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How Much Does a Smart Home Setup Cost? (2026)

Smart home technology includes automated lighting, thermostats, security cameras, door locks, and voice assistants. DIY options are affordable, while whole-home professional installation costs more.

MR
By Marcus Reyes, Construction & Remodeling Editor
·Published January 1, 2026·Updated March 1, 2026

National Average Cost

Low End

$500

Average

$3,000

High End

$10,000

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Cost Breakdown

Devices & Hardware50% — $1,500
Installation Labor25% — $750
Hub & Networking15% — $450
Programming & Setup10% — $300
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Project Details

Timeline

1–3 days for professional install; ongoing for DIY

Permits

Generally not required unless modifying wiring

Best Season

fall

Frequently Asked Questions

Smart Home Setup Costs Explained

A closer look at what drives the price, where homeowners overpay, and how to plan and pay for a smart home setup.

A budget that spans from a weekend to a whole-home system

Smart home is the widest-ranging project on this list because 'smart home' means anything from a single video doorbell to a fully automated, professionally installed system with lighting, climate, security, audio, and shades all tied together. Devices and hardware are the biggest cost, with installation labor, the hub and networking, and programming making up the rest. A capable DIY setup can be assembled for a few hundred dollars; a professionally designed and installed whole-home system runs into five figures.

The decision that sets your budget is DIY versus professional. Off-the-shelf devices that connect over Wi-Fi and set up through an app are inexpensive and renter-friendly. Professional installation makes sense for hardwired systems, whole-home audio and lighting, structured wiring, and the kind of seamless integration that's hard to achieve device by device.

The ecosystem decision you make first

The most consequential early choice isn't a device — it's the ecosystem. Committing to a platform (the major voice-assistant and smart-home ecosystems, or a hub-based standard) determines what works together and what doesn't. Buying a pile of devices from different brands that don't talk to each other is the classic smart-home mistake: you end up juggling five apps and a system that's clever in pieces and clumsy as a whole. Pick the ecosystem first, then buy devices that natively support it.

The newer cross-brand connectivity standards aim to reduce this fragmentation, so favoring devices that support broad interoperability protects you against being locked in or stranded when a brand fades.

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Where the money goes wrong

The overpay trap is gadget creep — buying smart versions of things you'll never automate, so the 'smart' features go unused while you've paid the premium. Start with the devices that earn their keep: a smart thermostat that cuts energy bills, a video doorbell and locks for security and convenience, and lighting in the spots you actually control daily. Expand from there based on what you'll really use.

The under-investment trap is the network. Smart homes are only as reliable as the Wi-Fi behind them; cheap out on the router and mesh coverage and your devices will drop offline and frustrate you daily. A solid network is the unglamorous foundation that makes everything else work.

Security, ongoing costs, and getting it installed

Two ongoing considerations: privacy and subscriptions. Cameras, locks, and assistants collect data, so favor reputable brands with strong security practices and keep firmware updated. And many devices — especially security cameras and monitoring — carry monthly subscription fees for cloud storage or professional monitoring, which add up; factor them into the true cost, not just the hardware.

Fall is a popular time to set up before the holidays. Most smart home spending is paid from savings given the flexible budget, though a major professionally installed system can be folded into a renovation. If you go professional, get quotes that specify the ecosystem, the devices and hub, any wiring or networking work, the programming and setup, and which features carry ongoing subscription fees. For DIY, plan the ecosystem and network first, then add devices in priority order.

More Smart Home Setup Questions

Should I do a smart home myself or hire a pro?

DIY with Wi-Fi devices and an app is cheap, flexible, and great for renters or starter setups. Professional installation is worth it for hardwired systems, whole-home lighting and audio, and seamless integration that's hard to achieve device by device.

What's the biggest smart home mistake to avoid?

Buying devices from different brands that don't work together. Choose your ecosystem or platform first, then buy devices that natively support it — and don't skimp on the Wi-Fi network that everything depends on.

Financing

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How to Pay for a Smart Home Setup

At a national average of $3,000, a smart home setup is a project most homeowners finance rather than pay for upfront. These guides walk through the options that best fit a job this size:

Need help financing your smart home setup?

Most homeowners don't pay for major projects out of pocket. Explore your options — from HELOCs to personal loans — and find the best rate.

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