harbor/neighbor
Self-serve network management for the people who share your home or building. Each neighbor gets a slice of the network -- their VLAN, their WiFi password, their devices -- without anyone needing to call you for help.
Each neighbor, their own WiFi
Tenants claim a VLAN, change their own WiFi password, toggle a guest network, scan a QR to connect. The operator never has to type a password again.
Devices, named and managed
Live list of every device on your VLAN. Rename them, block strangers, see who is using the most bandwidth. Nothing about other neighbors leaks across.
Groups and schedules
Group devices (kids, IoT, TVs). Schedule a block window per group. Snooze 30 minutes when homework runs late.
See your usage, not your content
Per-VLAN bandwidth chart over the last 7 days, refreshed every 5 minutes. Traffic totals only -- never the sites you visited.
Invite your household
Email a link or share a one-time URL. Members see the same network view as you and can manage their own devices, but can't change the WiFi password.
Privacy by design
We see network state (devices, signal, bandwidth totals). We don't see your traffic. Even the operator can only view-as-you with a support code you give them.
Magic links + 2FA
Sign in by email link or password, with optional TOTP two-factor. Forgot password, magic link, and recovery codes all built in.
How it works
- Operator installs the portal once on their network. Picks an adapter (Omada today, UniFi and pfSense coming) and pastes credentials in the setup wizard.
- Neighbor connects to the WiFi, opens /signup, picks their VLAN, proves they know the WiFi password.
- Magic link verifies their email; account is theirs. They can change their password, rename devices, see usage, invite household members.
Vendor-neutral by design
Harbor Neighbor isn't locked to one brand of hardware. A pluggable network-adapter layer sits between the portal and your gear, so the same self-serve experience runs no matter what's in the rack. TP-Link Omada is supported today, with UniFi and pfSense next on the roadmap.
Ready?
Sign up takes about 60 seconds.