Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Smart Home
  3. News

How to use Siri to control Apple HomeKit

Add as a preferred source on Google

So you like the idea of controlling your home from an iPhone or iPad with Apple’s new and emerging HomeKit smart home platform, but … er … “Siri, where the &%#!! Are the instructions?”

Apple has just released some Siri commands for you to use to control the few HomeKit-compatible devices available. To start, you’ll need iOS 8.1 or later and one of the HomeKit accessories announced earlier this month.

Recommended Videos

HomeKit can work with the ecobee3 smart thermostat, Elgato’s Eve sensor platform (door, window, weather, etc.), and an iHome smart plug. Insteon hub and Lutron smart lighting bridge and products.

One you pair the accessory and iOS device with the set-up code that comes with a HomeKit-enabled product, Apple says you can use the following commands:

  • “Turn on the lights” or “Turn off the lights.”
  • “Dim the lights” or “Set the brightness to 50 [or another] percent.”
  • “Set the temperature to 68 degrees [or another temperature].”
  • “Turn on the coffee maker.”

Apple says you may also be able to group accessories together in homes, rooms, or scenes. This is useful if you want to control a group of accessories with a single Siri command. You’ll need to set up these groups within the third-party app, and some apps might not have this option.

Here are sample commands for different rooms and zones:

  • “Turn on the upstairs lights.”
  • “Turn off Chloe’s light.”
  • “Turn down the kitchen lights”
  • “Dim the lights in the dining room to 50 percent.”
  • “Make the living room lights the brightest.”
  • “Set the Tahoe house to 72 degrees.”
  • “Set the thermostat downstairs to 70.”
  • “Turn on the printer in the office.”
  • “Set up for a party, Siri.”
  • “Set the dinner scene.”
  • “Set my bedtime scene.”

Siri commands for some accessories won’t work while your iOS device is locked.

You can also your HomeKit-enabled accessories when you’re away from home using your iOS device and an Apple TV (third-generation or later) with software version 7.0 or later. According to Apple: “Sign into iCloud with the same Apple ID on your iOS device and Apple TV, and you’ll be able to use Siri commands to remotely control your accessories. If your remote access isn’t working, sign out of iCloud on your Apple TV, then sign back in.”

If you have security issues you can delete your home data from iCloud.

Steve Castle
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Steve Castle’s fascination with technology began as a staff writer for luxury magazine Robb Report, where he reported on…
Google just made Gemini for Home a lot better at running your smart home
Google just updated Gemini for Home with smarter features and faster controls.
Google-gemini-for-home-updates

If you have a Google smart display or speaker at home, there are new updates you should know about. Google has rolled out a fresh batch of improvements to Gemini for Home, making the assistant noticeably smarter and faster across smart speakers and displays.

Gemini for Home is getting smarter and more personal

Read more
Pet tech is ridiculous, and I hate how badly I want it
Smart feeders, GPS collars, pet cameras, and health trackers all feel like anxiety with Wi-Fi. The annoying part is that some of them might actually help
Computer Hardware, Electronics, Hardware

One of my cats recently caught some kind of bug, which meant a vet visit, blood tests, and about $135 poorer. After all that, it turned out to be a normal fever. Good news for the cat. Slightly humiliating news for the me who spent the next few hours wondering whether a gadget could've helped me panic more efficiently.

That's the problem with pet tech. It sounds ridiculous until life gives you one weird symptom, one missed meal, or one unusually quiet afternoon. There are feeders that portion meals from an app, collars that track escape artists, cameras that let owners spy on naps, and water fountains that monitor drinking habits because apparently even the bowl needed analytics.

Read more
This Google Home update is all about smarter automation
More control, more conditions, more real-world use.
Google Home Nest Automations Featured

Google isn’t just tweaking Google Home this time; instead, it’s quietly turning it into something far more capable. And the focus is clear: give users real control over how their smart homes behave.

What’s new in the Google Home update?

Read more