RSystems

Power · Networking

PoE

Also known as: Power over Ethernet, PoE+, PoE++

Delivers DC power over an Ethernet cable alongside data, eliminating the need for a separate power outlet at devices like IP phones, access points, and security cameras.

PoE lets a PoE-capable switch (the PSE — Power Sourcing Equipment) supply power to a connected device (the PD — Powered Device) over the same Cat5e/Cat6 cable carrying data. No power outlet near the ceiling for your access point, no power brick at every IP phone.

Diagram showing PoE power delivery from a PoE switch (PSE) to powered devices (PD) — IP phone, access point, and camera — over standard Ethernet cable

PoE standards and wattage

There are three power tiers, and the names are what matter when matching a switch to a device:

| Tier | Max power at device | | --- | --- | | PoE | ~13W | | PoE+ | ~25W | | PoE++ | up to ~90W |

Most IP phones and basic access points run fine on standard PoE. Modern dual-radio APs, PTZ cameras, and video conferencing gear often need PoE+. High-draw devices like multi-radio APs and digital signage may need PoE++.

Switch power budget

A PoE switch has a total power budget — the maximum total wattage it can deliver across all PoE ports simultaneously. A 24-port PoE+ switch with a 370W budget can support ~14 ports at full 25.5W each, or more ports at lower wattage. When specifying a PoE switch, size the power budget for realistic worst-case load, not just port count.

Injectors

A PoE injector adds PoE capability to a non-PoE switch port — the injector sits between the switch and the device, taking power from a wall outlet and combining it with the Ethernet signal. Useful for adding PoE to a few ports without replacing a switch, but inelegant at scale.