How much does smart home installation cost in United Kingdom?
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Key takeaways
- Most smart home installation jobs in United Kingdom land between £200–£20,000 — known locally as smart home / home automation installer.
- Smart home installation is unlicensed in the UK, but fixed mains electrical work is notifiable under Part P of the Building Regulations and should be done by a registered competent electrician. Doorbell/CCTV cameras capturing beyond your boundary bring UK GDPR duties for domestic users.
- Prices below are researched national ranges, updated July 2026 — not quotes.
Smart Home Installation prices by job size in United Kingdom
| Job size | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| Starter setup Hub, smart lighting, a speaker and a camera — mostly plug-in | £200 | £600 | £1,500 |
| Multi-room automation Switches, blinds, sensors and cameras across a floor | £1,500 | £3,500 | £7,000 |
| Whole-home integrated system Wired control platform, lighting, climate, security and AV | £5,000 | £10,000 | £20,000 |
Per-unit rates
| Unit | Low | Typical | High |
|---|---|---|---|
| per hour (installer) | £45 | £60 | £90 |
What affects the price
- Job size and scope — bigger or more complex jobs move you up the ranges above.
- Access and condition — hard-to-reach areas, older properties or neglected maintenance add labour time.
- Materials and quality level — where materials are involved, the grade you choose often matters more than labour.
- Urgency — same-day or out-of-hours work usually carries a premium.
- Where you live — large metros in United Kingdom typically run above the national range; smaller towns below it.
How to save
- Get at least three quotes and compare like-for-like scopes, not just totals.
- Be flexible on timing — off-peak slots are often cheaper.
- Bundle related tasks into one visit to spread call-out costs.
- Agree the scope in writing up front to avoid change-order surprises.
How to hire a smart home installation pro in United Kingdom
- Confirm mains work is done by a registered electrician and is Part P compliant/notified
- Ask which standards the system uses (Matter, Zigbee, Z-Wave) and whether it runs locally
- Get device count, integration scope and any subscription costs in writing
- Set up a separate IoT network and strong unique credentials for cameras and locks
- Confirm how you add or replace devices yourself after handover
- Check public liability insurance
Red flags
- Mains wiring by an installer not registered for electrical work
- Proprietary cloud lock-in with no open-standard path
- No plan for local/offline operation
- Cheap no-name security cameras
- Vague on subscription fees
How Handld researches prices
These are researched estimates, not quotes and not our transaction data. We compile ranges from published sources — national statistics, trade bodies and incumbent cost guides — normalise them to GBP, and adjust city pages by a population-based cost tier. Last updated July 2026. Basis: MyBuilder smart home installation cost guide; Checkatrade 2025/2026 electrician rate data.
Frequently asked questions
What questions should I ask a smart home installer?
Ask which standards the system uses (Matter/Zigbee/Z-Wave), whether it works locally offline, who does mains wiring and their electrical licence, what the ongoing subscription costs are, and how you add or replace devices later without them.
Do I need a professional or can I DIY?
Plug-in and Wi-Fi devices (bulbs, plugs, cameras, a voice hub) are genuinely DIY. You need a professional — and often a licensed electrician — the moment you touch mains wiring: hardwired switches, dimmers, wired sensors, or a structured-wiring control system.
Will my smart home still work if the internet goes down?
Depends on the architecture. Cloud-dependent Wi-Fi gadgets lose most functions offline; local-first hubs and wired systems keep core automations (lights, locks, scenes) running. If reliability matters, ask specifically about local control before buying.
Should I worry about a system becoming obsolete?
Yes — proprietary ecosystems can be abandoned or paywalled. Favour devices supporting open standards like Matter and Thread, and avoid locking your whole home into one vendor's cloud. Ask the installer how the system copes if a brand discontinues support.
How much does smart home installation cost?
A starter setup — a hub, some smart lighting and a speaker or two — is a few hundred to a couple of thousand; multi-room automation with switches, blinds and cameras runs into the mid four figures; a whole-home integrated system with wiring and a control platform is five figures. Device count and wiring drive the price more than brand.
Wi-Fi or wired/hub-based — which should I choose?
Wi-Fi devices are cheap and easy but can get flaky at scale and depend on the cloud. Hub-based systems (Zigbee, Z-Wave, Matter) and wired control platforms are more reliable and responsive for a whole home, at higher upfront cost. Match the system to how many devices you'll run.
What does smart home installation cost in the UK?
Most households spend £200-£2,000, with whole-home systems £5,000-£10,000+ and high-end installs reaching £15,000-£35,000. Electricians run about £55/hr outside London, £75-£90/hr in London.
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