I Tried Building the PERFECT Smart Home: What I Learned (Mistakes Included)

I Tried Building the PERFECT Smart Home: What I Learned (Mistakes Included)

Affiliate links to Smart Home Tech I used and had lots of success with:
Kara Light Switch: https://amzn.to/40PwC1V
Hue Motion Sensor: https://amzn.to/3Vl1OVO
Hue Light Bulbs: https://amzn.to/3AFS1Qv
Lutron Switches (Requires Hub): https://amzn.to/3HrhIIa
Aqara Temp and Humidity Sensor (Requires Hub): https://amzn.to/3oSelDO
Tapo Smart Plug: https://amzn.to/4295JqN

Affiliate links to YouTube gear I use:
Sony a7siii: https://go.magik.ly/ml/1qb8i/
Sony A7c: https://go.magik.ly/ml/1qb8k/
14in M1 Pro MacBook Pro: https://go.magik.ly/ml/1qb83/
Mac Studio: https://go.magik.ly/ml/1qb8o/

Timestamps:
0:00 Intro
1:00 What’s the Goal?
1:50 What Needs Automating?
2:40 What Devices Do We Need?
5:53 Smart Home Standards
7:53 Smart Home Ecosystem
10:23 Home Assistant
12:21 Conclusion

Let’s talk about what I learned trying to make this house smart, this includes all the things I would do differently with everything I know now. That’s the idea, make things more convenient and make less things for me to worry about, which you’re about to see from me, actually leads to a lot of inconveniences itself.

We’ll need a way to control the ceiling fan, the 3 lamps, and the blinds. We also need something that can tell when someone is in the room, and a way to tell how hot or cold this room is. So, what devices are available to do these tasks? If you’re trying to control lights, you have smart bulbs, smart plugs, and smart light switches. Each have their own pros and cons and really you have to figure out for yourself what’s best to use for your situation. As for the ceiling fan, I’m going to use a smart switch since I don’t care about the fan speed and the fan will only be kept on medium anyway when I have it on. Now the hardest part was finding devices for the blinds. I had to purchase these aqara E1 drivers, to smartify and motorize these existing blinds.

To solve the remaining items, we’ll need to use sensors. These are the “eyes” of your smart home. These can be used for your smart home to understand what’s happening in your house and can be used in your home automations. And sometimes you can actually find multi-purpose sensors that have more than one sensor built in. Like the one I have right here. The Philips Hue motion sensor, has a motion, illuminance and temperature sensor all built into this single device.

The primary smart home ecosystems are Alexa, google home, and Apple Home or Homekit. You have to be careful using one because you have to be on the lookout to see if your specific ecosystem is supported by the device or hub that controls all these devices. So it requires a bit of research to make sure you have the right device. These systems don’t talk to each other and you get stuck in a situation where a bunch of devices only work on one platform but not the other. So my solution for a while was to just use both google home and apple home and use them for different things.

Home Assistant is a tool that enables you to consolidate pretty much all your smart home devices and more like your NAS into a single point. And from there it can behave as your smart home letting you control all your devices in the Home Assistant app, or then route all of your devices back to your desired smart home ecosystem even if they were not originally supported by that ecosystem. See this TP-link motion controlled light switch? It’s not Apple Home compatible, but with Home assistant controlling it, it can be used in Apple Home. Home assistant also has super robust automations that let you make some really complex stuff. The level of customization Home Assistant provides is fantastic. That being said, it has its own issues too, some integrations with Home Assistant aren’t very good and doesn’t work the way you’d expect. Home Assistant also requires being a bit techy to fully setup, and since the automations are so robust, it’s easy to make a mistake that leads to unintended consequences, like the lights turning on randomly at midnight causing your significant other to wake up. So if you’re willing to spend some time with it, it can definitely enhance your smart home, and make it so much better as long as you’re aware of its limitations.

So here’s a summary of all my tips. Research what you’re buying, make sure they’re compatible with everything you use now and in the near future, use 3rd party platforms like Home assistant to further consolidate what you need and force compatibility for the devices that aren’t compatible with your smart home ecosystem and use it to control all the automations in a single place. And take it one room at a time to keep the end goal in sight.

50 Comments

  1. I don’t know why they don’t build home assistant ready to use and all supported devices list should there to choose and add simply. Unfortunately very hard to add devices. Why they don’t make things ready and just leave us to simply customise or arrange devices dashboard. Can’t find out my smart devices brand list on smart home. On the add on section i have to do a lot of token things to add a device, evern after that they don’t work properly. Cannot individually turn on or off only primary switch work all on or off at one go..

    Alexa and google home page dash board layout are maybe limited but way easier .

  2. You had me at “it all starts with a single lightbulb” 💀

  3. have you tried Tuya/Smart Life device? it can be linked to google home/apple home.

  4. Sounds like a freaky and time-consuming hobby to solve problems you didn’t have before 🙃

  5. Very timely for my smart home project. I already installed smart switches, outlets, light bulbs, door locks, cctv cameras, & got my smart cooker, google speaker. I wanted to control my TV & other stuffs. But now stuck on installing many apps and now searching for an app that can control everything. This vid of yours is a great help. Imma try this tomorrow. Thanks for this!

  6. @zoltanbaisden9763 April 15, 2025 at 9:14 am

    Yours video start so good and i thought here find my solution but also u didnt share whats was the solution whats the product of working all of your device. so big No HELP your video.

  7. Energiser smart bulbs only cost £5 and work amazingly

  8. Jimmy I’m right there with you I am finally at the point that my wife actually uses Siri now to control things

  9. I just started with one free smart bulb with elexa device.
    Then a kitchen light switch.
    Then the tv, stereo and dining room light because they were easy with an IR wifi blaster, xmas light were ir too so why not?
    Im not into the next phaze of sensors yet, that is where it gets expensive and complex imho, everything ive done so far has been dirt cheep.
    My mate has his whole house and garden automated , very impressive but occasionally goes wrong and frustrating to get working.
    All good fun though.

  10. @davidkublal7534 April 15, 2025 at 9:16 am

    Awsome video and very insightful info. I was thinking of using Home assist for advanced authentication.

  11. Great video! Thank you

  12. @richardkurtz9661 April 15, 2025 at 9:16 am

    "A-Car-A"

  13. This can’t possibly be the “ultimate” because Apple hasn’t done this yet.

  14. Well that was very useful, thank you! Having a conversation with the family about what we want before we start is definitely a good idea. I think I want something at the "dumber" end of the smart home spectrum so I’ll stick with Google compatible products to smarten my home. A routine that will switch on the lights when I park on my drive will be useful – I suspect that will involve a compatible smart alarm system.

  15. Love the video, thank you. Do you have a video on how to connect your devices from Home Assistant to Apple home ?

  16. I hate that there are still matter compatible devices, that require a proprietary hub from the manufacturer or and have limited functionality if you use it instead of their cloud garbage. Like why?

  17. 8:03 HomeAsistant? Bunch of other ones, Xiaomy, Tuya………..

  18. @timothymcgregor2255 April 15, 2025 at 9:24 am

    4:16 a fourth option is to install something behind the existing switch, just in case you don’t like the size of all the smart switches on offer (I’m guessing that size is a US standard, it’s like 3 times the size of our switches here in NZ).

  19. 9:21 so Alexas is not the problem, but Alexa is ?

  20. 7:28 now we know you have Alexa, and that there is first bad call it feature if you will, but if you are forbidden to say the name Alexa in your home now, what is next and what do you do when you have someone whose name is Alexa?

  21. The problem is charging your blind drivers

  22. Exactly the video I wanted to see. And yes, we bought 4 smart bulbs and now I’m thinking of buying a $200 Amazon Echo Studio so I don’t have to use my phone. Seems like the whole smart home industry is based on unproductive overengineered nerding.

  23. What do you use matter or wifi

  24. @casualonemmo-player2167 April 15, 2025 at 9:36 am

    I use a motionsensor by the front door: if anyone comes (99% its the mailman), my philips hue lights turn red and then my speaker starts to play the "postman pat" song.

    Edit: i should get an outdoor camera aswell, so it would also show a live feed on the tv, to see who it is.. but i havent gotten that far yet. I do have a peaking hole in the frontdoor though.

  25. "life long journey" bro you’re roughly 35 , done this roughly 3 years max. Took me 1 day to figure this out , so at best you’re lying .

  26. Awesome video. You touched on one subject very shortly that I believe is extremely beneficial and needs more attention. I flipped my shit when I found Lutron made a wireless remote wall switch. Of course all this automation and telling Siri to turn on/off light or open and close garage doors is cool. But a remote wireless paddle switch mounted to a Wall specific location is just super simple and brilliant.

  27. @benoitcloutier8803 April 15, 2025 at 9:39 am

    Home assistant brought back my interest into smart home

  28. @chuksjerahmeel1355 April 15, 2025 at 9:39 am

    I like creators that cares about very little things, Iit shows a great level of attention to details. Who noticed he muted when he said Alexa. My dumb alexa would have responded.

  29. I’m new to home assistant. I have Google nest cameras, doorbell, thermostat around the house with a Google subscription. I’ve tried using home assistant on a raspberry pi so that I can’t stop paying Google each month for a subscription. So far all I’ve managed is to get HA setup with the nest products just the way that Google home app does.

    So my question is, what are the steps to get HA setup with the kit that I have so that I can save the videos locally and save money.

  30. My partner and i have an agreement. I can do a much home automation as i like but only in my man-cave/office. Even that is getting out of control.

    It started because in my job, i kept being given free smart nest hubs but never used them for years. And yes, my ibsession started with the smart lights. Thats the gateway drug.

  31. What is that lamp at 2:14? Who makes it? Cool lamp. Great video!

  32. Best tip is: go for smart relays rather than smart bulbs, thanks me later.
    In time: even better if you can combine both, but if not, the smart relays are miles ahead of the bulbs alone

  33. @FuturePulseDaily April 15, 2025 at 9:47 am

    I’m going to spend 2025 connecting agentic ai (like claude’s computer use) to the internet of things. This information has been incredibly valuable to me. Thank you, you’ve got a new subscriber.

  34. Is home assistant an app or pc program

  35. Thank you you a great video. I was stuck between Nest hub and Apple TV hub. Please guide what is the cheapest home assistant device? I also have Aqara M3 Hub and SwitchBot mini hub.

  36. My finger can turn a light on and off. No connectivity or adaptability issues to deal with. Also, my hand can open and close blinds. Instead of opening my app and pressing a button with my finger, I just use my hand and move 10 feet to the blind.

  37. this is not building.. this is talking.. too much talking..

  38. Could you link me to the device you use for your blinds, please? 🙂

  39. Thank you for this good sir – Wish I would have found this 3 amazon returns ago…

  40. 9:16 Your WiFi is not local 😱😱 ??
    What do you do, use neighbors or public or how else you could have remote WiFi in your home so it is not local ?

  41. @jaythompson5102 April 15, 2025 at 9:55 am

    Ok good on finding Home Assistant now next task is to use Node-Red and set up logic in there to do some real automation.

  42. Hi Jimmy, great video. I am new to the block with home assistant. Now I have started to set it up in my home, but I am thinking, if I can also use home assistant also in my apartment at the lake. In my current home I bought a Home Assistant green hardware. Do I have to buy a second one for the other address or is there a short pass without new hardware to use home assistant in both homes. could not find a video explaining this and hope for an answer here

  43. good

  44. Easy now you seem to be very intelligent

  45. 12:03 I know that feeling 😀

  46. All you did is make me more confused, just show us how you did everything

  47. I started with some SonOff WiFi switches to control the lights downstairs.
    Then I bought some Zigbee IKEA bulbs and a smart plug just to tinker with in HomeKit.

    I quickly realised HomeKit’s limitations and that I wanted to control the SonOff and IKEA stuff with one app/system.

    So, like Jimmie, I installed Home Assistant (HA) on a mini PC and integrated everything and quite a few extras in HA and it works fantastic!

    I can see the status of my car, my gas an electricity usage, my doorbell camera, all the lights and the weather forecast on one page on my phone.

    I get a notification when the trunk/boot of my car is open for more than 1 minute and my car and I are home.
    The outside lights are automatically switched at sunset/rise and the lights downstairs will turn on when I get home.

    You do need to tinker a bit but it’s well worth it imo. As a bonus with HA, you have the freedom of choice which often means that you can use products that cost less and have more functionality.

    You need to invest some time but I highly recommend it.

    Oh, and every device can still be manually operated too.

  48. Brown Ronald Hall Maria Wilson Kimberly

  49. Nice video, smart and funny guy. I am in the same situation: 3 hubs, 3 apps, more than 100 devices (zigbee mostly), but still struggling with routines too basic to be really useful.

  50. @christianmatts_bk April 15, 2025 at 10:02 am

    you can get switch that automatically turns on bathroom fan based on humidity, and turns off fan after set time. no home automation req

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