Secure Your Wireless Network and Protect Your Business
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Ready to see how your wireless networks hold up against real-world attacks? Fill out the form to share your needs and let our experts recommend the right penetration testing approach.
More Penetration Testing Services
- Wireless Penetration Testing
- External Penetration Testing
- Internal Penetration Testing
- Physical Penetration Testing
- Social Engineering
- Vulnerability Scanning
- Web Application Penetration Testing
A wireless network penetration test evaluates the strength of an organization’s Wi‑Fi and wireless infrastructure against real-world attacks. It focuses on identifying weaknesses in wireless configurations, encryption, authentication, and device management by simulating how an attacker could gain unauthorized access to the network. By uncovering issues such as weak passwords, insecure protocols, rogue access points, and improper segmentation, a wireless penetration test helps ensure your wireless network does not become an easy entry point into your environment.
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An external network penetration test simulates a real-world attack against an organization’s internet-facing systems and infrastructure. It evaluates how effectively perimeter defenses such as firewalls, VPNs, web services, and exposed hosts protect against unauthorized access. By identifying vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, and exploitable weaknesses visible to an outside attacker, an external penetration test helps reduce the risk of breaches before adversaries can gain an initial foothold.
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An internal penetration test simulates a real-world attack from inside an organization’s network to evaluate the strength of its defenses. It assumes an attacker has already gained limited access to the network through a compromised user account or workstation and tests how effectively network controls prevent lateral movement, privilege escalation, and access to critical systems. The goal is to identify weaknesses in network design, configurations, and permissions before they can be exploited in a real attack.
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A physical penetration test evaluates an organization’s ability to prevent unauthorized physical access to its facilities, systems, and sensitive assets. It simulates real-world intrusion attempts including tailgating, badge misuse, or bypassing physical controls to identify weaknesses in locks, access controls, surveillance, and security procedures. By uncovering gaps in physical security, a physical penetration test helps ensure that facilities, personnel, and critical infrastructure are protected against threats that could bypass technical defenses entirely.
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A social engineering engagement evaluates how effectively an organization’s people and processes resist manipulation by attackers. It simulates real-world social engineering tactics including phishing, pretexting, and impersonation to identify weaknesses in awareness, training, and verification procedures. By testing how employees respond to these scenarios, a social engineering engagement helps organizations strengthen human defenses, reduce the risk of credential theft or unauthorized access, and reinforce security as a shared responsibility across the organization.
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Vulnerability scanning uses automated tools to identify known vulnerabilities, misconfigurations, and outdated software across an organization’s systems, networks, and applications. It provides a broad, repeatable view of security weaknesses by continuously checking assets against up-to-date threat intelligence and vulnerability databases. While vulnerability scanning does not attempt exploitation, it plays a critical role in maintaining security hygiene by helping organizations quickly identify, prioritize, and remediate issues before they can be exploited by attackers.
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A web application penetration test evaluates the resilience of a web application against real-world attacks. It focuses on identifying vulnerabilities in application logic, authentication, authorization, input handling, and session management by simulating how an attacker would attempt to exploit the application. By uncovering issues such as injection flaws, broken access controls, and insecure configurations, a web application penetration test helps ensure your application protects user data, enforces proper access, and supports a strong overall security posture.
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Our Approach
We go beyond automated scans and generic reports. With roots in education and hands-on training, our wireless penetration testing engagements are designed to help your team understand not just what we find, but why it matters and how to fix it.
From day one, you’ll have direct access to our testers through a dedicated communication channel, where we provide ongoing updates and context around our findings. We also offer the option for your team to shadow our testers, giving firsthand insight into real-world adversary techniques and practical ways to strengthen defenses.
Activities performed during wireless penetration testing include, but are not limited to:
● WPA2 PSK handshake grabbing
● Password attacks
● Guest wireless auditing
● WPA2 enterprise attacks
● Evil twin attacks
● Spoofing attacks
● Other testing depending on specific customer content and footprint
At the conclusion of the engagement, you’ll receive a detailed report that clearly prioritizes security issues by risk level to support efficient remediation. We offer retesting to validate that fixes have been successfully implemented, and our reports also highlight areas where your security controls are performing well – giving technical teams, managers, and executives a balanced, actionable view of your security posture.
Our Methodology
All testing performed is based on the NIST SP 800-115 Technical Guide to Information Security Testing and Assessment, OWASP Testing Guide (v4), and customized testing frameworks.
Our penetration testing process includes the following steps:
Plan
Customer goals are gathered and clear rules of engagement are established to guide the engagement.
Discover
Perform scanning and enumeration to identify potential vulnerabilities, weak areas, and exploits within the environment.
Attack
Confirm potential vulnerabilities through exploitation and perform additional discovery upon new access.
Report
Document identified vulnerabilities, exploits, failed attempts, and key security strengths and weaknesses.
By the Numbers
Key Statistics
%
of all data breaches were caused by external actors
Verizon 2025 Data Breach Investigations Report
%
of breaches were motivated by financial gain
Verizon 2025 Data Breach Investigations Report
%
of all data breaches were caused by abuse of valid credentials
Deloitte Annual Cyber Threat Trends 2024
%
of attacks on IoT devices specifically targeted routers
Deloitte Annual Cyber Threat Trends 2024
Why Wireless Network Security Matters
Wireless networks are often one of the most overlooked entry points in an organization’s security posture, yet they can provide attackers with direct access to sensitive systems and data. Weak encryption, misconfigured access points, or unsecured devices can turn your Wi‑Fi network into a gateway for unauthorized access, lateral movement, or data exfiltration. A wireless network penetration test simulates real-world attacks on your Wi‑Fi environment to identify vulnerabilities before they can be exploited. By strengthening your wireless security, this testing helps protect critical assets, enforce proper network segmentation, and ensure your overall cybersecurity posture remains robust and resilient.
Frequently Asked Questions
Wireless Network Penetration Testing
How does wireless network pentesting differ from internal network penetration tests?
Wireless pentests focus on Wi‑Fi and other wireless networks, identifying vulnerabilities in access points, encryption, and authentication, while internal tests assess the wired network and internal systems.
What risks does a wireless pentest uncover that scans don’t?
It uncovers weak encryption, misconfigured access points, rogue devices, and insecure Wi‑Fi access that automated scans often miss.
What techniques are used during a wireless network pentest?
Techniques include Wi‑Fi sniffing, rogue access point testing, password attacks, protocol analysis, and attempts to bypass wireless security controls.
Do we need wireless network pentests for compliance (SOC 2, ISO 27001, PCI, HIPAA)?
Yes, many compliance frameworks require testing wireless networks to ensure sensitive data isn’t exposed via unsecured Wi‑Fi.
How long does a wireless network pentest take?
Typical engagements last 1–3 days, depending on the number of access points and network complexity.
Do you retest after fixes are applied?
Yes, we offer retesting to confirm that vulnerabilities have been successfully remediated.
Inside a Real Pentest Report
A Report That Fortune 500 Companies Trust
Get a firsthand look at a real penetration testing report and understand how our expert team communicates risk, impact, and remediation steps.
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