Smart homes promise efficiency. Lower bills. Less waste. More control. But not every “smart” upgrade actually delivers on that promise. Some make a real dent in your energy use. Others just give you more ways to check an app.
This is the one that earns the hype. A smart thermostat can automatically adjust your home’s temperature based on your schedule, habits, or whether you’re even home at all.
That means:
The key? Let it do its job. If you’re constantly overriding it, you’re just turning a smart device into a manual one.
Smart bulbs alone don’t save much energy. Smart lighting systems do.
The real benefit comes from:
Lights left on in empty rooms are one of the easiest ways to waste energy—and one of the easiest to fix.
Some devices never really turn off. TVs, coffee makers, gaming consoles—many sit in standby mode, quietly pulling power 24/7.
Smart plugs let you:
Heating and cooling make up a huge portion of your energy bill.
Smart blinds help manage that by:
Water systems are often overlooked, but they’re a major energy draw.
Smart upgrades here can:
They’re impressive. Screens. Cameras. Apps. Notifications. But in terms of energy savings? Minimal.
They don’t significantly reduce usage compared to efficient standard models, and often use more power because of all the added features.
They make your home easier to control. But they don’t save energy by themselves. Unless they’re actively managing other devices (like thermostats or lighting), they’re just another always-on device drawing power.
Newer TVs can be more efficient, but that’s not because they’re “smart.” The smart features don’t reduce energy use. In fact, constant connectivity and background updates can slightly increase it.
A smart home should reduce effort, not create more of it. Ting fiber is built for exactly that. With reliable, symmetrical speeds and no slowdowns between devices, your smart home can run the way it’s supposed to, quietly, consistently, and without interruption.
Because saving energy shouldn’t mean managing more. It should mean doing less, and getting more out of your home.