The 2026 baseline (Cat6 is no longer it)
Three years ago, Cat6 was the default specification for Saudi office fit-outs. It isn’t anymore. The combination of Wi-Fi 6E, increasingly bandwidth-hungry applications, PoE++ powered devices, and the 25-year cable lifecycle has pushed Cat6A to the new baseline for serious enterprise deployments. Specifying Cat6 today is locking yourself into bandwidth constraints you’ll regret within five years.
What Cat6 actually delivers — and where it falls short
Cat6 supports 1 Gbps speeds at the standard 100m distance, with 10 Gbps possible at reduced distances (37-55m depending on cable quality and installation). It’s adequate for current office workloads — typical knowledge workers don’t saturate gigabit links — but it’s a 1990s-era specification serving 2026 expectations.
Where it falls short: Wi-Fi 6E access points push up to 4-5 Gbps to a single AP at peak, which the AP-to-switch link must support. PoE++ (90W) for high-end APs and IP cameras stresses Cat6 cables thermally over long pulls. And future-proofing for the 25-year window — a typical structured cabling commitment — points firmly toward higher specifications.
Cat6A — the new mid-tier baseline
Cat6A delivers 10 Gbps at the full 100m distance, supports PoE++ comfortably, and handles the higher heat loads with better-shielded designs. The price premium over Cat6 is typically 15-25% for cable, with similar premium on connectors, jacks, and patch panels. Over a 25-year cable lifecycle, that premium is trivially small compared to the cost of recabling halfway through.
For most Saudi office, retail, and hospitality fit-outs, Cat6A is now the right specification. The exceptions narrow to: temporary fit-outs (less than 5 years), very small deployments where cost sensitivity is severe, and mature offices being expanded rather than rebuilt.
Fiber types: OM3 vs OM4 vs OS2
Fiber appears in several places: building backbones connecting MDF to IDFs, data centre interconnects, and increasingly to-the-desk for high-bandwidth workstations. The fiber type matters.
OM3 multimode supports 10 Gbps at 300m, 40 Gbps at 100m, 100 Gbps at 70m. OM4 extends those distances by ~50%. OM5 (newer) supports wavelength-division multiplexing for higher capacity over the same fiber. OS2 single-mode supports 10 Gbps at 10km, 100 Gbps at 2km — the right choice for inter-building runs and longer pulls.
For mid-market office deployments, OM4 multimode for backbones is the standard. For campus or multi-building deployments, OS2 single-mode in the long pulls.
PoE+ and PoE++ implications for cable choice
Power over Ethernet has changed cable specification fundamentally. PoE+ delivers 30W per port — adequate for IP phones and standard wireless access points. PoE++ (also called 4PPoE or PoE Type 4) delivers 60-90W per port — required for high-end APs (Wi-Fi 6E with 8×8 antennas), advanced IP cameras with PTZ and analytics, and emerging digital signage.
Higher PoE wattages create heat in cable bundles. Tightly-bundled Cat6 runs PoE++ at the upper limit can experience heat-related signal degradation over long pulls. Cat6A’s better shielding handles the thermal load more comfortably. For deployments planning Wi-Fi 6E or PoE++ devices anywhere, Cat6A becomes the safer choice.
The total cost over 25 years (the only number that matters)
Structured cabling is a 25-year commitment. The cost differential between Cat6 and Cat6A on a 500-drop office is typically SAR 50,000-80,000. Spread over 25 years, that’s SAR 2,000-3,500 per year — less than the cost of a single mid-cycle equipment refresh that Cat6 limitations might force.
The real question isn’t “Cat6 or Cat6A?” — it’s “do you want to recable in 7-10 years when Cat6 limitations bite, or pay slightly more now for cable that lasts the full 25-year window?”
Hidden cost: certification testing and documentation
The cabling itself is half the cost. The other half is professional installation, certification testing with a Fluke DSX or similar tester, and complete documentation. Skipping certification is a false economy — a non-certified cable plant fails audit requirements for many enterprise tenants and creates liability when troubleshooting becomes needed.
Insist on certification testing with documented results for every drop, manufacturer warranty registration, and as-built drawings.
Brand/manufacturer choices that matter
The major manufacturer ecosystems — Panduit, CommScope, Belden, Leviton — offer 25-year performance warranties when you use their certified installers and matched components. Mixing manufacturers within a single channel voids the warranty. The brand decision is largely about the local installer ecosystem in Saudi Arabia and parts availability.
For office, hospitality, and education fit-outs across Saudi Arabia, book a structured cabling assessment and we’ll deliver a written specification with cost options. Pair structured cabling with networking services, CCTV installation, and server solutions for an integrated infrastructure project.