If you’re planning a network installation or cabling upgrade, you’ve likely come across the debate between Cat6 and Cat6A. Both support fast Ethernet connections, but they’re not interchangeable — and choosing the wrong one can mean expensive re-pulls in a few years when your network demands grow. Here’s a clear breakdown of the differences and which one makes sense for your business.

Cat6 vs. Cat6A: The Real Differences
Speed and Distance
Cat6 supports 1 Gbps at up to 100 meters, and 10 Gbps but only up to 55 meters. For most workstations today, 1 Gbps is sufficient — but the 55-meter limitation for 10G means Cat6 won’t scale well in larger spaces or high-density wireless environments.
Cat6A supports 10 Gbps at the full 100-meter distance. The “A” stands for augmented — it has improved insulation that eliminates the alien crosstalk limiting Cat6 at higher speeds. Cat6A is the recommended standard for any space deploying wireless access points, IP cameras, or VoIP systems.
Size and Cost
Cat6A is thicker (7-8mm vs. 5-6mm for Cat6), which matters in NYC buildings where conduit fill capacity is often limited. Cat6A cable costs roughly 30-50% more per foot — but for a 50-drop installation, the material cost difference is typically $500–$1,500. That’s a small premium for infrastructure that will last 15+ years.
When Cat6 Still Makes Sense
Cat6 is appropriate in small offices where all runs are under 50 meters and 1G speeds are sufficient for the foreseeable future, or in budget-constrained projects. In most new commercial builds, however, Cat6A has become the de facto standard.
What About Fiber?
Fiber is the right answer for backbone runs — the connections between your IDF closets and your main distribution frame (MDF), and for runs across large campus environments. Fiber is immune to electromagnetic interference, supports much longer distances, and carries far more bandwidth than copper.
Shielded vs. Unshielded Cat6A
Cat6A comes in shielded (F/UTP or S/FTP) and unshielded (U/UTP) variants. Shielded Cat6A provides additional protection against interference in environments with lots of electrical equipment. Unshielded Cat6A is sufficient for most standard commercial office environments.
Cat6A costs a little more per run. A re-pull in three years costs far more.
SolvedIT installs Cat6, Cat6A, and fiber cabling for businesses across New York City, New Jersey, and Connecticut. Every installation includes full TIA-568 certification and documentation.
Get a free quote on your cabling project — we’ll scope it out and give you a flat-rate price with no surprises.
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