Matter launch event smart home news products – Breaking News & Latest Updates 2026
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Matter’s big coming out party is going down today, November 3rd, in Amsterdam at the Matter launch event. After years of waiting and multiple delays, companies are finally announcing their product roadmaps for the transition to Matter, the new smart home standard that promises to fix smart home interoperability.

Matter has been developed by Amazon, Apple, Google, and Samsung, alongside many other smart home companies like Eve, Nanoleaf, Wyze, Lutron, Somfy, and Signify (Philips Hue), to name just a few. Perhaps most importantly, once they’re in your home, Matter devices can operate entirely locally, talking to each other over Thread and Wi-Fi and not going through the cloud.

Matter’s governing body, the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA), says 190 products are now certified or close to gaining certification in the first Matter categories. These categories include smart lighting, smart plugs, smart thermostats, smart shades, smart sensors, and smart locks.

Below, you’ll find all the announcements and analysis from the event.

  • Some of my favorite smart kitchen gadgets are on sale for Prime Day

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    8A0A0340
    The GE Profile Stand Mixer knows when your meringue is whipped.
    Photo by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

    Regular readers of The Verge will know that my favorite room in my smart home is my kitchen. As an avid home cook and mom of two, this is the room where I spend the most time, and where I look for as much convenience and extra help as I can get. As a result, I’m always testing new connected gadgets in a quest to find the best ones — those that offer the most value and save me the most time.

    But the problem with kitchen gadgets is that they are so expensive. This makes Amazon’s Prime Big Deal Days a good time to get a great deal on some of my favorite smart kitchen products. Here’s a roundup of some of the deepest discounts I spied on products I’ve found genuinely useful in my smart kitchen.

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  • I found the first Matter smart fridge

    I tracked down the Bosch 100 Series fridge at CES. It’s the company’s first to support the Matter standard, enabling local connectivity to any smart home ecosystem.
    I tracked down the Bosch 100 Series fridge at CES. It’s the company’s first to support the Matter standard, enabling local connectivity to any smart home ecosystem.
    I tracked down the Bosch 100 Series fridge at CES. It’s the company’s first to support the Matter standard, enabling local connectivity to any smart home ecosystem.
    Photo by Eelco Lammertink for The Verge

    Home appliance manufacturer Bosch is showing off its first Matter-enabled appliance on the show floor at CES this week. The 100 Series French Door Bottom Mount Refrigerator launched in November and should be available to buy in the US this spring.

    The fridge retails for $2,500 and has a chip on board that supports Matter. A firmware update to the smart home standard will come this summer, says Eelco Lammertink of BSH, which owns Bosch, Siemens, Thermador, and Gaggenau.

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  • Matter is here, but it’s still a long road to the simple smart home

    A Matter QR code on an Eve Energy smart plug. To pair a device to a Matter app, you’ll just need to scan this code.
    A Matter QR code on an Eve Energy smart plug. To pair a device to a Matter app, you’ll just need to scan this code.
    A Matter QR code on an Eve Energy smart plug. To pair a device to a Matter app, you’ll just need to scan this code.

    At the official launch event for Matter this week, I saw a lot of exciting things: a Google Nest Hub controlling an Eve Energy smart plug; a Wiz light bulb working with Apple Home; a Yale smart lock talking to a SmartThings hub over Thread. None of these things were possible before Matter. And all of these things worked well in their demos using voice, app, and other smart home control interfaces — even in the interference hell of a mini-trade show floor.

    But I also saw that Matter has a long way to go before it fully delivers on its promise of an interoperable and simple smart home. A phrase I heard a lot throughout the two-day event was, “Matter is a journey,” followed by, “This is just the beginning.”

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  • Thomas Ricker

    Thomas Ricker

    Here’s Aqara’s new Thread-enabled door and window sensor.

    Sure, Aqara’s Door and Window Sensor P2 is just two chunks of rounded white plastic. But things like color, size (it’s smaller than it looks), and logo placement are important when deciding if you’ll attach one to every door and window of your Matter-enabled smart home to trigger automations. The Thread-enabled sensor isn’t yet Matter-certified, but we saw this prototype working at yesterday’s Matter launch event.

    Photo of the Aqara Door and Window Sensor P2 mounted to a plastic demonstration board.
    A prototype of the Thread-enabled Door and Window Sensor P2 from Aqara.
  • Thomas Ricker

    Thomas Ricker

    Philips Hue Bridge is getting updated to Matter early next year

    Philips Hue Bridge device shown wall-mounted above a table near a lamp.
    Philips Hue Bridge device shown wall-mounted above a table near a lamp.
    Image: Philips Hue

    The Philips Hue Bridge is now Matter certified, with a software update coming to all users by Q1 2023. The free update will make most existing and new Hue lights and accessories Matter compatible. Developers, or anyone willing to live on the edge, can access the beta firmware as of today.

    News of the Hue Bridge certification first leaked via the Connectivity Standards Alliance’s Matter certification database early Thursday morning, just as the Matter launch event kicked off in Amsterdam.

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  • Nathan Edwards

    Nathan Edwards

    Level locks had a secret Thread radio this whole time

    Photo of the Level Lock Plus in satin nickel installed on a door. The door is ajar, and the deadbolt is extended.
    Photo of the Level Lock Plus in satin nickel installed on a door. The door is ajar, and the deadbolt is extended.
    The Level Lock Plus and Level’s other locks will soon work with many more smart home platforms.
    Photo by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

    Level’s entire lineup of Bluetooth smart locks — best known for hardly looking like smart locks at all — have had hardware support for Thread this whole time and will soon be updated to support Matter over Thread. You love to see it.

    Level’s smart locks, which include the Bolt, Lock, Lock Touch, and the just-reviewed Lock Plus with Home Key, are clever and discreet — the Bolt fits entirely within the cutout of your existing deadbolt. But they were Bluetooth-only, and smart home integration and out-of-home control were limited to Apple Home (with a Bluetooth connection to a HomePod Mini or Apple TV) and Ring (if connected to a Sidewalk Bridge like the Ring Video Doorbell Pro). With such limited platform support, Level’s locks have been pretty niche.

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  • We’re getting our first look at Matter devices today, and here’s what’s coming next

    A purple, blue, and white illustration of the Matter logo
    A purple, blue, and white illustration of the Matter logo
    The CSA is hosting an event in Amsterdam this week to celebrate the launch of the new smart home standard Matter.
    Illustration: The Verge

    Matter was finally released last month, and now, we are getting our first look at the devices that will work with the new smart home interoperability standard. At a Matter launch event in Amsterdam hosted by the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA), the organization announced that over 190 products are now certified or close to gaining certification in the first Matter categories. These include smart lighting, smart plugs, smart thermostats, smart shades, smart sensors, and smart locks. That’s a relatively small number in the infinite pool of smart home devices, but it’s a good start.

    Today, the CSA announced four new device categories that are coming next, in addition to cameras, home appliances, robot vacuums, and more advanced energy management categories already announced. These are garage door controllers and electronic gates, environmental quality sensors and controls (such as indoor air quality monitors and air purifiers), smoke and carbon monoxide detectors, and ambient motion and presence sensing.

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  • Amazon announces a phased rollout of Matter to its Alexa smart home platform

    Amazon’s latest smart speaker, the fifth-gen Echo Dot with Clock, sitting on a table showing the time.
    Amazon’s latest smart speaker, the fifth-gen Echo Dot with Clock, sitting on a table showing the time.
    Amazon’s latest smart speaker, the fifth-gen Echo Dot with Clock, will be a Matter controller next month.
    Photo by Jennifer Pattison Tuohy / The Verge

    Amazon will start its Matter journey slowly, bringing support for the new smart home standard to 17 Echo devices in December. But this first rollout will only be Matter over Wi-Fi (no Thread, yet), compatible only with Android phones, and cover just three device types: smart plugs, smart bulbs, and smart switches. Amazon announced the news at the Matter launch event in Amsterdam this week and says it will expand the rollout to iOS and Thread early next year, when it will also add more of the device types Matter supports.

    The company, which is a founding member of the new smart home interoperability standard, also announced that Matter device makers will need to go through Amazon’s Works With Alexa program to get the WWA badge on their product pages. But they can do this in tandem with Matter certification. If a device is Matter certified, it will work with Alexa, regardless of whether it has the WWA certification.

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  • Thomas Ricker

    Thomas Ricker

    Why Matter matters in one chart.

    See the green and blue bars on the far right? That giant blue bar represents the expected growth in smart devices by 2030. Matter is here to make sure they work easily together. Good luck.