

⚡ Small device, big network impact — power your WiFi like a pro!
The Mikrotik mAP lite is a compact, PoE-powered 2.4GHz wireless access point featuring 802.11b/g/n standards and a magnetic chassis for flexible placement. Running RouterOS, it offers versatile network roles including bridge and router modes, making it an ideal portable solution for professionals seeking reliable, configurable WiFi in a minimalist design.
| ASIN | B01BMMJVLI |
| Are Batteries Included | No |
| Best Sellers Rank | 81,534 in Computers & Accessories ( See Top 100 in Computers & Accessories ) 569 in Routers |
| Brand | MikroTik |
| Colour | White |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars (307) |
| Date First Available | 3 Feb. 2017 |
| Guaranteed software updates until | unknown |
| Item Weight | 120 g |
| Item model number | RBMAPL-2ND |
| Manufacturer | IRD - EU23 Parent Code - PES - DE |
| Number of Ethernet Ports | 1 |
| Operating System | RouterOS |
| Power Source | Connector Type C (EU) |
| Product Dimensions | 4.9 x 1.1 x 4.8 cm; 120 g |
| RAM Size | 0.06 GB |
| Series | Mikrotik mAP lite |
| Wireless Type | 802.11b, 802.11g, 802.11n |
K**N
Tiny and Fast! Make sure you set a WiFi password!
Tiny, honestly Tiny, amazing little device, remember if you are using this to extend your wireless network set it up as a bridge not an access point or a router, I use mine hard wired in to a poe net switch, the device does come with a PSU though if you need it. I'm getting 60mbs which is more than fast enough for my phone when sat out in the garden. Connect the device directly in to your ethernet port on your computer for setup and follow the instructions, any questions simply ask an ai chat bot, quicker than anything these days although I would avoid asking the chatbot on here as it's limited. Overall I can highly recommend this, if you wanted an outside access point this would easily fit inside a small plastic terminal box. It's highly configurable via the in built web server or the software, I used the web interface and it was quick and simple. Note that out of the box mine was set with no WiFi password! Make sure you change this, look for the little padlock next to the WiFi symbol on your phone, if you don't see it, connect to your pc and set a password for access.
H**Y
Incredibly small, cute, functional
This is a brilliant device- the size of a small stack of After Eights. It can be powered from PoE, and can run as a bridge, router (I think it can even drive a PPPoE modem) and do some basic filtering. Obviously, you won't get giant high-gain antennas, and its' 2.4GHz only, but you get the typically ludicrous RouterOS feature set in a tiny package. Perfect for throwing in your toolkit, or bag when travelling. It's also great if you want to leave an AP in a cabinet that field engineers can power up to connect their laptop into a wired network. Oh, and the fact that it's magnetic? That's brilliant. Plug it into a PoE-ed ethernet cable, slap it somewhere and be happy. It has its limitations (it's no industrial grade UBNT AP), but at the size and price, it's a gem.
M**E
Works well, reliable so far
Works well, using as a backup for my home internet so if it fails I just enable my phone hotspot and the house then uses that. Has been needed a few times and has worked every time.
M**Y
Amazingly small / powerful but has a flaw
Small, powerful but I needed this to work via POE and Google / other comments will tell you this implementation ‘may’ work on your POE, for me it didn’t work out - even with a x-over adapter Yes they supply a bulky UK power adapter but space was limited for me. I’ve worked around the power issue (using a small micro usb supply)
S**H
Fabulous device!
I reprogrammed it to do the opposite and be a back up for my broadband by using my phone. Works flawlessly.
H**L
Gadget that saved us!
I use this device to set up a secondary back up WAN for the UniFi UDM PRO. I am able to connect this device to my mobile phone hotspot and use it as a back up for my home Wi-Fi. We’ve had a few outages recently, and this little device has insured that we have connectivity at flick of a button!
R**S
At this price, no other box delivers this much!
Simple to setup. Reset button is a bit hard to press. Amount of features in this little AP is amazing. Use it on my Homelab to setup my IoT WiFi network
H**T
Overall good, but PoE is broken :(
It's super-small, works (mostly) well, and has a very rich feature set which offers massive scope for complex configuration. If you're a Cisco bod you'll pick up the console pretty quickly. However, there's a big "but"... I bought it mainly for the PoE "support". It seems fine with my old ASA5505, also fine with an injector, but does it work with any recent mid/high-end Cisco campus switches? Does it chuff. There are staff posts on Mikrotik's forum referencing PoE design flaws, and suggesting use of a crossover cable to reverse the polarity. I'll give that a try, but not holding out much hope at this point.
C**N
Performance et compact peut être un peu complexe pour les novices ,route OS marque que je conseille AU TOP TOP
J**R
werkt goed. verwacht geen wonderen. maar voor kleine ruimtes prima te gebruiken en makkelijk mee te nemen.
C**O
Producto estupendo para llevarlo en el bolsillo, la maleta o en un viaje y utilizarlo cuando lo necesites como un AP personal, además es un Mikrotik en toda regla!. Y uno se pregunta, y además ¿para que me sirve un punto de acceso de tan sólo 100 Mbit/s y Wifi 2G? en mi caso es para aislar los inseguros IOTs que sólo se conectan las no tan seguras redes 2G, por no andar creando vlans, tengo a todos estos aparatitos conectados y aislados (+ isolation) en el mAP, el consumo es ínfimo, es POE y el que sólo sea 100 Mbit/s es lo máximo que saca el que en el hipotético caso se cuele... Al ser un routerOs tiene firewall y otras cosas mas... También se me ocurre para una red de invitados aislada de mi red En resumen, sin complicarte, aísla lo inseguro en el mAP!
D**Q
The MikroTik mAP Lite is the adorable cousin of the mAP 2n—the one that shows up with half the features, a third of the weight, and still somehow manages to be useful in situations you didn’t see coming. With only a single Ethernet port, you lose a big chunk of the Swiss Army knife tricks the larger mAP can pull off, but what remains is still a shockingly capable lab and field companion. In the right hands, it’s the fastest way to pop up a Wi-Fi network when you’re tired of standing in front of a rack, need to reach gear from across the room, or want to stop leaning over a switch like you’re trying to smell the firmware. In the lab, the mAP Lite earns its keep over and over. Need a quick test SSID to validate DHCP, DNS, or captive portal behavior? Done. Need to figure out what a device is doing before you commit it to the production stack? This thing will happily give you a clean, isolated wireless bubble to experiment in. And the “one Ethernet port” limitation actually simplifies certain workflows—you plug it into something, it becomes the gateway drug for diagnostics. No bridging tricks, no inline MITM setups, just a tiny radio that gives your laptop or tablet the wireless rope it needs to poke at devices hiding behind racks, under desks, or in the dreaded top-of-ladder zone. In everyday tech work, the mAP Lite is basically a get-out-of-jail card for laptops without Ethernet. That single port becomes your emergency NIC, your temporary portal into stranded VLANs, your way to SSH into switches that live in awkward corners of MDFs. It’s not winning any throughput awards and it’s very much a “2.4 GHz only” child, but for powered-from-anything PoE-in convenience and dead-simple portability, it’s a tool that quietly becomes part of your standard kit. It doesn’t replace the full mAP, but it fills a niche you don’t appreciate until you’re on-site, stuck on Wi-Fi-only hardware, and wishing you had just one more wired hop. This is that hop. ⸻ Pros • Tiny, featherweight, and ridiculously easy to toss in any toolkit • Great for lab testing, quick SSIDs, and isolated “what is this device doing?” scenarios • Perfect workaround for laptops with no Ethernet port • PoE-in makes it deployable anywhere a switch or injector exists • Incredibly cheap for the utility it provides Cons • Only one Ethernet port—no bridging, no inline MITM, limited tricks • 2.4 GHz only, with all the crowding and interference that implies • RouterOS depth is still there if you stray beyond simple configs • Throughput capped by both hardware and physics • More limited Swiss Army knife than the full mAP
P**O
Muy fácil de configurar y muy buena cobertura.
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