The consumer-friendly giant versus the open-source powerhouse — which smart home hub actually wins for your setup?
April 5, 2026 | 16 min readHome Assistant wins on automation power and local control. SmartThings wins on simplicity and mobile app experience. Choose SmartThings if you want plug-and-play. Choose Home Assistant if you want total control and don't mind the learning curve.
Samsung SmartThings is a cloud-first consumer platform — polished app, broad device support, and active development backed by Samsung. It's the default choice for mainstream users building their first smart home.
Home Assistant is an open-source platform that runs locally on hardware you own (Raspberry Pi, dedicated server, or Home Assistant Yellow). No cloud dependency, complete data ownership, and automation capabilities that dwarf any commercial platform.
SmartThings takes 15-20 minutes. Download the app, create an account, plug in the hub, and start adding devices via auto-discovery or manual pairing. The new 2025 app interface is genuinely excellent.
Home Assistant setup varies wildly based on your hardware:
Winner: SmartThings for beginners. Home Assistant is not hard, but it requires more technical confidence.
| Platform | Zigbee | Z-Wave | Matter | Wi-Fi | Thread |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| SmartThings 2025 | Native | Via adapter | Native | Yes | Yes |
| Home Assistant | Native | Native | Native | Yes | Yes |
Home Assistant typically supports more devices through community-developed integrations. If a device works on the local network, Home Assistant can almost certainly control it. SmartThings relies on manufacturer partnerships for official support.
SmartThings automations are powered by a visual editor that covers 90% of use cases. Triggers, conditions, and actions are easy to chain together.
Home Assistant's automations are defined in YAML but can also be configured via the visual editor. The difference is depth:
Example: A Home Assistant automation can detect you're home based on which phone Wi-Fi is connected, check the weather forecast, and only turn on the sprinkler system if no rain is expected AND you're actually home AND it's before 8am.
| Aspect | SmartThings | Home Assistant |
|---|---|---|
| Local Processing | Partial (Edge Drivers) | Full (100% local) |
| Cloud Dependency | Some features need cloud | Zero cloud required |
| Internet for Setup | Required | Required |
| Internet for Runtime | Some automations | Not needed |
| Data Privacy | Samsung cloud | Your server only |
This is Home Assistant's killer feature — when your internet goes down, your SmartThings automations may fail for cloud-dependent features. Home Assistant keeps running regardless.
SmartThings' 2025 app redesign is excellent — card-based dashboard, intuitive device grouping, and a polished automation builder. It's one of the best consumer smart home apps available.
Home Assistant's official app is functional but less polished. The Lovelace dashboard is fully customizable but requires setup effort. Many users prefer the browser dashboard on tablets. Third-party apps like Fully Kiosk improve the tablet experience.
SmartThings: Official integrations with Samsung TV, Family Hub appliances, Amazon Alexa, Google Home, and IFTTT. The SmartThings community also creates unofficial edge drivers.
Home Assistant: Over 2,500 official integrations. Everything from Tesla and Tesla Powerwall, to Yamaha receivers, to custom RF sensors, to HomeKit, to weather services, to ESPHome devices. The breadth is unmatched.
| Cost | SmartThings | Home Assistant |
|---|---|---|
| Hub Hardware | $149 (SmartThings Hub) | $35-100 (Pi 4 + accessories) or $149 (Yellow) |
| Software | Free | Free (open source) |
| Subscription | Optional ($4.99/mo for video) | Optional ($7.99/mo for cloud backup) |
| Total Year 1 | $149 | $35-149 |
| 5-Year Total | $149 + subscriptions | $35-149 (no subscriptions needed) |
Choose SmartThings if you want the easiest path to a smart home, prefer a polished app experience, are OK with some cloud features, and don't need advanced automations.
Choose Home Assistant if you value data privacy, want automations that run without internet, enjoy technical projects, or have a large mix of devices from different ecosystems.
The good news? Many users run both — SmartThings handles simple everyday automations while Home Assistant manages complex routines, presence detection, and legacy devices.