Organisational networks have quietly become one of the most strategically important layers of UK business infrastructure. As hybrid work stabilises, cloud adoption accelerates, and connected devices proliferate across every sector, the market for enterprise‑grade networking equipment is undergoing rapid, research‑driven transformation. The UK is no longer simply upgrading routers and switches — it is rebuilding the digital backbone of its economy.
A market defined by growth and diversification
Recent UK networking‑equipment research shows a sector expanding across multiple categories, from routers and switches to Wi‑Fi systems, mobile‑core networks, and intelligent RAN controllers. Growth rates vary by segment, but several stand out:
- Wi‑Fi network equipment is growing at a 14.75% CAGR through 2030, driven by demand for high‑density, high‑reliability wireless in offices, retail, and logistics.
- Wireless routers continue to expand at 9.08% CAGR, reflecting the shift to hybrid work and cloud‑first architectures.
- Router and switch markets - the backbone of enterprise networks - maintain steady growth at 4.12% CAGR, with Cisco, Huawei, Juniper, HPE, and Arista leading innovation in security‑centric and software‑defined networking.
This diversification signals a market moving beyond commodity hardware toward integrated, software‑driven, and security‑first solutions.
The connectivity context: demand is surging
Ofcom’s Connected Nations 2025 report shows the UK’s network environment shifting dramatically:
- Gigabit‑capable networks now reach 87% of UK premises, up from 83% the previous year.
- Full‑fibre coverage has reached 78%, including 78% of SMEs.
- Adoption is rising too: 56% of premises with gigabit access now take up the service.
This rapid expansion places new pressure on organisational networks. As external connectivity improves, internal networks must match that performance - pushing businesses to upgrade switching, Wi‑Fi, and security layers.
The device explosion: organisational networks are getting crowded
DCMS research into enterprise connected‑device usage reveals a critical trend: UK organisations are deploying far more connected devices than they can reliably monitor or secure. Interviews with IT and cybersecurity leaders across retail, finance, healthcare, R&D, and transport show:
- Many organisations underestimate the number of connected devices in their networks.
- Responsibility for device security is fragmented across IT, operations, and facilities teams.
- Businesses rely heavily on third‑party digital services and cloud‑connected devices, increasing attack surfaces.
- Cyber‑attacks on connected devices are common, driving demand for more robust network‑security equipment and monitoring tools.
This device proliferation is reshaping procurement priorities: organisations now value visibility, segmentation, and zero‑trust capabilities as much as raw network speed.
The strategic shift: networks as security infrastructure
Across all research sources, one theme dominates: network equipment is becoming security equipment.
With rising cyber‑risk, regulatory scrutiny, and the complexity of hybrid environments, UK organisations are investing in:
- AI‑enhanced intrusion detection.
- Secure SD‑WAN.
- Network‑access control (NAC).
- Encrypted Wi‑Fi 6/7 deployments.
- Cloud‑managed switching and monitoring.
The network is no longer just a transport layer - it is the first line of defence.
Expanding to meet demand
The UK’s organisational‑network‑equipment market is expanding because the demands placed on networks are expanding. Faster broadband, more devices, hybrid work, and escalating cyber‑risk are pushing organisations to modernise their infrastructure. The research is clear: the next decade of UK competitiveness will depend not just on digital services, but on the invisible networks that make them possible.