Safaricom, in partnership with Huawei, has introduced Kenya’s first Fibre to the Room (FTTR) solution, a home connectivity model designed to eliminate Wi-Fi dead zones and address growing pressure on household internet networks.
The rollout comes at a time when Kenyan homes are increasingly running multiple high-demand digital activities at once, from streaming and gaming to remote work and smart device automation, exposing limitations in traditional broadband setups that rely on a single router.
Unlike conventional Fibre to the Home systems, where fibre terminates at one central point, FTTR extends optical fibre connectivity into every room. This creates a distributed network structure that ensures each space in the home has direct, stable access to high-speed internet.
“Today’s homes demand more than just connectivity; they require an always on digital ecosystem. Through our partnership with Huawei, we are delivering a truly immersive connected home experience that meets the evolving needs of modern households,” said Peter Ndegwa, CEO, Safaricom PLC.
Ending the “One Router Problem”
Safaricom says the FTTR model directly responds to a long-standing challenge in home internet delivery, uneven Wi-Fi coverage caused by distance, walls, and device congestion. By placing optical access points in each room, the system removes dependence on signal distribution from a single router.
The result, according to the company, is consistent connectivity across the entire home, with near-zero latency variation and reduced interruptions during high-bandwidth usage.
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FTTR is positioned as a solution for modern digital lifestyles that increasingly rely on stable connectivity for ultra-HD streaming, online gaming, AR and VR applications, video conferencing, cloud storage, and interconnected smart home systems.
Built for Multi-Device Homes
Safaricom notes that today’s households are no longer single-user internet environments. Multiple devices often operate simultaneously across different rooms, creating congestion and performance drops under traditional Wi-Fi setups.
The FTTR system is designed to handle this shift by creating a unified fibre-based mesh throughout the home, supported by intelligent network management that automatically optimises traffic and reduces interference.
Key features include whole-home gigabit-level coverage, ultra-low latency performance for real-time applications, AI-powered optimisation that adjusts network load dynamically, and compatibility with smart home technologies such as IoT devices, security systems, and entertainment platforms.
The company says the system is also designed as a future-ready foundation, capable of supporting emerging technologies without requiring major upgrades to internal home wiring or network hardware.
Strategic Shift in Broadband Competition
The launch positions Safaricom as the first operator in Kenya to deliver a fully room-level fibre connectivity model, moving beyond traditional broadband competition focused on speed tiers to a more structural redefinition of home internet architecture.
The partnership with Huawei combines Safaricom’s nationwide fibre infrastructure with Huawei’s FTTR ecosystem, which includes optical terminals, Wi-Fi 6/6+ capability, and AI-driven network control systems.
Industry observers see FTTR as part of a broader global trend where internet providers are shifting focus from external network speed to internal home network quality, effectively treating the home as a fully engineered digital environment.
With this rollout, Safaricom is betting that the next phase of connectivity competition will not be about how fast the internet enters the home, but how seamlessly it moves within it.

