It's under the client IP assignment section https://documentation.meraki.com/MR/Client_Addressing_and_Bridging/SSID_Modes_for_Client_IP_Assignment L3 roaming is specifically for when you say for example have 3 floors with layer 3 subnets pushed to the access layer. So, clients get IPs in subnet 1, 2, 3 depending on which floor they're on. If devices are going to roam from one floor to another (meaning actively using device during the physical move) then layer 3 roaming is a good option. If however a user will move and say carry a laptop, tablet, etc with them from their desk on 1st floor to a conf room on floor 3 that's not really a use case or need for L3 roaming. Standard mapping of the SSID/APs to their respective floor VLAN ID with bridged mode is fine. Time and time again I see dashboards with L3 roaming enabled and mapped to a single VLAN. That does literally nothing different than standard bridged mode to a single VLAN 😉 Btw this is all explained in great detail here https://documentation.meraki.com/Architectures_and_Best_Practices/Cisco_Meraki_Best_Practice_Design/Best_Practice_Design_-_MR_Wireless/Wireless_Layer_3_Roaming_Best_Practices
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