Choosing a smart home hub used to mean picking an ecosystem and living with its device restrictions for years. Matter has genuinely loosened that lock-in, but hub choice still meaningfully affects reliability, privacy, and how much your automations depend on an internet connection that will eventually go down.
What changed in 2026
- Matter device certification expanded across most major smart home categories, meaning far more locks, lights, sensors, and plugs now work across ecosystems without proprietary bridges.
- Thread network adoption grew significantly, improving reliability and battery life for sensors and small devices by routing around a single point of failure the way WiFi-only setups cannot.
- Local-processing hubs gained mainstream options, giving privacy- and reliability-conscious buyers real alternatives to cloud-dependent hubs for the first time at accessible prices.
What a smart home hub actually does
A hub coordinates communication between your smart devices, your phone app, and (for many hubs) a voice assistant. Some devices connect directly to WiFi and technically do not need a hub at all, but a dedicated hub generally improves reliability, enables local automations, and reduces the number of separate apps you need to manage devices from.
Hub types compared
| Hub approach |
Processing |
Ecosystem lock-in |
Best for |
| Voice-assistant hub (integrated) |
Mostly cloud |
Moderate, but Matter reduces this |
Households already using that voice assistant daily |
| Dedicated Matter/Thread hub |
Local, with cloud backup |
Low |
Reliability and cross-brand flexibility |
| Proprietary single-brand hub |
Varies |
High |
Households fully committed to one device brand |
| Router-integrated hub |
Local |
Low to moderate |
Simplifying setup into one existing device |
Matter did not eliminate the decision, it simplified it
Matter's promise was a single standard that any compatible device works with, regardless of hub brand. In practice, it delivers real cross-compatibility for many device categories, but voice assistant integration, automation sophistication, and app quality still differ meaningfully between hub platforms. Matter mainly removes the fear of being permanently locked into your first choice — switching hubs later is far less painful than it used to be.
Local vs cloud processing: why it matters
A hub that processes automations locally keeps your lights turning on with your alarm and your door locking at night even if your internet goes down. A fully cloud-dependent hub loses those automations during any outage, which is a bigger reliability gap than most people expect until it happens during exactly the wrong moment. If privacy is a priority alongside reliability, local processing also means less of your daily routine data leaving your home network.
Thread and the mesh reliability improvement
Thread creates a mesh network among compatible battery-powered devices (sensors, some locks, some plugs), so a single device does not depend on a direct, unobstructed WiFi connection to your router. This is a genuine reliability improvement for exactly the category of devices — small, battery-powered, often placed far from the router — that historically caused the most smart home flakiness. Pairing a strong mesh WiFi setup, as covered in our WiFi extender vs mesh guide, further improves overall smart home reliability.
FAQ
Do I need to replace my existing smart devices to use Matter?
Not necessarily — many existing devices have received Matter support through firmware updates, though some older devices never will. Check your specific device manufacturer before assuming a firmware update is coming.
Is a hub necessary if all my devices connect directly to WiFi?
Not strictly, but a hub typically improves reliability, enables local automations, and reduces the number of apps needed — worth it once you have more than a handful of devices.
Which voice assistant has the best smart home integration in 2026?
This changes frequently and depends on your specific device mix; check current compatibility for your actual devices rather than assuming based on past ecosystem reputation.
Does Thread replace WiFi for smart home devices?
No, they serve different device types — Thread suits low-power sensors and battery devices, while WiFi remains standard for higher-bandwidth devices like cameras and smart displays.
Where to go next