WPA3 in MDUs: Stronger Security, Tougher Deployment?

WPA3 in MDUs: Stronger Security, Tougher Deployment?

The multi-family connectivity landscape is changing rapidly. With Wi-Fi 6E and Wi-Fi 7 now entering mainstream deployments, property owners and managed service providers (MSPs) are under increasing pressure to deliver secure and reliable connectivity to residents. At the heart of this transition lies WPA3, the latest Wi-Fi security standard, which is mandatory for operating in the 6 GHz band. While WPA3 introduces stronger encryption and forward-looking protections, its adoption in multi-dwelling units (MDUs) is proving to be a complex journey.

WPA 3 Background

The WPA3 security standard was created and is maintained by the Wi-Fi Alliance, which introduced WPA3 in 2018 to provide enhanced security and stronger encryption for Wi-Fi networks, replacing the previous WPA2 standard.

The transition to WPA3 has been a particular challenge in multi-dwelling unit (MDU) environments. Many vendors have relied on proprietary methods such as dynamic pre-shared keys (DPSK) or individual keys per unit to bridge gaps. Still, these approaches are not part of the WPA3 standard.

As Kevin Robinson, CEO & President at the Wi-Fi Alliance, noted, these proprietary models were “essentially brute force” adaptations of WPA2 methods, which begin to run into compatibility issues with WPA3. He emphasized that the Alliance is working on a standards-based approach to provide unique credentials for MDUs, ensuring proper security and interoperability across deployments.

“To be very clear, that’s not a WPA3 issue. The approach vendors were using for WPA2 started running into issues with WPA3. There actually is work going on in the Alliance for a standards-based approach to have unique pre-shared credentials to support MDU environments.” — Kevin Robinson, CEO & President at the Wi-Fi Alliance

Why WPA3 Matters in MDUs

Security is a perennial concern for property-wide Wi-Fi networks. Unlike single-family homes, MDUs must accommodate hundreds of residents, each bringing multiple devices—many of them IoT or “headless” devices that lack traditional onboarding interfaces. WPA3 strengthens encryption, closes well-known WPA2 vulnerabilities, and is effectively required to unlock the performance benefits of the 6 GHz spectrum.

Aaron Lee, Senior Systems Engineer at Ruckus Networks, explained:

“WPA3 and 6 GHz go together. You can’t separate them. If you want to use six gigahertz, you must have WPA3.”

This alignment of spectrum access and security standards means WPA3 is no longer optional for operators seeking to deliver seamless and secure Wi-Fi in MDUs.

The MPSK Gap

One of the major stumbling blocks for WPA3 adoption in MDUs is its lack of native support for Multi-Pre-Shared Keys (MPSK). MPSK has long been used in multi-tenant environments to provide unique credentials per user or unit, ensuring both security and network segmentation. Without MPSK, onboarding at scale becomes far more complex.

Vendors have stepped in with proprietary alternatives. Ruckus, for example, pioneered Dynamic Pre-Shared Key (DPSK) years ago and has now evolved it into DPSK3. This approach layers on top of WPA3 to allow seamless onboarding, including for headless devices, while enabling access to 6 GHz bands.

As Alek Murray, Solutions Architect for Ruckus, put it:

“If you want to use six gigahertz at all… you must use DPSK3 if you want to do multiple PSK on those networks. DPSK3 goes hand-in-hand with WPA3.”

While effective, these vendor-specific solutions raise interoperability and standardization concerns across the industry.

 Proprietary Workarounds: Innovation or Fragmentation?

There is no consensus on whether vendor solutions like DPSK3 represent a long-term fix or a temporary patch. On one hand, they solve real-world deployment problems. On the other hand, they create dependency on specific platforms and may complicate multi-vendor networks.

Murray emphasized that multi-PSK has never been standardized:

“Multiple PSK as a standard does not exist. Anyone using it—Cisco with iPSK, Aruba with MPSK, others—are essentially using variations of what we created. It was never standardized in Wi-Fi 5 or Wi-Fi 6, and I don’t see it being inserted into WPA3 anytime soon.”

This absence of open standardization leaves MSPs caught between choosing proprietary fixes or delaying upgrades, neither of which is ideal for long-term planning.

 

Source: Maravedis

 

Resident Experience and Onboarding Challenges

Beyond technical debates, the resident experience remains paramount. Many residents expect Wi-Fi to “just work” when they move in, without the need for QR code scans or manual configuration. Yet many of the consumer-oriented onboarding tools being explored fall short in MDU contexts.

Lee highlighted the problem:

“There’s always a piece missing—what do you do about headless devices? What about users who don’t know their MAC address? That’s where the seamless approach matters most.”

Operators must balance stringent security with ease of use, a delicate equation in communities where IT literacy varies widely.

Standards and  Vendors

The future of WPA3 in MDUs will depend heavily on whether the WFA moves to standardize multi-tenant onboarding methods. Discussions are ongoing, but for now, most agree that vendor-led solutions are the only practical option.

Standards often leave practical gaps in how users connect. When these are not fully addressed by the standard bodies, vendors typically develop their own methods to fill the need. This dynamic keeps innovation moving but perpetuates fragmentation, a long-standing theme in Wi-Fi’s evolution.

Looking Ahead: WPA3 and Wi-Fi 7

With Wi-Fi 7 rolling out, the urgency of adopting WPA3 will only intensify. Device ecosystems have largely caught up—most new smartphones, laptops, and consumer electronics already support WPA3. The challenge lies in bridging legacy equipment with forward-looking deployments in MDUs. This model balances economies of scale with individualized security, making MDUs more resilient to future demands.

Conclusion

WPA3 represents both progress and challenge for MDU connectivity. Its strong security and mandatory role in 6 GHz operations make it unavoidable for future networks. Yet its lack of support for MPSK, coupled with reliance on proprietary workarounds, creates complexity for MSPs and property owners.

For now, the industry is in a transitional phase—innovating quickly, but without the clarity of universal standards. Property owners, MSPs, and residents alike will feel the impact as deployments scale. The path forward lies in finding an equilibrium between security, simplicity, and interoperability, ensuring that the promise of WPA3 delivers tangible benefits in the MDU context.

About Maravedis

Maravedis is an independent research and analysis firm focusing on managed connectivity in MDUs, hospitality, etc, and the convergence of WiFi with 5G/6G. We provide syndicated reports, custom research, consulting, and bespoke marketing services.  No one ever got fired for buying our services:-)

 

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