NETGEAR Nighthawk 5G Mobile Hotspot M7 with eSIM or SIM | Portable WiFi 7 Router for Travel in 140+ Countries | Supports 32 Devices | Unlocked 5G/4G LTE | 3.6Gbps Speed | AT&T, T-Mobile (MH7150)

Add your review

$499.99

$499.99


Note: Prices and availability are accurate as of the date/time indicated and are subject to change. Any price and availability information displayed on Amazon at the time of purchase will apply to your order. As an Amazon Associate, we earn from qualifying purchases.
Add to wishlistAdded to wishlistRemoved from wishlist 0
Add to compare



The NETGEAR Nighthawk 5G M7 Portable WiFi Hotspot with eSIM allows you to experience high-speed WiFi 7 with enhanced security and privacy anywhere you need it, through the power of 5G. Superior to phone hotspots, M7 delivers faster speeds on up to 32 devices, and your phone stays free. Purchase eSIMs right from the NETGEAR mobile app and get connected instantly with 5G/4G data plans in 140+ countries. Also accepts a physical SIM card or 3rd party eSIM from your carrier of choice. Enjoy the freedom to stay connected on your terms, wherever your day takes you. Dimensions: 83.6 x 145 x 16.9 mm (3.29 x 5.71 x .67 in.)
Get the latest, most powerful WiFi with speeds up to 3.6 Gbps. Powered by a 5G or 4G cellular internet connection, M7 delivers at-home performance on the go
Instant coverage with NETGEAR eSIM in 140+ countries using 5G or 4G without contracts or hidden fees. Purchase flexible data plans right from the NETGEAR app for seamless connectivity
Easily set up and manage your network, monitor data usage, buy eSIM data plans, and more – all from the intuitive mobile app
Unlocked to accept SIM cards and eSIMS from major 5G/4G network operators. Compatibility with Verizon: The M7 works with activated Verizon eSIMs and Verizon “Nano” SIM cards. Using the M7 to activate new Verizon SIM/eSIMs is expected February 2026.February 2026.
High-capacity battery lasts up to 10 hours on a single charge for all-day WiFi performance
Powerful built-in security includes Firewall protection, WPA3 encryption, and automatic firmware updates
Liberate your phone and connect up to 32 devices at once – stop worrying about dropped calls and dead batteries
Connect directly to M7 via USB-C, or use an Ethernet Adapter (sold separately) for ultra-fast, multi-gig, wired speed

9 reviews for NETGEAR Nighthawk 5G Mobile Hotspot M7 with eSIM or SIM | Portable WiFi 7 Router for Travel in 140+ Countries | Supports 32 Devices | Unlocked 5G/4G LTE | 3.6Gbps Speed | AT&T, T-Mobile (MH7150)

0.0 out of 5
0
0
0
0
0
Write a review
Show all Most Helpful Highest Rating Lowest Rating
  1. Ben

    Unexpectedly I like this device
    I received the device and found it too simple for the high price and not quality enough. I decided to return it and Netgear via Amazon offered me $100 refund to keep it. I did so.Finally, after using it, it’s a reliable robust device. Work as expected..No touch screen. Market place is expensive and limited.Works well with Google Fi. Excellent battery.Pricing is too high. Work in US, EMEA, Asia. Excellent app. I used it at an hotel where the wifi was at 12mbps and Netgear gave me 100mbps positioning it besides the window of the room. I also bring it to the beach so my phone is not becoming hot in 5G and doesn’t drain the battery. Overall I love this product. Simple and efficient.

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  2. Grant County Golfer

    Tough To Set Up, But Well Worth The Effort.
    I was going to send this back but decided to give it ‘one more try’. I’m happy to report it all worked out. I contacted my carrier tech support, who hit some magic button, and VIOLA! It works! And works very well. This thing is quite fast, latency is about on par with my fiber optic internet service! Yeah, it’s fast. The trouble I was having was in setting up the APN section of the router. The manual doesn’t give you much information, and simply guessing what info goes in that section won’t help you get going. Plus, there are features that you cannot simply turn on, you need approval from your carrier.After getting it going I did a speed test, nothing spectacular, but 47MBPS (Bytes, not bits) down and 25MBPS up isn’t too shabby for something not yet fine tuned. I’m no power user so that works for me just fine. I use YouTube and stream music more than I watch TV so this will be just fine. At 47MBPS I can stream 2 videos at one time if I choose, not that I would.This unit has a rather large battery as compared to the entire package, but that’s a good thing. I have no idea how long it takes to charge one up, and probably never will know how long it lasts since I plan on tethering it to my laptop or desktop computers. It also works without a battery installed if you do like I’m going to do, tether it to my computers.I bought this in preparation for an Arizona snowbird trip next month. Not getting any answers from the RV parks in Arizona I decided to find my own solution. 4G is plenty fast for myself. At any rate my cell carrier limits me to 60GB per month, with the threat of throttling my speed if I surpass that. I probably will based on what I use now, about 3GB per day.For those interested I found out that Google Chrome has a feature for YouTube where you can kill the video and just listen to the audio portion of YT videos. Since a lot of my YT usage is advice type videos I can kill the video portion and enjoy the audio knowing that I’m not racking up half a gig for that 25 minute ‘video’.The answers are always out there, you just need to know how to ask the questions.

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  3. JASON ARNOLD

    SPYBOX —- NO INTERNET, WITHOUT PERMANENT NETGEAR COOKIE ON BROWSER —- and so much worse…..
    NetGear, up to their old tricks again —- spying on their customers. Their mobile hotspot device stops functioning if you try to remove their cookie from your browser. They make this cookie a requirement (and the persistent surveillance it entails) for their device to function. This mandatory cookie most likely defeats VPN and TOR encryption, as it is attached to the browser itself, following you around the internet, knowing who you really are, despite efforts to mask yourself with encryption — information they will later sell to data brokers, most likely, or whoever the highest bidder is. The persistent cookie requirement is a slimey practice of NetGear with their routers currently. When I first bought this device, I was free to use it without their web based router interface cookie tagging along, and just deleted it, after I finished logging into the router. Later, I’m pretty sure, they pushed an undisclosed update to the unit’s firmware — causing it to nolonger work without the cookie being present — at all times. This is after months of use prior without it (so I know it’s possible to function without it). This is just not a company that can be trusted — at any time — certainly not with your online privacy.I’ve had their cellular router for awhile now, and did rigorous testing — always the same thing: remove their cookie from the browser, and their router stops supplying internet not long after. In order to restart your service, you have to relog into the router, reboot it, and allow it to re-place the cookie —- internet restarts. Sometimes, you have to do this process many times, to get it restarted. This router has come with tons of hassle, wasted time, and lots of wasted money.I remember having another router of theirs, a good while back, and running into other slimey practices. That router eventually experiencing strange problems, that I could not resolve myself. I contacted the company for help, and was told: I would need to purchase a technical service plan, before they would assist. I threw their router in the trash. Years later, I completely forgot, NetGear was the manufacturer of that thrown away router, and foolishly bought another NetGear router, this one — getting suckered in by the hype online (lies). Unless you like being spied upon…….stay away from NetGear.UPDATE: Things only worsened: Tor is completely unuseable with this router, as it doesn’t allow their cookie to follow you around, either deleting it everytime you go to another site, or preventing the cross site tracking NetGear is attempting to employ upon you.UPDATE: Using tabbed isolated containers on your browser is ineffective stopping their tracking; attempting to use them has them slow your internet speed, followed shortly by, stopping your internet connection entirely. I imagine, their using the http://192.168.1.1 NetGear web interface cookie to fingerprint your browser and log your IP address — not allowing any data flow without checking each and everytime that the cookie is still present, and has your initial browser fingerprint and IP address, when you logged into the router. Any deviation from the browser fingerprint and IP address from when you logged in has them slow your data flow, and stop your internet completely, shortly thereafter — requiring an arduous relog-in and reboot process, to restart everything (that you may have to do many times, to get everything going again).UPDATE: Things get progressively worse, the longer you own a NetGear router. Now, even with me allowing them to follow me around, everywhere I go online, keeping their spy cookie in-place, I get constant stoppages of my internet — requiring me to relog-in, reboot, refresh pages, clear cookies — even do factory resets (wiping out all my user preferences, and having to reset them each time) sometimes, again and again and again and again and again, to restart operation of their router.If you can imagine having another company between you and your internet service provider, that decides when, if, and under what circumstances, you get the internet that you paid for, from the other company — and that in-between company jerking you around, not providing any simblance of effective customer support after sale; spying upon you; causing you large amounts of hassle, aggrevation, time loss, money loss; attempting to con you into purchasing technical service plans, to solve problems they most likely created…………..you just had the NetGear experience.FINAL UPDATE: Things went down hill fast, after writing this negative review of their product. This company doesn’t apparently know how to deal with critical reviews in an ethical way — or, in a professional, business focused way. I experienced their router not being able to fully reset (indicative of requiring the default, on device, log-in credentials) shortly after this review posted — that was a big red flag — that something was pushed to my device to stop its full recovery, and alter its performance — and — it did — I experienced its operation get progressively worse — concluding in: no effective measures to return the device to full operational functionality. At best, after relentless factory resets, reboots, relog-ins, and other aggrevation, the router now only supplys internet for two minutes, then ceases operation — effectively, making it useless. This is not an ethical company.I post my experience with NetGear as a warning to all —- avoid their overpriced low performing devices —- avoid their no help customer service —- avoid their strange malphunctions and device abnormalities down the road, that has them offer you pricey extended tech support plans as the solution (after they created the probem in the first place) —- avoid the hassle —- avoid the aggrevation —- avoid the time loss —- avoid the money loss —- avoid the scam………..avoid the NetGear experience.* Friends have already told me: the NetGear NightHawk 5G M7 Portable Wi-fi Hotspot is ten times worse than the M1 NightHawk, in way of personal information collection, and online monitoring. I’ll be staying away……..I’ve had enough of the NetGear snoop game.

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  4. Gene Capeder

    No shortcuts taken – quality you can count on
    Nighthawk with dual-Sims – quality components, very fast and secure connections, sturdy design. Built and designed by Netgear – this is going to last me for ten years, honestly.

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  5. Jin Chai

    Netgear M1/M1100 is not working in Canada with any sim card. And, the battery is not charging after a few uses. This battery not charging problems happen to many Netgear LTE routers, be careful. The router is expensive.

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  6. grant walker

    The router is fine. Mine came with a power plug from overseas not suitable for Australia. USA possibly

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  7. lricardez

    Exelente router mifiNetgearEstá desbloqueado.. puedes usar la SIM de cualquier compañíaLo uso con Telcel en MéxicoTiene su pantalla LCD dónde se ve la información de red así como los datos en usoY los remanentes..si tienes plan de rentaLo recomiendo al 💯%

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  8. راشد ا.

    راوتر جيد وسهل الاستخدام

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this
  9. Talys

    This device may seem to be a bit on the pricey side, but leaps and bounds better than any other other device I’ve encountered. It takes a micro SIM, and worked flawlessly and painlessly with TELUS.The admin setup was very easy (note: the default password is under the battery, but it’s not necessary, because the first time you go to 192.168.1.1, it will prompt you to set your own password). It will also work without the setup – just use the default, random WiFi password that’s clearly displayed on the screen.The display clearly states the amount of data consumed on the plan, and a great feature tells you how many days are left. Tapping the button will scroll between different display screens on the device.A standout feature is that the Nighthawk has a RJ45, and supports 2.4GHz as well as 5GHz, and like any regular router, you can disable either of the wifi antennas if you don’t need them, for example, if you want to connect this directly to a desktop as its primary/only source of internet.In that scenario, another great feature is that you can simply unplug the battery. The device works perfectly with no battery – it simply says battery 0%, no nags, or anything else to indicate a “problem”.I have not yet extensively used this, but it seems snappy in both the interface and internet speed.

    Helpful(0) Unhelpful(0)You have already voted this

    Add a review

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

    4 + 3 =
    Powered by MathCaptcha

    NETGEAR Nighthawk 5G Mobile Hotspot M7 with eSIM or SIM | Portable WiFi 7 Router for Travel in 140+ Countries | Supports 32 Devices | Unlocked 5G/4G LTE | 3.6Gbps Speed | AT&T, T-Mobile (MH7150)
    NETGEAR Nighthawk 5G Mobile Hotspot M7 with eSIM or SIM | Portable WiFi 7 Router for Travel in 140+ Countries | Supports 32 Devices | Unlocked 5G/4G LTE | 3.6Gbps Speed | AT&T, T-Mobile (MH7150)

    $499.99

    MomsMust-Haves — Made for Moms, Loved by Babies!
    Logo
    Compare items
    • Total (0)
    Compare
    0
    Shopping cart