Mesh Network Capacity and Congestion

LoRa Channel Capacity

LoRa is a low-data-rate technology. Unlike Wi-Fi, the RF channel is shared by all nodes simultaneously using a CSMA-like approach combined with Meshtastic's managed flooding mesh mechanism (every node rebroadcasts packets that still have hop limit remaining; there is no routing table). Understanding channel capacity helps you design a network that doesn't saturate itself.

Airtime Utilisation Metrics

Meshtastic displays Channel Utilization and Air Utilization percentages in the app. These are your primary indicators of network load. Channel Utilization is measured over a rolling 1-minute window, and the app colour-codes it: green below 25%, orange 25 - 50%, and red above 50%.

Sources of Traffic in a Mesh

Traffic Reduction Strategies for Dense Networks

The Hop Storm Problem

If many nodes retransmit the same packet, a single user message can trigger a burst of dozens of transmissions across the mesh. Meshtastic uses duplicate-packet detection to suppress already-seen packets and prevent routing loops, but in dense networks already near maximum airtime utilisation, a sudden burst of messages can temporarily saturate the channel and cause widespread packet loss. Keeping hop counts low and broadcast intervals long is the primary mitigation.

Monitoring Your Network

Use the Channel Utilization and Air Utilization figures in the Meshtastic app to assess local network load before and after adding new nodes. If deploying a new repeater in a dense area, monitor whether its addition increases congestion - a new high-visibility, high-priority infrastructure node can increase channel load for every other node in range.


Revision #5
Created 2026-05-03 04:17:10 UTC by Mesh America Admin
Updated 2026-06-09 22:20:06 UTC by Mesh America Admin