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March 20, 2023 01:15 pm GMT

The best smart light bulbs for 2023

One of the best places to start when building a smart home ecosystem is smart light bulbs. Not only are they relatively affordable compared to other IoT gadgets, often costing between $10 and $50 a bulb, but they can also completely change the feel of your home. You can go from boring and analogue to colorful and automated within minutes, and there are endless possibilities when it comes to using smart light bulbs to create funky-colored light scenes, setting schedules and more.

But like the rest of the smart home space over the last few years, there are now more players in smart lighting than ever before. We tested out some of the most popular smart lights on the market and found that most of them are quite good, but there are differences in compatibility, color quality and mobile app usability that are worth considering before deciding which smart bulb system will be right for your home.

What to look for in smart light bulbs

Connectivity (To hub or not to hub)

One of the biggest appeals of smart lights is being able to control them from your phone. Most of them are able to do so by connecting to it via WiFi or Bluetooth, or via an external hub, which handles the connection for them. Bluetooth connectivity limits the range in which youll be able to control the light, so its only best for a limited number of bulbs and ones you dont expect to control when youre away.

WiFi smart lights are easy to set up and can be cheaper overall since they dont require a hub to connect them. However, having something like a central Zigbee hub can make your whole system more reliable since its connection is separate from your homes WiFi network. For that reason, hub-based bulbs tend to be more expandable, so we mainly recommend those if you want to eventually have dozens of smart lights around your home.

White or color?

Most smart bulbs youll find today are white and color bulbs, meaning they can glow in vibrant blues, pinks, greens and everything in between, as well as shine with different temperatures of white. But there are some white-only bulbs out there, and they are often a bit more affordable than their color counterparts. While we recommend springing for the white-and-color devices, if youd prefer white only, make sure youre getting a bulb that can span the color temperature spectrum (typically from about 2000 to 5000 Kelvin), offering you various levels of warm and cool white light.

App features

One of the perks of smart lights is the amount of control you have over them thanks to their various app-connected capabilities. Most companion apps let you do things like set lighting schedules, group individual lights into room designations and create your own custom light scenes with different colors. But we have seen other features that arent as ubiquitous like vacation mode for automatically turning lights on and off to enhance your home security, and sync with media, which changes the colors of lights depending on the music youre listening to or the game youre currently live-streaming.

Smart home compatibility

If you use a smart assistant like Amazons Alexa or the Google Assistant regularly, make sure the smart lights you get work with your favorite. All of the bulbs we tested supported both Amazons and Googles virtual assistants, allowing you to use voice commands to turn lights on and off, dim them and more. The wildcard here is Siri and Apples HomeKit; while numerous smart bulbs have added HomeKit to their list of compatible connections, not all lights support Apples smart home framework.

Expandability

We alluded to this above, but youll want to consider how many smart lights you eventually want in your home. Some brands and systems are easier to expand than others, and we generally recommend going for hub-based bulbs if you plan on putting smart lights in every room in your home. If youre only looking to deck out your home office or living room with some fancy lights, WiFi options should serve you well. Thankfully, these are some of the most affordable smart home devices you can get, so even if you dont have a clear answer to this question now, you can reconsider your options down the line if you do decide to outfit your home with multiple smart bulbs.

Best overall: Philips Hue White + Color Ambiance

If youve done any research into smart lights, youve probably come across Philips Hue bulbs. The range is popular for a variety of reasons, and we agree theyre the best smart light bulbs you can get thanks to their wide compatibility, easy to use mobile app and their expandability. Particularly, if you know you want to outfit more than one room in your home with these IoT devices, Philips Hue is the way to go.

The first thing thats important to know about Hue bulbs is that they are now Bluetooth enabled. That means you can buy a few to try out first, then easily expand your system with a hub when you want to add more lights to your home. Previously, the hub was required for any and all lights, but now its much easier to dip your toe into the range before fully taking the plunge.

Like all of the other smart lights we tested, you only need to screw in a Philips Hue bulb, turn on your light, and follow the instructions in the mobile app to start using it. Even if you only have the lights in one room to start, we still recommend grouping them into their own room in the Hue app so you can easily control the entire spaces environment at once.

Hues White + Color bulbs provide a range of warm to cool whites and millions of colors to experiment with. Colors are rich and vibrant, and Philips pre-programmed scenes, such as Energize, Bright and Relax, let you quickly emulate your old dumb lights with different warmth levels of white light. You can pick from a number of color scenes in the app, too, but its also easy to create your own color temperature. So if youve always wanted to flood your office with a rainbow of colors while youre live-streaming on Twitch, you can find the precise presets you want, save them and then turn them on with just a few taps in the app.

The Hue app is pretty easy to use, and the bulbs support voice commands from Amazons Alexa and the Google Assistant. That means you dont even have to open the app to control your lights; you can simply say Alexa, turn off the bedroom lights and only the lights in that designated room will extinguish. Youll be able to add up to 10 bulbs to your system using Bluetooth alone at which point youll have to add a Philips Hue hub into the mix to support up to 50 lights. The hub also enables things like HomeKit connectivity, light schedules and automations, home and away modes and syncing with movies and music.

Arguably the most useful of those features is automations, which lets you set on/off schedules for your lights, including automatically turning the lights off when you leave the house. Its understandable why Philips would make these few features exclusive to those with Hue hubs adding a hub into the mix makes the system more reliable, allowing you to do more with increasing numbers of connected lights, plus it will encourage many to invest in a hub and more Hue bulbs over time. We like Hues hub not only for its reliability, but also because it allows finer and more flexible control over your devices. So if youre on vacation and want to turn on your living room lights to see whats going on, you can do that.

Expandability goes beyond the number of lights you have in your home: It also includes multiple smart bulbs you can install outside, too. The Hue range has a ton of indoor and outdoor bulbs to choose from, including recessed lights, outdoor pedestal and flood lights, light strips and more. Its one of the few ranges available today that gives you a ton of options to make every bulb in and out of your home smart, which is important to consider if you know you want to go all in on the smart light front.

But that brings us to the biggest downside of Philips Hue, which is the price. Hue bulbs are on the expensive side, with a two-pack of White + Color Ambiance bulbs costing $80. If youre looking for cheap bulbs to test out smart lighting, some of our other picks below, like the Kasa smart light bulb, will be better choices since most of them have lower prices per bulb. However, if smart lighting is something you want to invest in going forward, we recommend going with one of Philips Hue starter kits: the White + Color Ambiance starter kit, including three bulbs, a hub and a smart button, comes in at $180, which is cheaper than if you were to buy all of those components separately.

Runner up: LIFX Color A19

Overall, LIFXs color smart lights are similar to Hues White + Ambiance bulbs in that theyre easy to set up, they offer striking, saturated colors and work with three major platforms: Alexa, Google Assistant and HomeKit. But the main difference is the LIFX bulbs are WiFi only, so you cant connect them to a hub even if you wanted to, and some are slightly more expensive than Hue devices. The Color A19 bulb, which supports 1100 lumens, normally costs $50, but theres an 800-lumen equivalent thats a bit cheaper, coming in at $35 per bulb.

LIFXs mobile app is also undoubtedly the slickest we tested. While that may not mean much to you, its worth mentioning because mobile apps are the way most people interact with their smart lights on a daily basis. The homepage features all of the room groups in your household, along with the names of the lights in each room. You can easily turn a whole room, or a specific light, on with just a tap, and do the same for all of the lights in your home.

LIFX lights support scheduling, so you can program lights to work for you so you rarely (if ever) have to control them manually, plus there are a plethora of scenes and effects to choose from. While all of the color lights we tried had pre-made scenes or presets ready to go in the app, Philips Hue and LIFX clearly had the most out of them all. Personally, I found LIFXs scenes and additional effects to be a bit more fun and engaging than Hues. You can pick from scenes like spooky or pastel and use effects like strobe if you want to make your living room feel a bit more like a nightclub. While most people probably wont use these niche scenes and effects on a regular basis, theyre great perks to have when youre entertaining or just want to set the right vibe for your next movie night or game-streaming session.

LIFX has a number of products in its ecosystem, from standard A19 bulbs to lightstrips to candles. It has switches, too, so you can physically control your smart lights if you wish. But Philips Hue has all of those options too and more, including not just switches, but standalone floor lamps, outdoor spotlights, downlights, light bars and motion sensors. Youll have more options with Hue if you want to convert all of your homes lights to smart ones, and have multiple ways to control them, too.

Best budget: TP-Link Kasa Smart WiFi Light Bulb

TP-Links Kasa brand is known for its solid yet affordable smart home devices and its smart lights are no different. We tested out the WiFi-only multicolor smart light bulbs and found them easy to install and use, and they provide a bunch of features at an affordable price; a four-pack of multicolor bulbs will only set you back $40.

Besides having a simple installation process, Kasas multicolor smart lights stayed reliably connected the whole time we tested them and the companion mobile app is simple and clean. All of the main functions for each light live in that bulbs dedicated page in the app, allowing you to change brightness, white levels, color, schedules and more without navigating through a bunch of different menus. Changing colors is nearly instantaneous, and the light changes as you drag your finger across the color wheel in the app. Editing the four presets youre able to save takes only a few taps, as does grouping multiple bulbs into rooms and creating lighting schedules. For the latter, if you do set on/off schedules, the app will show you the next step in that schedule (i.e., off at 8:35pm) next to each individual light.

Theres also a handy usage section in each lights page that shows you the bulbs energy use over time, plus an estimate of how much energy youre saving by using a smart light instead of a regular one. This is something that would be fun to observe over many weeks and months of using these bulbs, especially if conserving energy is one of the main reasons you invested in smart lights in the first place.

TP-Link claims you can connect unlimited smart devices to its mobile app, which technically means you can have as many Kasa smart lights in your home as youd like. We only tested a few together, so we cant say for sure how dozens of connected devices would affect app speed and light response time. These are WiFi-only bulbs, which means connecting them to a Zigbee hub isnt an option, so keep that in mind before deciding to invest in a house-full of these gadgets. Its also worth noting that these lights arent compatible with Apples HomeKit, although you can control them using Alexa and Google Assistant commands.

Best all white: LIFX White E26

Maybe you dont want to bother with colored lights. If thats the case, LIFXs White E26 is your best bet. You get all of the non-color features in the mobile app that we explained above, including schedules and virtual assistant controls, but in a more basic light bulb that only costs $10.

My biggest gripe is that it doesnt span the cool-to-warm temperature range that other bulbs do. Rather, youre stuck with just one shade of white: 2700K, which is on the warmer side. This makes the LIFX bulb better for intimate settings like a bedroom or a living room, but since its not overly warm, it could work in a home office, too. Its also dimmable, so you can control its brightness.

If you have a specific use case in mind for your smart lights that doesnt involve a rainbow of colors, then a LIFX bulb will more than suffice. They would work well in a childs room, for instance, allowing you to set wake-up and sleep schedules that gradually turn on and off the lights, or in a home office where you just want a bit more control over your lights without extra frills.

Honorable mention: Sengled Smart Light Bulbs

Sengleds Smart Light Bulbs deserve a shout because theyre essentially more affordable versions of the best bulbs mentioned here, just with a few compromises. Key among those is that their colors are less nuanced than most others we tested and the mobile app is less polished.

That said, youre still getting millions of colors out of Sengleds smart lights and the app is easy to use. It also provides all of the features youd want from a smart light bulb, including grouping, schedules and automations. The fact that the Sengled mobile app isnt as slick as Hues or LIFXs may actually work in its favor with newbies the basic controls and labels will be very easy for smart home novices to understand.

The bulbs we tested were WiFi-based, so they do not require a hub. However, Sengled has a bunch of other smart lights that work via WiFi, Bluetooth or hub connectivity. A pack of four WiFi color bulbs will set you back $30, while a set of six Zigbee hub-based lights costs only $100. Overall, Sengleds devices are much more affordable than Hues, making them a good budget option regardless of whether you want to stick to WiFi or invest in a smart home hub like Sengleds own or a smart device like Amazons Echo with a built-in hub.

Best smart lamp: Philips Hue Signe Table Lamp

Philips Signe table lamp is a slick way to add a wash of color into your living room, or a more controllable light source on your desk. The nearly two-foot tall lamp can be customized with up to three colors of light at once, plus it supports a full array of cool and warm hues as well. Shine it towards a wall to set the mood with colored lights during your game night, or use it to give yourself sufficient lighting during your next Zoom meeting you can make it as fun or as practical as you need. It also supports effects like candle and fireplace, both of which produce moving light that emulates flickering flames. We also appreciate that the Signe lamp is a totally standalone device, like most of Philips new Hue bulbs: you dont need a Hue bridge to use it. But if you have one, youll be able to do things like control the lamp when youre away from home.

The Signe lamp is a splurge, though, coming in at over $200. Its certainly worth it if you need just one powerful light source, but a more affordable alternative would be the Philips Hue Go portable table lamp. It too supports millions of colors and a full spectrum of warm and cool light, but it runs on a rechargeable battery and can be used wirelessly. Depending on the setting you choose, youll get up to 18 hours of continuous use, making it a good option if you want a controllable light that can go anywhere you need it without fuss.

Best smart light strip: Govee M1 RGBIC LED Strip Light

Light strips can bring illumination to hard-to-reach places, or give a whole new vibe to your living room or office. The latest light strip from Govee, the M1 RGBIC model, gets super bright and supports a wide range of colors. Its WiFi-connected but requires no central hub, so even if you have other smart lights throughout your home, this one will fit in easily. One strip measures nearly 16.5 feet long and its divided into 15 segments that you can control individually from within the Govee app.

Well get into the app features, but its worth noting where the M1 sits in the smart light strip space. There are various different lengths out there and you can even find some two-packs that will cover up to 100 feet. The 16.4-foot length is pretty common in single packs, although you can find some that run up to 33 feet long. You can expect to pay $25 to $50 for a basic, multi-color, 16.4-foot light strip and the price will go up from there depending on how many segments the strip has, the color range it supports, if its WiFi-connected and other additional features. Govees M1 Light Strip is on the higher end of the spectrum, coming in at $110 for 16.4 feet of light, but it still costs less than arguably its biggest competitor: Philips Hue Light Strips, which come in at $80 per 6-foot strip.

I was impressed by not only the color spectrum the M1 Light Strip supports, but also how bright it is. This strip gets almost blinding, and I usually had it operating at just 75 percent of its full brightness. While you cant control each individual light on the strip, you can customize all 15 segments in the Govee app.

The sheer number of options and effects Govee provides is remarkable: the effects lab gives you pre-made basic colors, scenes that mimic sunrises, starry nights, different kinds of movies like thrillers and dramas, gaming genres and more. On top of that, you can make your own custom scenes (and choose to share them with others in Govees Explore page) as well as your favorite colors and hues that you can save for frequent use. The strips color is saturated and vibrant combine that with the overall brightness and it was easily able to give my office an attractive, ambient glow when positioned around the periphery of my couch.

Aside from the higher price tag, my only other complaint about the M1 light strip is actually Govees mobile app. Its a bit chaotic and takes some getting used to, so it might not be the best choice for anyone that wants something basic. However, I was able to get the hang of all the controls, and then some, after about a half hour. And you can always default to using Alexa or Google Assistant voice commands to control your light strip if you prefer, or you can set automations in the app that can take care of all your most used controls.

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/best-smart-led-light-bulbs-143022856.html?src=rss

Original Link: https://www.engadget.com/best-smart-led-light-bulbs-143022856.html?src=rss

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Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics. Engadget was launched in March of 2004 in partnership with the Weblogs, Inc. Network (WI

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