
Finding the Wi-Fi key for your Bbox takes between ten seconds and several minutes depending on the method chosen. Some allow you to share the password without ever showing it in plain text, while others require dictating it letter by letter. The security gap between these approaches is worth comparing before choosing the one that suits your daily use.
Comparative methods for accessing the Bbox Wi-Fi code
Several paths lead to the same password, but they do not offer the same level of convenience or exposure of the code. The table below summarizes the options available on recent Bbox models.
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| Method | Access to plain text code | Sharing without revealing the password | Prerequisites |
|---|---|---|---|
| Label under the box | Yes | No | Physical access to the Bbox |
| Admin interface (192.168.1.1) | Yes | No | Browser + admin credentials |
| Bouygues Telecom App | Yes (+ QR code) | Yes, via QR code | Client Space account |
| Native Android QR code (10+) | No | Yes | Must be connected to the network, biometric unlock or PIN |
| iOS Sharing (16+) | No | Yes (AirDrop / proximity) | Two Apple devices, Bluetooth enabled |
| Dial / screen Bbox WiFi 6E or 7 | Yes (+ QR code) | Yes, via displayed QR code | Physical access to the box |
The main difference lies between methods that expose the key in plain text and those that transmit it in an encrypted manner. When you dictate a complex password to a guest, each character can be misheard or intercepted. Retrieving the Bbox Wi-Fi security code via a QR code eliminates the risk of incorrect entry and limits uncontrolled dissemination.

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Bbox admin interface and mobile app: two logics for accessing the Wi-Fi network
The admin interface accessible from a browser at the address 192.168.1.1 remains the most comprehensive method. It provides access to the Wi-Fi key, the network name (SSID), the type of active encryption, and advanced router settings.
What the admin interface allows that the app does not
From the admin panel, you can change the encryption protocol (switch from WPA2 to WPA3 if your Bbox supports it), change the SSID name, or disable WPS. The Bouygues Telecom app does not provide access to all these network settings.
On the other hand, the Client Space app offers an advantage that the web interface does not have: the generation of a shareable Wi-Fi QR code from the “My box” section, then “Wi-Fi”. This QR code can be scanned by any smartphone without the password appearing in full on the screen.
When to prefer one or the other
- You want to enhance the security of your network (change encryption, disable WPS, rename SSID): go through 192.168.1.1 from a browser connected to the Bbox
- You are hosting guests and want to share Wi-Fi access quickly: open the Bouygues Telecom app, go to “My box”, and display the QR code
- You no longer have access to your admin credentials or the app: turn the Bbox over and read the label stuck under the box, which displays the default password
Sharing the Bbox Wi-Fi code without exposing the key in plain text
The Wi-Fi QR code is not a gadget. It is today the only method that transmits network credentials without displaying the password on the recipient’s screen.
On the WiFi 6E Bbox, the dial allows you to navigate to the “Connect to WiFi network” menu. A press in the center simultaneously displays the password and a scannable QR code. On the WiFi 7 Bbox, the touchscreen further simplifies the operation.
Native sharing from Android and iOS
Android 10 and later versions generate a Wi-Fi QR code directly from the phone’s network settings, provided you are already connected to the network and have unlocked the device with a fingerprint or PIN. The password never appears in plain text on the recipient’s side.
On iOS 16 and 17, Apple offers proximity sharing between devices of the brand. When an iPhone tries to connect to your Bbox network, your own iPhone displays a notification offering to share the password. The transfer occurs via Bluetooth, without displaying the key. The recipient must be in your contacts for the feature to trigger.
Conversely, if your guest uses an Android and you use an iPhone (or vice versa), no native inter-system sharing exists. The QR code from the Bouygues Telecom app or from the Bbox screen remains the only option that avoids dictating the password.

WPA3 encryption and Bbox network security
Sharing the Wi-Fi code securely is pointless if the network encryption itself is weak. The WPA3 protocol enhances protection against brute force attacks by requiring individual key negotiation for each connected device.
Recent firmware updates for some Bbox models support WPA3. To check if your box activates it, log into the interface at 192.168.1.1 and look for the Wi-Fi security settings. If only WPA2 is available, the network remains protected, but the level of resistance to intrusion attempts is lower.
The CNIL recommends in its practical sheet on home Wi-Fi security to maintain up-to-date encryption and choose a long password. A default password written under the box may be sufficiently robust, but changing it from the admin interface adds a layer of protection, especially if the label has been photographed or shared in the past.
The choice of sharing method and the level of active encryption on the Bbox form two links in the same chain. A QR code shared via the Bouygues Telecom app on a network encrypted with WPA3 offers the best compromise between ease of welcoming guests and protecting the data that transits on your home network.