Glossary

Guest WiFi

Guest WiFi is a public, internet-only WiFi network a business offers to customers, separate from its private back-office network, typically secured by a captive portal that requires sign-in.

Guest WiFi is the WiFi a business gives to its customers — separate from the private network that runs its tills, security cameras, and back-office computers. By design it goes nowhere except to the public internet, so a guest device can\'t see internal systems even if it\'s compromised.

Why guest WiFi is segregated

Mixing customer phones onto the same network as a card terminal or an admin laptop creates real PCI-DSS, ICO and cyber-security exposure. The standard pattern is:

  • Separate SSID ("Pub_Guest" vs "Pub_Staff") — different network names.
  • Separate VLAN — traffic is firewalled at the access point so guests can\'t scan the staff LAN.
  • Separate credential model — staff use WPA2/3 passwords; guests use a captive-portal email/social login.

Guest WiFi vs public WiFi

"Public WiFi" usually means an entirely open café-style network with no authentication. "Guest WiFi" implies the business has actively configured a controlled experience — typically captive portal, branded splash page, time-limited sessions, and a record of who connected. From a guest\'s perspective both feel similar; from an operator\'s perspective they\'re very different.

Guest WiFi and marketing

Once you have a captive portal capturing email or social-login data, guest WiFi becomes one of the highest-quality marketing channels available — see WiFi marketing.

Related

Related terms

Try CaptiFi free for 30 days

Capture guest emails, run automated email/SMS campaigns, and grow Google reviews — all from your existing WiFi.