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

Smart speakers vs. smart displays: which is right for you?

Add as a preferred source on Google
Woman using smart speaker while working in office.
Luis Alvarez/Getty Images

Smart displays and smart speakers often serve the hub of a connected smart home. Giving you the ability to issue commands to other gadgets, quickly check up on the local news, or stream your favorite music, smart displays and smart speakers are incredibly popular. The lineup of devices is better than ever today, with Amazon, Google, Sonos, Apple, and other big-name manufacturers churning out highly reviewed products.

But which is best for your home, a smart display with video capabilities or a simple smart speaker with robust audio output? Here’s a closer look at both to help you decide which one better fits your needs.

Recommended Videos

Size and Design

The Google Nest Audio.
Google

Smart speakers don’t have to pack a touchscreen, so their designs are generally smaller and more minimal. They also have a lot of design variety, from the orb-like Echo 5th Gen to the obelisk shape of the Buy at Google . They can come in small versions like the Nest Mini or HomePod Mini, and some options are even portable with a rechargeable battery so you can take them with you. One of the smallest smart speakers is the Echo Pop, standing less than 4 inches tall and 4 inches wide.

Smart displays give up these options for the sake of the touchscreen. That’s a powerful feature, but it does limit design, and experiments like the rotating Buy at Amazon (or the Facebook/Meta Portal devices) tend to be more awkward than not. They’re also not found in portable designs. The Echo Show 8 is a fairly standard size for a smart display and measures nearly eight inches wide and 5.5 inches tall.

Winner: Smart speakers

Sound

The Amazon Echo (4th Gen) Battery Base at a dinner party.
Amazon

The smart speaker design has another advantage: There’s more room for speakers, as well as easier placement options. That allows for Amazon’s 360-degree sound design for the Echo or the arrays of tweeters and woofers found in speakers like the Apple HomePod or Echo Studio. This often leads to superior sound, making smart speakers an excellent option for pumping a room full of tunes.

Smart displays, however, are more likely to hide speakers away in the base, where they can still do a fine job of playing music but can’t quite compete with smart speakers. Attempts like the Echo Show 10, which perches the screen above the speaker base, are better at this, but in general, smart displays fall behind on the audio side.

Winner: Smart speakers

Smart features and interactivity

The Nest Hub rests on a kitchen counter as a man cooks.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Both smart speakers and smart displays come with voice assistants, typically Google Assistant or Alexa (or in some cases, both), although the HomePod line offers Siri, too. The voice assistants themselves are largely the same. You can give the same commands, ask the same questions, and do everything from set timers to start voice chats.

But here is where the touchscreen starts to become so useful. They add a whole other layer of capabilities that smart speakers just can’t accommodate. You can stream video, allowing you to watch how-to videos, YouTube music videos, your favorite shows (a number of streaming apps are usually supported), news stories, and more. You can also browse visual results from the internet and select options to read more. Since smart displays typically come with cameras, you can also choose video chats instead of audio chats. While voice assistants can offer interactive games with either device, smart displays have more immersive games thanks to the many options the touchscreen provides. When not in use, the touchscreen can show a slideshow of photos, keep you updated about the weather, and more.

Winner: Smart displays

Placement and positioning

Amazon Echo Show 15 Smart Display on a wall.
Amazon

Where are you going to put your voice assistant device? Both smart speakers and smart displays have different strengths here. Smart speakers are generally more versatile. They don’t need to be close by to project sound, so they can be placed on a shelf, countertop, entryway table, and so on. Smaller versions can make great bedside alarm clocks (the newest Echo Dot even has an LED clock on it) or desktop voice assistants.

Smart displays need to be close at hand, close enough to touch and clearly view the screen, but you also want them nearby. They do better on a kitchen counter, on an office desk, on a central counter, and so on. The screens have also gotten larger, culminating in the current , which is large enough to be placed on the wall like a portrait. You can mount some smart speakers on the wall too, but the effect isn’t quite the same.

Winner: Tie

Privacy

Sonos Speaker Logo.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Privacy is always a big question with voice assistant devices: Can you trust the device to keep your personal information secure? Even worse, is there a chance that a smart speaker or smart display could spy on you, recording your audio or recording video of its surroundings unprompted?

Fortunately, voice assistants are programmed to only record commands following their wake words like “Alexa” or “Hey Google,” and you can adjust if these recordings are kept or not. Outside of someone hacking into the speaker or display (don’t buy these devices used), there’s not much chance of the device “spying” on anyone. The closest they get is features like Alexa’s “Drop In” feature, which allows select friends and family to initiate calls on Echo devices, and you can disable this option whenever you want.

But manufacturers know this isn’t quite enough. Today’s smart displays also come with buttons and shutters so you can manually disable mics and cameras so they can’t be used even if the software tries turning them on.

Winner: Tie

Pricing and availability

Blue HomePod Mini sitting on desk while person works.
Apple

If you want to save, which device is right for you? Standard smart speakers are typically right around $100, although there are exceptions like the Apple HomePod, which costs $300 and is more expensive than a large portion of smart speakers.

The mini versions of smart speakers can vary from $50 (the Nest Mini) to $100 (the HomePod mini) and are the best way to save if you are looking for deals.

Smart displays, meanwhile, can start around $100 (the Nest Hub) and can cost much more, up to $250 for something like the Echo Show 15. You won’t be finding any under $100 unless it’s incredibly small, like the Echo Show 5.

Winner: Smart speakers

Which smart device comes out on top?

Smart displays are easily the best choice in certain situations, such as a kitchen companion, a desktop device to stream shows while you are working, or an interactive hub for kids and grownups to play with. They also have additional value if you like video chats or want to stream live footage from your security cameras.

But for most other purposes, smart speakers win out. They come in a wide variety of sizes and styles, are generally more affordable, and tend to have better speaker designs. You can also place them just about anywhere within listening distance.

Tyler Lacoma
If it can be streamed, voice-activated, made better with an app, or beaten by mashing buttons, Tyler's into it. When he's not…
Topics
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
Bose turns up the volume on home audio with its sleekest and smartest Lifestyle Collection
Bose's newest home audio lineup arrives with bold promises: cinematic sound without the clutter, a decade-overdue soundbar redesign, and a speaker small enough for your bookshelf.
Bost Lifestyle Ultra ecosystem featured image.

Bose has pulled back the curtain on the Lifestyle Collection. It consists of three new premium audio products, built to work individually or as a unified system: Lifestyle Ultra Speaker ($299), Lifestyle Ultra Subwoofer ($899), and Lifestyle Ultra Soundbar ($1,099).  

All the products promise high-fidelity sound wrapped in materials that are aesthetic enough to double as home decor. Pre-orders for the products are already open at Bose’s official website, and availability begins May 15. 

Read more