In modern Power over Ethernet (PoE) systems, power delivery is no longer a fixed one-way process.
As devices become more advanced — from Wi-Fi 6 access points to multi-sensor IP cameras — their power requirements change dynamically.
To handle this flexibility, the Link Layer Discovery Protocol (LLDP) plays a vital role.
Defined under IEEE 802.1AB, LLDP enables intelligent, two-way communication between PoE power providers (PSE) and power consumers (PD).
By understanding how LLDP works within the PoE power negotiation process, network designers can ensure optimal performance, energy efficiency, and system safety.
LLDP is a Layer 2 (Data Link Layer) protocol that allows Ethernet devices to advertise their identity, capabilities, and configuration to directly connected neighbors.
Each device sends LLDP Data Units (LLDPDUs) at regular intervals, containing key information such as:
When used with PoE, LLDP is extended through LLDP-MED (Media Endpoint Discovery) or IEEE 802.3at Type 2+ power negotiation extensions, enabling dynamic power communication between PSE and PD.
Before LLDP was introduced, IEEE 802.3af (PoE) used a simple classification system during the initial link-up:
However, as devices evolved, this static approach became insufficient.
For example, a dual-band wireless AP might need 10 W in idle but 25 W under heavy load — impossible to manage efficiently using only the legacy class method.
That’s why IEEE 802.3at (PoE+) and IEEE 802.3bt (PoE++) introduced LLDP-based power negotiation.
| IEEE Version | LLDP Support | Power Type | Max Power (PSE) | Negotiation Method |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 802.3af (PoE) | No | Type 1 | 15.4 W | Fixed class-based |
| 802.3at (PoE+) | Optional | Type 2 | 30 W | LLDP-MED optional |
| 802.3bt (PoE++) | Yes | Type 3 / 4 | 60 W / 100 W | LLDP mandatory for high power |
The LLDP negotiation process occurs after the physical PoE link is established and the PD has been detected.
Here’s how it works:
| Advantage | Description |
|---|---|
| Precision | Enables the PD to request exact power levels (e.g., 22.8 W) instead of predefined class values. |
| Efficiency | Prevents over-provisioning, freeing power budget for additional devices. |
| Safety | Dynamic adjustment protects devices from overheating or power surge. |
| Scalability | Supports multi-port, high-density PSE systems with optimized resource allocation. |
| Interoperability | Ensures seamless operation between devices from different vendors under IEEE standards. |
| Feature | Traditional PoE (Class-Based) | LLDP PoE Negotiation |
|---|---|---|
| Power Allocation | Fixed per class (0–8) | Dynamic per device |
| Flexibility | Limited | High |
| Real-Time Control | None | Supported |
| Overhead | Minimal | Moderate (Layer 2 frames) |
| Use Case | Simple, static devices | Smart, variable-load devices |
In short:
Class-based power assignment is static. LLDP-based negotiation is intelligent.
For modern deployments — Wi-Fi 6/6E APs, PTZ cameras, or IoT hubs — LLDP is essential to fully utilize PoE+ and PoE++ capabilities.
Under IEEE 802.3bt, LLDP becomes a core part of the power negotiation process, especially for Type 3 and Type 4 PSE/PD pairs delivering up to 100 W.
It supports:
This allows dynamic, safe, and efficient distribution of power across multiple high-demand PDs — a critical feature for smart buildings and industrial networks.
Consider a Wi-Fi 6 access point connected to a PoE++ switch:
This intelligent negotiation ensures:
Reliable LLDP-based communication requires stable signal integrity and robust current handling at the physical layer.
LINK-PP provides PoE RJ45 connectors with integrated magnetics optimized for IEEE 802.3at / bt compliance and LLDP-enabled systems.
Features:
These components ensure that power negotiation packets (LLDP frames) remain clean and reliable, even under full power load.
Q1: Does every PoE device use LLDP?
Not all. LLDP is optional in PoE+ (802.3at) but mandatory in PoE++ (802.3bt) for advanced negotiation.
Q2: Can LLDP adjust power in real time?
Yes. LLDP allows continuous updates between PSE and PD, adapting power allocation as workloads change.
Q3: What happens if LLDP is disabled?
The system falls back to class-based power allocation, which is less flexible and may under- or over-power the PD.
LLDP brings intelligence and flexibility to Power over Ethernet systems.
By enabling dynamic communication between PSE and PD, it ensures each device receives just the right amount of power — no more, no less.
As networks scale and devices become more power-hungry, LLDP-based PoE negotiation is essential for optimizing energy use, maintaining reliability, and supporting next-generation devices.
With LINK-PP PoE RJ45 connectors, designers can ensure stable LLDP signaling, strong current endurance, and long-term network performance in every PoE application.