The Eero 6+ is everything I need to put wifi where wifi doesn't want to go. There's one small learning curve, but it's easy to surmount.
I purchased a three-pack of the Amazon Eero 6+ Mesh Wifi Routers because my little home router was starting to get choked up trying to send wifi through our 2400 sq ft house, upstairs, downstairs, and finally - when the SkyShed POD arrived, outside as well. I'm very well-versed in networking so it didn't take me long to home in on this great set for what I needed. I don't have guests needing access, I don't have kids needing special permissions, and I don't need the extra features that the payment option provides, so it was a one-time purchase and I'm done. I may add a fourth unit in the POD itself if there's a good deal on one soon. It's not needed, but it might be nice to supplement the current gl.Inet Opal that I have there now, which is trying to connect across 50 yards of open lawn.
If you don't know what a mesh wifi network it, it's sort of like a giant game of "telephone." Each router on the network finds all the other routers on the network and they use a little bit of the Wifi bandwidth to communication among themselves. Then, your device (mobile phone, tablet, laptop, or astro computer) can connect to whatever router it sees as having the strongest signal, and that connection gets routed back through the mesh network to the one that's actually plugged into your Internet. Poof! Internet access! The nice thing about these is that if you need more, you simply buy another one, plug it into power, and then tell the mobile app to find it. Once it does, you can add it to your network and it will just magically expand your mesh network to include the coverage that this new unit provides without having to do anything else to any other devices. It's like magic!
Eero is expecting to plug into your ISP modem directly, and then serve wifi out to your local area. If you already have an existing router that you want to keep plugged into the network and just have the Eero mesh network provide wifi access, then you need to flip the Eeros into bridging mode so that the wifi network that they create is "bridged" (a networking term) to your existing network provided by your router. This is literally a quick setting in the app and you're done. This is what I had to do because I have a somewhat complicated home network so I can connect via VPN to my work network.
All said, these devices not only increased the range of our wifi, but dramatically stabilized the bandwidth and access that devices like TVs and smart speakers had. Everything just "worked better." Since we don't have blazing fast internet speeds, the Eero 6+ was fine for my needs, but you may want the Eero 6 or the Eero 6E Pro models depending on whether you find those more useful or not. The differences are basically speed and connectivity. If you have 6E devices, or a 2.5Gbps network, then you might want the more expensive ones. If you need more basic coverage or slower speeds, then the 6 might be enough for you. If you really want to cover some space, especially outdoors, consider the Eero 7 Outdoor version, which claims to be both weatherproof and covers 15,000 square feet. Wow!