this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2026
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Hi everyone. I recently started my Home Assistant journey by replacing Google Calendar and Keep Notes with Home Assistant. A couple of light bulbs burnt out and I want to replace them with bulbs that I can use exclusivity on Home Assistant and bypass the manufacturers app entirely. What brand should I look for?

These are standard wall mounted lights in my kitchen and my laundry room.

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[–] bluGill@fedia.io 6 points 9 hours ago

General advice is smart switches, dumb bulbs. Switches mean that you can control the light without getting out your phone, or whatever it is you use to control the bulb. Sure HA can talk to many bulbs, but only if the switch is on. Guests will not have the ability to control your bulbs - either there is too much work to install an app for a short stay, or the system is a security nightmare (often both). Use a smart switch because they have a control on the wall that guests can use to get what they want done without having to worry about apps.

Most often you can choose bulbs with the right color temperature, but if not some dimable bulbs change color temperature. If this is not good enough two lights: a general room like, and a separate special effects light, don't combine them (HA can control both, but they are separate systems generally not used at the same time)

[–] CompactFlax@discuss.tchncs.de 4 points 8 hours ago

Look for zigbee, thread, and/or matter.

+1 on smart switches/dumb bulbs for hardwired fixtures. There are exceptions, but not many.

[–] MuttMutt@lemmy.world 1 points 6 hours ago

I run a hybrid setup. I'm going to go in depth on some stuff because lights and switches are only the beginning.

I'm using a mix of rgb bulbs and switches. Every room tends to have one of each minimum. The reason for this is that I can do fun things with RGB bulbs like have them change color in sequence https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x_LUe0OMj70

Or the RGB's can visually give information like weather conditions when you wake up, or storm alerts if you are gaming with a headset. I am messing with a follow me setup and my stepson at the same time by changing the color of his RGB bulb based on my location in the house.

I'm also using old phones and tablets at multiple locations so control of them is no big deal when the need arises and these devices also allow quick access to cameras and other information and controls. Places where I don't have tablets or phones will be eventually getting homemade smart switches to control things.

I've found that the Sonoff ZBMINI series is very nice to use if you can fit them in the box. They turn any old dumb switch into a smart switch and they can be used with low voltage switches if they have 2 switch legs. The switch legs can accept high voltage but when they are wired together they run 5v, you just have to check with a meter. They can also turn outlets into smart outlets without a switch connected at all. Anything that runs on a battery is zigbee and I'm slowly migrating anything I can't build myself that way.

I use WLED for RGB strips, build my own indoor sensors and fixed placement switch controls using ESP32's and ESP8266's so they all use wifi or eventually will be POE wired. I also built my own controller for my water heater using an ESP8266, DS18B20's, and a multi pole solid state relay. I setup my own water meter using a meter with a built in pulse output and an ESP8266. My electric meter uses an ESP32, a pair of ATM90E32AS, and some current transformers. Everything setup on ESP's run ESPhome.

The best setup is what YOU choose works best for your home and situation. Anyone who says otherwise has a different mindset, situation, and design ethos. Many people claim wifi devices are always problematic, the only reason why I'm switching from them is is harder to get them off the manufacturer's ecosystem as for me they have worked flawlessly. I run a very powerful router with a 10G fiber LAN backbone and commercial grade switches and multiple commercial grade AP's because I am building things in a way that suits my usage and experience. I have pulled over 2500 feet of ethernet through the house along with some OM3 fiber and still need to pull more to be finished.

BTW I've been told over and over again how many things I do won't work or are wrong or are going to start a fire etcetera etcetera. My 240v water heater setup has been up and running for over 6 years now with no issue. If you really understand how things work and research the parts you are using anything is possible. Just remember that if you DIY you are the person responsible for the results.

[–] fan0m@lemmy.world 2 points 9 hours ago (2 children)

Phillips hue bulbs are solid but on the pricy side.

Govee is ok, I recommend making sure you get ones that have Matter capability. Same with LifX brand.

Iim sure there are other brands but those are 3 I have experience with.

[–] GreatAlbatross@feddit.uk 1 points 8 hours ago

I can second the Hue bulbs.
They're good quality, and connect directly to a zigbee dongle without the Signiant app/Hub.

[–] Strit@lemmy.linuxuserspace.show 1 points 8 hours ago

In my area we have a brand called LEDvance, which ships both wifi and zigbee bulbs. I have some of the Zigbee ones and I don't need anything other than HomeAssistant to add them to my network.