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Is My Router Making Me Sick?
Symptoms

Is My Router Making Me Sick?

Signal Sanctuary Signal Sanctuary 3 min read

Short Answer

Some people report symptoms they associate with Wi-Fi routers, including headaches, poor sleep, difficulty concentrating, feelings of restlessness, or general discomfort.

Whether a router is the direct cause of those symptoms is often difficult to determine. Many factors can affect how we feel, including stress, sleep habits, lighting, noise, air quality, screen time, and other environmental influences.

If you have noticed a pattern, it may be worth exploring systematically rather than dismissing it — or assuming you have already found the answer.

Why People Ask This Question

Most people do not wake up one morning worried about electromagnetic fields. Instead, they notice something. Perhaps they sleep better while traveling, feel more comfortable in certain rooms, develop headaches after long periods around electronics, or experience symptoms that seem to improve when devices are unplugged or moved.

What Does a Router Actually Do?

A Wi-Fi router communicates by transmitting and receiving radio-frequency signals. Unlike ionizing radiation such as X-rays, Wi-Fi uses non-ionizing radio-frequency energy. The amount of energy involved is relatively low and decreases rapidly with distance from the router.

Why Do Some People Report Symptoms?

Some individuals report noticeable changes when they reduce wireless devices in their environment, including better sleep, reduced headaches, improved concentration, and greater calm. Others notice no difference at all. Researchers continue to study the relationship between electromagnetic environments and human health.

A Practical Way to Investigate

Keep a simple journal

For one or two weeks, record sleep quality, headaches, energy levels, mood, and time spent using electronic devices.

Change one thing at a time

Try a single adjustment: move the router farther from your bed, turn Wi-Fi off overnight, or reduce device use before bedtime. Observe what happens over several days.

Look for patterns

The goal is not to prove anything. The goal is simply to determine whether a consistent pattern exists.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does turning off Wi-Fi at night help?

Some people report sleeping better when Wi-Fi is turned off overnight. Others notice no difference. The only way to know is to test it systematically.

Is it safe to sleep next to a router?

Many people do so without reporting any problems. If you are curious whether distance matters for your situation, moving the router farther away is a simple experiment.