
Smart Home Devices 🏠
Smart Plugs, Lighting, Security & Hubs (18)
How to Build a Smart Home Setup
The key to a smart home that actually works is compatibility: pick an ecosystem first, then add devices that support it. From there it comes down to connection type, whether you need a hub, and which jobs you want automated. The points below cover the decisions worth getting right early.
Pick the assistant you'll actually use — Alexa, Google Home or Apple Home — and buy devices that support it. Standardising on one ecosystem means a single app, shared automations and voice control across everything. Devices that support Matter are the safest bet because they work across multiple ecosystems.
Wi-Fi devices connect straight to your router with no hub, which is simple but adds load as you add devices. Zigbee uses a low-power mesh and needs a hub, but scales better for many sensors and bulbs. Matter is a newer standard built for cross-brand compatibility — look for it to avoid being locked into one brand.
A handful of Wi-Fi plugs and bulbs work fine without a hub. Once you're running several Zigbee or Thread devices, a hub gives you a more stable mesh, local control and richer automations. If you're starting small, begin with Wi-Fi devices and add a hub when your setup grows.
Smart plugs and energy monitors let you see what's drawing power and switch non-essential loads off remotely, which helps manage usage around outages. Pairing a router and ONT with a small UPS keeps your network — and any cloud-connected cameras — online while the area is dark. Local-control devices keep working even when the internet drops.
Choose cameras and sensors from established brands, enable two-factor authentication on the app, and keep firmware updated. Prefer devices that support encrypted cloud or local recording so footage isn't exposed. Place cameras for coverage of entry points, and use motion sensors to trigger lights or alerts rather than relying on footage alone.





