Welcome to the Smart Home Explainer Hub
Simple, jargon-free guides and quick videos to help you build a smarter, more connected home — one step at a time.
Do You Need a Smart Home Hub? (Explained Simply)
🤔 What Is a Smart Home Hub?
A smart home hub is like the control centre or “brain” of your smart home setup. It helps different devices — even from different brands — talk to each other and work together smoothly.
Many hubs use wireless protocols like Zigbee, Z-Wave, or Thread, which allow them to connect devices without relying entirely on Wi-Fi.
✅ Do You Really Need a Hub?
The short answer: Not always.
Whether you need one depends on how complex your smart home is (or will become).
💡 You don’t need a hub if:
You’re just starting out
You’re only using Wi-Fi-based devices (e.g. smart plugs, bulbs, cameras)
You control everything through your phone or voice assistant (Alexa, Google Assistant, Siri)
Most modern smart devices can work independently using their own apps or through a smart speaker.
🔗 You do need a hub if:
You want all your devices to work together across brands
You're using Zigbee, Z-Wave, or Thread-based products
Your Wi-Fi is overloaded with too many devices
You want advanced automation that runs even when the internet is down
A hub brings local control, better reliability, and unified control from a single dashboard or app.
🧠 Common Smart Home Hubs (2025)
Amazon Echo (with built-in Zigbee)
Samsung SmartThings Hub
Home Assistant (DIY and privacy-focused)
Hubitat (great for local automation geeks)
Apple HomePod Mini (Thread & HomeKit)
Some hubs come built into devices you may already own, while others offer more advanced features and customisation.
🏁 Final Thoughts
If you’re just experimenting with a few smart devices, skip the hub for now — and keep things simple.
But if you’re planning a fully connected home or want more control and automation, a smart home hub can be a game changer.
📌 Want help choosing the best hub for your setup?
Watch our video series here at You Tube
Head to the next article in the series:
➡️ Smart Home Devices: Wi-Fi vs Zigbee vs Thread – What’s the Difference?