

🚀 Elevate your network to 10G speed — because your data deserves the fast lane!
The TRENDnet TEG-7124WS is a 12-port 10G web smart switch featuring 8 RJ-45 10G ports and 4 SFP+ slots, delivering a massive 240Gbps switching capacity. Designed for SMBs and professional environments, it supports advanced traffic management, IPv6, and government-grade NDAA & TAA compliance. Its rack-mountable metal chassis and lifetime manufacturer protection make it a reliable, future-proof backbone for high-speed networks.












| ASIN | B0BLQPPXL3 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #323 in Computer Networking Switches |
| Brand | TRENDnet |
| Built-In Media | • TEG-7124WS • Quick Installation Guide • Power cord (1. |
| Case Material Type | Metal |
| Color | Black |
| Compatible Devices | Desktop |
| Customer Reviews | 4.3 out of 5 stars 33 Reviews |
| Data Transfer Rate | 240 Gigabits Per Second |
| Interface | SFP |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 12.8"L x 9.06"W x 1.74"H |
| Item Weight | 4.31 Pounds |
| Lower Temperature Rating | 32 Degrees Fahrenheit |
| Manufacturer | TRENDnet |
| Mfr Part Number | TEG-7124WS |
| Model Number | TEG-7124WS |
| Number of Layers | 3 |
| Number of Ports | 12 |
| Platform | Not Machine Specific |
| Product Dimensions | 12.8"L x 9.06"W x 1.74"H |
| Switch Type | 12-Port 10G Web Smart Switch |
| UPC | 710931140897 |
| Upper Temperature Rating | 122 Degrees Fahrenheit |
| Warranty Description | Lifetime Warranty |
S**M
Good switch, fast, easy build, reputed manufacturer, looks good in rack. Deal price is hard to beat.
Great little switch. I just rewired my house with this as the backbone. I was expecting it would give me gig speeds, considering parts of my home were wired with Cat5e, and other parts are Cat6. But I was surprised to find that all of the ports are at 10G. Unfortunately, I only have one endpoint with a 10G NIC to do a proper throughput test. Here are some pros/cons I observed. Pro: Plenty of ports. Good balance between copper and SFP+ slots, which can be used with copper or fiber. Had no trouble negotiating with other switches and endpoints I have, which support 1, 2.5, and 10G. Runs cooler than other switches I have tried from a Chinese manufacturer. US manufacturer, so warranty claims and support may not be an issue (I hope). Easy and fast configuration, was up and running in minutes. Just the right balance of features (L2 and L3). CLI (console and SSH) and web-managed, so the options are great. Con: Fan noise, but it's to be expected. Mine is in the garage, so it's not bothersome. But its hard to see how this would work as a desk switch. But the fan speeds do change with ambient temperature, which is nice. For an expensive switch, it doesn't come with dust caps. Considering these get deployed in places where bugs can crawl in and set up a warm nest, it should have been shipped with dust caps. I bought some separately to cover the SFP+ ports. The spec sheet only mentions 1,2.5, and 10G speeds. But the graphics and interface include 5G, so I don't know if it can do 5G speeds as well. Will do some testing and update. Wish it had a link utilization graph on the interface. I know it has robust RMON and SNMP support, but it's faster for a quick glance. Most switches I have interacted with come with a ground on the switch body; this didn't. I guess it's not needed or expected that the rack be grounded. I was split between this and Zyxel, but the deal offering made this irresistible. It offered the same features with more ports and was slightly cheaper. Power consumption is hovering around 33W in my case, with low to no load, but sitting in the garage, where the fan seems to run continuously.
C**X
Solid Smart Switch.
I bought this on Prime Day as part of my effort to bring my home network into the modern age; it was an offer I could not refuse. I'm not running anything yet which requires 10G, but it is an investment toward being future-resistant. So far, no issues aside from a router upstream not identifying it (although it knows its existence). I'll figure it out eventually; it is no fault of the switch and at my age, I'm in no real hurry anyway. I bought a 12U rack to install it & a few other goodies, and the rack currently sits on a desk adjacent to my work area. I do not find the fan noise particularly objectionable, even though it runs continuously; your mileage may vary. Overall, this seems like a quality smart switch. I'm glad I made the purchase.
R**A
A Great Choice for 10Gbps Networking, with a Minor Caveat for Home or Office use
My setup is straightforward, and I've tested the switch with two Linux-based computers equipped with Intel x540 pcie(note that this NIC are not supported on Windows 11) and a PFSense router with VLAN. The results have been impressive, with iperf tests yielding speeds of around 9.3Gbps. Additionally, I've noticed a significant reduction in ping times, from 2-3ms to 0.15ms, although this may not be noticeable for most users. TRENDnet regularly releases firmware updates, which gives me peace of mind - a key factor in my purchasing decision, as some cheaper alternatives don't offer this level of support. One thing to note is that this switch is slightly on the noisier side. It does produce a gentle hum that's audible in quiet environments. If you're planning to use it in a silent workspace or home office, you may want to take this into consideration.
K**N
So many gigabits...
I had a NAS die on me, and things started spinning out of control. The old NAS only had two 100 megabit ports. So I got a Synology DS923+ and saw that I was saturating the gigabit connection. That led to getting the 10 gigabit card, and I found that I was saturating the connection on my 2.5 gigabit switch. And then Prime Day happened, and I bought a DS1122+ with another 10 gigabit card. And if you're going to have two NAS devices capable of 10 gigabits -- you need a 10 gigabit switch, right? Realizing I was going way, way past overkill for home use, I decided if I was going 10 gigabit, I was going as inexpensive as practical. Since I'm adding to an existing network with different vendors and VLANs, having something semi-managed was essential, and fully-managed would be even nicer. Now -- there is a much less expensive managed 10 gig switch that's all SFP+ which I had considered, but I just didn't feel good about the no-name company that made it. Not that TRENDNet is top-tier, but they've been around long enough that I can count on them releasing firmware updates from time to time, and reasonably trust that there's nothing nefarious baked into the hardware. When this initially arrived, I was a little puzzled that it wasn't pulling a DHCP address. I had to go into the documentation to discover that this comes from the factory set to 192.168.10.200 and apparently, you're not changing it without a console connection or a device on that network. That's about 75% of the reason I docked a star. I guess you can make some argument for airgap security on a switch being a good thing, but I just don't see a use case for this grade of switch where that's necessary enough to outweigh the convenience of fast setup. Anyway. The GUI isn't awful All the functions you'd reasonably expect to need are there and easy -- maybe too easy -- to use. I kind of with things like ACLs could be set on a single page per port, and that doing things like setting up LACP could be done as "these three ports" instead of having to turn it on port-by-port, but I'm picking nits here. What is a bit annoying is that some of the pages show ports that the switch doesn't have, while other pages have you selecting ports off of a sketch of the switch. Consistency is not a priority to their UX team. That said, the GUI is extremely fast as switches go, and not every config change requires a reboot. The only other odd thing that stood out to me was when I used an SFP+ module to connect to my Cisco gigabit switch, the Cisco switch looked like the interface was flapping, and the TRENDNet switch didn't show a module installed at all. Forcing the port to gigabit resolved the problem, but I was a little surprised that it didn't auto set to max capability. (Though in fairness, the module is pretty cheap and may not report it.) All things being equal, I'd buy this again. The config annoyances are minor, and the speed is divine.
R**.
tradesoffs be ware
This is an OK managed 10G switch. The pros are the price, getting 12 managed ports (8x 10GBE + 4x 10G SFP+) under $500 is hard to beat. The Web UI is not bad either, takes a second to get VLANs going. A major flaw is on bootup, the switch seems to put all ports in VLAN 0 and connect them all together. this of course is addressed once it boots up, but you now have to worry about power on sequencing. It also takes about 2 minutes to boot up, a bit slow. Two other major points: it has a fan in it, the fan is audible in a quiet environment. The switch gets very hot so the fan is required, I think TrendNet should have looked at better airflow options, possible a larger fan type to address heat and noise and other power issues. Finally it's physically large. Looking inside the case, it's mostly empty space so it doesn't have to be this thick, or this deep... but it is. Noisey Hot Larger than needed VLAN0 on all ports on bootup I would be happy to replace it with a smaller, silent switch.
F**1
Ultra fast 10 gb ports
One of the few that actually works and doesn’t take a ton of setup. Love this switch.
J**Z
Great smart home switch
Great switch for a high speed smart home backbone.
N**N
Great
Works at full 10GBE speed, has extensive management capabilities