Just to help clarify things a little bit here, for your information sake.
The reason that the MAC address printed on the bottom sticker of the device is different from the Wireless MAC you are seeing is that technically they are two different interfaces. That is, the MAC printed on the sticker is the one GLI assigned to the physical WAN port on the unit.

Typically on these types of devices if you look closely you will see a number of MAC addresses by default:

  1. First one for the physical WAN port
  2. Second for the LAN interface/wired ports
  3. Third for the Wireless radio (2.4Ghz)
  4. Fourth for the other Wireless radio (5Ghz)

These are populated by the code that @jeffsf mentions in post #6 above. Most manufacturers make them sequential. So if you’re familiar with HEX, in your case they read:

  1. Physical WAN Port - xx:xx:xx:xx:xE:74
  2. LAN Ports - xx:xx:xx:xx:xE:75
  3. Wifi 2Ghz Radio - xx:xx:xx:xx:xE:76
  4. Wifi 5Ghz Radio - xx:xx:xx:xx:xE:77

Without getting into the whole specifics of how networking actually works, the idea of MAC addresses is that they give a physical interface a unique identifier on the local network. As @jeffsf pointed out, you can change that arbitrarily if you want (though there’s no real reason to), but it doesn’t achieve much. You may also introduce problems if you are not careful, because if you end up manually assigning the same MAC address to more than one interface then theoretically other devices on the network may get confused as to how to actually communicate with your router. (From the description of your setup it doesn’t sound like this would happen, but I wanted to point it out.)

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