going through a router. For example, you can have a smartphone paired directly with a smart speaker, or a smartphone paired with Bluetooth headphones.
Wi-Fi networks can connect to practically a limitless number of devices simultaneously, like your phone, tablet, gaming console, soundbar, media players, and more. Once you connect the device to the Wi-Fi network with a password, you’re good to go.
Bluetooth connections work with one active connection at a time, using a shared digital passkey between two devices. Connection can be activated with a single click once the devices are in range of each other, and they’ll stay paired until you choose to disconnect. Some devices now use multipoint Bluetooth and can switch between more than one connection without having to drop a previous connection, making it easy to switch device pairings.
Read on to learn more about the difference between Wi-Fi and Bluetooth when it comes to speakers.