Cell Phone Booster for Home | Up to 5,500 sq ft | Boost 5G 4G LTE & 3G Signals on Band 2 4 5 12 13

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Customers say

Customers find the wireless signal repeater functional and easy to install. They say it works well for cell calls and text messages, providing reliable service with fewer dropped calls. Many consider it a good value for the cost and one of their best assets. The build quality and SD card capacity are also appreciated. However, some customers have differing opinions on the signal strength and internet speed.

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Your Sales Price $159.00 - $139.00

A quick rundown of this product’s key features:

【Whether P50 Is Suitable For Me】-Please confirm that your phone supports frequency bands 2,4,5,12, 13, or 17 and receives at least 2 bars of signal outdoors. If not, the home cell phone booster may not function properly. (Refer to the product image for instructions on how to check frequency bands)
【What P50 Can Help You with】- The P50 cell signal booster is ideal for enhancing signals in House office shop basement and metal building, addressing dropped calls and slow 4G LTE/5G network speeds to ensure improved call quality and data transfer rates.
【Does P50 Boost 5G Signal 】- The P50 will only amplify your 5G signal if the 5g signal your phone is using band 2 4 5 12 13 or 17.Regardless of the carrier you use, whether it’s Bell, Rogers or Telus, our booster works as long as your phone is using band 2, 4 ,5 ,12, 13, or 17.
【Smart Device】 -Phonetone cell signal booster provide the maximum signal gain of 72dB, 32X amplify signal, Coverage up to 5,500 sq ft.It has excellent features like Manual Gain Contro,Automatic Gain Control,Standby Mode, always optimize to provide you with the optimal signal and connection to your cell phones
【Excellent After-Sales Service】-We provide a 30-day return, 90-day exchange, and up to 3-years warranty. Additionally, we offer timely technical support via email . Contact us anytime, anywhere.

Our Top Reviews

Reviewer: Amazon Customer
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Installation requires care in placement, otherwise setup is very easy and device works fantastic!
Review: My house, and my entire neighborhood, seems to be in a cell phone reception Bermuda triangle. I have at least two towers within a mile or two, yet I could barely capture 2 bars most of the time inside my house, and often less, depending on which room I was in. And forget cell reception in the basement! My wife was having difficulty sending and receiving texts, our connections were so poor.After years of frustration, I finally heard about “cell boosters” or “cell extenders”. It turns out there are two types. One type, the network extender, works off of an existing internet connection, and it is provider-specific. So for instance, if you have an AT&T cell subscription like I do, you would need an AT&T internet network extender.The other type is a network booster or cell booster. This one takes whatever signal is coming from a cell tower and amplifies, or boosts it, inside your house. This one works with all providers. I decided I wanted to provide a better signal for all providers, so our guests would benefit, as well. Therefore, I chose a cell booster.This particular model I am reviewing appeared to be the most economical of those I could find. After ordering, I eagerly awaited its arrival. It came nicely boxed, with all parts necessary for installation. The kit provides U-bolts suitable for mounting the external receiving antenna on a pole. The pole is not provided, but that was not an issue for me with my intended mounting location.My house is two stories, plus a basement. I decided to test the whole setup first by simply mounting the external antenna in an upstairs, south-facing window, pointing nearly due east at the nearest cell antenna. After running the cable down the stairs to the main floor, I stood up the internal broadcast antenna at about waist height and plugged in the amplifier. Excellent, 2 green lights! I was able to boost from maybe -115 dB to maybe -100 dB, but only in a very short radius around the broadcast antenna. And it was necessary to point the internal antenna in kind of a funny angle to avoid a feedback situation with the external antenna, as indicated by a red light on the amplifier. The coverage within the main floor with that angle was not ideal.So I moved the external antenna to a north-facing window, pointed nearly due north at another antenna only about a mile away. This gave me a much better angle of coverage within the main floor of the house for the internal antenna. I was also able to tweak the direction of the external antenna and gain or lose 5-20 dB of boost, simply with better or worse signal reception. But I would still get feedback once in a while, especially at higher boost numbers.At this point, I was still not sure this whole system was really going to be worth the trouble. I was getting some boost, but only in a limited semicircular zone in half of my main floor. And the feedback was troublesome. To be fair, the installation instructions do stress that vertical separation of the two antennas is very important, and my test setup was not really providing much of that. I only had about 8 ft of vertical separation, and about 30 feet of horizontal separation.In the end, I decided I had just enough boost to give it a try for real. My plan was to mount the external antenna in the attic, facing north at the cell tower I tested for the second try. So I spent a whole day crawling around in the attic, mounting the antenna, running cables, drilling holes through walls to get the cable to where I wanted the internal antenna, etc. Not necessarily difficult, but time-consuming. Finally, late in the afternoon, I had enough of the system in place, though not permanently mounted, that I could plug in the amplifier and see what I had.Wow! I mean, really wow! I was getting readings in the -70s, -80s, all over the house! Even 5 bars in the basement! I could hardly believe it. I now get pretty much 5 bars throughout the entire house. Wow! And never a hint of feedback, even with the massive boost signal.So as you can see, I was impressed. Clearly, getting the external antenna up another 15 feet gave me much better reception. And the extra 15 feet of vertical separation eliminated the feedback situation, as well.So we have been running with this for 24 hours now, and we couldn’t be happier.Here are some points that might be helpful. Most of these are in the installation instructions, but I reiterate them here for emphasis:1. Vertical separation of the antennas is very important.2. The two antennas must point away from each other.3. Experiment with how you have your external antenna pointed. Even a half of a degree difference in antenna direction, I found, could add or subtract from your performance.4. Experiment with different cell towers, if you have that option.

Reviewer: Alex
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Helped Boost my signal
Review: Great cell phone booster. All calls are clear and no more having to repeat myself on the phone. Internet was a little bit but not as big increase like the phone calls.It was Well packaged. Easy to install. It had all the hardware that you need to mount. I mounted to old round TV attena pole. I used zip ties to hold from win. Used the cell tower signal app to find best direction to point outside attend. Great product and would buy again.

Reviewer: Placeholder
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title: Works Great!
Review: Bottom line is that it amplified a signal that was 0-1 bars (occasionally 2) to 4-5 bars. So I am 100% satisfied with that. Installing and setting up was easy. The one shortcoming of this (and it may be common to the more expensive kits I imagine) is that the cell signal is very strong near the indoor transmitter antenna, but drops off rapidly with distance, it is really only giving a good signal in a single room size area (20′-30′ direct line-of-sight distance), but this is starting with a very weak 1 bar signal, so I imagine that is a factor. I am using the cell service mainly for Internet, and one thing I noticed is that the data rate is NOT improved with the signal strength (number of bars on phone)…Long soap opera: my house sits in a ravine with no cell service (absolutely zero bars anywhere near my house), but at the very upper edge of my property, about 300′ up from my house, I get1 bar cell reception. I have had ViaSat satellite internet for six months and it is expensive ($124/month) and horribly slow (impossible to stream video or do zoom). Cell data at the top of the hill above my house is about 2-3x faster. My thought I could buy this, test it right away, and return it if it didn’t work. So it did work, but my additional issue is routing this cell signal down to my house. I actually want it more for an internet connection and with wifi calling it will do both.I wasn’t clear if running a 200+ foot cable between the cell amplifier output to my house would be possible so I did a very kludgey solution: I have a dedicated cell phone essentially acting as an internet hotspot next to the transmitter antenna (the square plate), and from that phone run a USB cable to a $28 “pocket router” (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B073TSK26W?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details), then run a 150 foot Cat 7 ethernet cable from the router down the hill towards my house to an outdoor access point (https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07953S2FD?psc=1&ref=ppx_yo2ov_dt_b_product_details) which is close enough to my house to get the signal. I already had the cable and outdoor access point, so I was just working with what I already had… and it does work, that is, I have wifi internet access everywhere in my house, and with wifi-calling, essentially have phone service. The entire setup was just plug-and-play (I had already set up my outdoor access point). It is not great, the signal does disappear at times (and I think this is a function of just my location and the weak cell signal, nothing wrong with the equipment) , so it is a work in progress.

Reviewer: Blackrain
Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: This is not my first test of a cell signal antenna, I have installed and tested a few. The last one was a year ago, so now I am testing this new “updated version”, to see how it compares.SCENARIO: I use this booster for our summer spot that is nestled between rolling hills and suffers terribly from virtually no cell service at all. People around us have had these systems setup for awhile so I took advantage of my ability to test this equipment a couple of years ago. The following is a breakdown of how it all works ad well as the conclusion that this newer system is everybit as effective as the others that I have tested, no particular gains in performance BUT I findthat this particular example is much better made (sealed) for our weather than the others were (are) and they were pretty good to start with.First step, before even considering placing an order, BE SURE to down load one of the cellular signal apps (Android has many) and install it so that you can determine what band your cellular provider is using. Bell/Virgin, as an example, are using Band 2, in our case. You MUST buy an antenna and system that will cover the band that is identified on your newly installed phone app. Vendors specific which band(s) their systems will cover. If it doesn’t match, the system will not work. This Phonetone brand, covers multiple bands.The system itself is pretty easy to set up. You must mount an antenna on the highest point possible on your structure, run cabling to the booster box and another cable to the indoor antenna. That is mostly it, the rest is fine tuning.Most of the apps (my favs are “LTE Discovery” and “Network Cell Info Lite”) that you will have to chose from for determining band value, will also advise you as to which direction (roughly) your closest cell tower is (this is done in conjunction with Google maps). Once the system is up and running, you can nudge the antenna to the left or the right, to determine the max signal strength being received on your phone and then lock it down (tighten the mount) to hold that position.The booster box placement is at your discretion, based on the limitations of your cable entry point in the structure, as well as interior antenna placement and cable lengths. Interior antenna placement can either be at a central point of the structure or wherever you feel the strongest boost of signal will benefit you most.We have evaluated more than 1 system and they are all pretty much the same, although Phonetone has turned out to be our favorite to have worked with but again, they are all very similar. For 2 people that have never done anything like this before, we went from unboxing a system like this to fully dialed in system in a little over 2 hours. That was mostly because of our indecision in placement of the interior antenna as well as preferred entry sites for the cable into the building and then drilling and fishing wiring. Subsequent installs and tests of other systems were done in under roughly 30 minutes.As for the results when installing a booster system like this…? WOW again… night and day. Consistently achieving 4 bars, very occasionally dipping to 3 or climbing to 5 for flash moments. Texts, phone calls and even video calls, are now possible in a location that often struggled to get a text through without failing 2 or 3 times first.In speaking with some of the people around us ver there that employed these kinds of systems, most of them got them through links provided to them by Bell, Telus or Roger’s and ALL of them paid twice as much plus… with the average outlay being about $500. This particular model has an antenna shroud, which will help to keep the antenna clean and provide it’s maximum cross section for reception.That makes these, not only really effective systems but a very good value as well. As said at the beginning of this review, the performance remains unchanged (still awesome) the antenna itself just seems to be better housed and sealed.Highly recommended.

Reviewer: Cael
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: Ordered this mostly to boost signal in areas of my house that tend to drop signal. It’s not easy to set up as the booster needs to be installed high up, wires run (took almost a day to install) and it needs to receive a strong signal at that location. Then the signal can be boosted by the other receiver inside the house. It worked perfectly for me once it was set up.

Reviewer: Paul
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: At our one building that’s in place with already not the best signal outside, inside there are spots that it completely cuts out. This isn’t recommended for a large area but we just need it for a small part in the building.They provide 2 pretty long cables, 1 to the antenna bit outside to the powered control piece, then 1 from that to the broadcasting node that goes inside much like a wifi access point would.They provide everything you need to get it installed with the clips, mounts, and cables. I recommend putting the powered control piece in conditioned room or a room that has air flow just so it won’t get too hot especially in the summer.It’s not perfect especially to someone who’s not an expert at setting these up, the manual helps a bit in understanding the different band selectors but you’ll want to research it if you have no idea about this stuff and starting from no knowledge on these things, if it’s not set up right it’s not going to work well.Once I figured out the cell bands and set them up we did get boosted signal inside. It wasn’t crazy and it wasn’t like super fast upload/download speeds either, but it was better than nothing.If you get this and read where it says get permission from your carrier, that applies to the US, in Canada you don’t need to, you just make sure it conforms with the regulations, but you don’t need to contact your carrier or any carrier when testing or installing except maybe to ask them for help.

Reviewer: Marc B.
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: This antenna does work for boosting my cellular signal from 1 bar to 3 bars, but it did little or nothing for the internet. My signal was still 3G when camping. Where I was most frustrated was that this particular antenna has to be directionally pointed towards the cell tower to receive the signal. Where I was, even using the app to locate the antenna direction was sparse at best. Ultimately I did get it to work, and as said above it did boost my cell signal, but if I was to recommend this, it would absolutely be for home install in a static location secured tightly to a proper mounting bracket so it isn’t altered by wind or other elements. There are Omni Directional Antennas which don’t have to be pointed directly like this one, although they are considerably more expensive. For a budget signal booster, this is a great option however!

Reviewer: David A Simpson
Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars
Title:
Review: This cell booster did improve my signal strength but for my test I didn’t get a lot of range from the indoor antenna. My version has the omni directional outdoor antenna, which I put at the corner of the house nearest the closest cell tower. Try not to laugh at my temporary antenna mast but I wanted to see how well this worked before actually investing in a mount for the side of the house.It does make a big difference if you can get the antenna up as high as you can, and separate the indoor antenna as far away as you can from the outdoor antenna. I’ll have to play around a bit to see if I can get some further range in the house but as you can see from the before and after screen shots it did boost the signal about 20’ from the indoor panel.If your signal is really really poor to begin with your results may not be that great but if you can get some decent results with a typical weaker signal and some height with the outdoor antenna.

Price effective as of Mar 14, 2025 05:07:58 UTC

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