TP-Link / solid green
TP-Link lights meaning
TP-Link router or range router lights make more sense when read by label first and color second. TP-Link routers often use orange or amber for WAN trouble while local Wi-Fi can still appear active.
Short answer
What do TP-Link lights mean?
TP-Link router or range router lights make more sense when read by label first and color second. TP-Link routers often use orange or amber for WAN trouble while local Wi-Fi can still appear active.
TP-Link routers often use orange or amber for WAN trouble while local Wi-Fi can still appear active.
Safe order
Check in this order
- Confirm the matching label: power, online, Wi-Fi, or Ethernet.
- If internet is still down, test a wired device before changing Wi-Fi settings.
- Look for a second warning light that explains the real fault.
- Restart only if the solid light conflicts with no service.
Light labels
What the nearby label changes
Before a factory reset
A reset can erase Wi-Fi names, passwords, port forwarding, and provider activation state. Use it only after power, cable, outage, and startup checks do not explain the light.
When to call support
Call the provider when Online, Internet, Broadband, US/DS, or Optical never reaches a steady normal state after one clean restart and cable check.
When Wi-Fi settings matter
Change Wi-Fi settings only when service lights are healthy but phones, laptops, or smart devices cannot join the wireless network.