Smart Home

Best Smart Home Devices for Apartments That Don't Require Drilling

A practical renter-friendly guide to smart home device categories that can work without drilling, rewiring, or permanent apartment changes.

Quick answer

For most renters, the safest smart-home starting point is plug-in, bulb-based, tabletop, or removable-placement gear: smart plugs, smart bulbs, leak sensors, contact sensors where allowed, tabletop speakers/displays, and portable cameras only where privacy and lease rules allow them.

Avoid starting with hardwired switches, drilled cameras, permanent mounts, or anything that changes building wiring unless you have permission and know the electrical/safety requirements.

Quick verdict

Best overall
Plug-in and bulb-based starter categories
Best budget
Smart plugs for simple lamp and routine control
Best for renters
No-drill, no-rewire, removable setups
Best for families
Sensors and routines that reduce everyday friction without adding risky cords or loose devices
Avoid if
Your lease forbids adhesive devices, cameras, or electrical changes

Renter-friendly categories to consider

No-drill starter

Smart plugs

Lamps, fans, holiday lights, and simple routines where the plugged-in device is safe to switch on and off.

Apartment fit
Good because it is portable and reversible.
Avoid for
High-draw or safety-sensitive appliances unless the device and manufacturer guidance clearly allow it.

Verification: Category guidance only — check each product's load rating, indoor/outdoor rating, ecosystem, and manufacturer instructions.

No-drill smart home category fit

CriteriaSetup frictionRenter fitCheck before buying
Smart bulbsUsually lowGood when bulb swaps are allowedBulb size, brightness, dimmer compatibility, hub/ecosystem
Smart plugsUsually lowGood for lamps and safe plug-in loadsLoad rating, plug shape, app/ecosystem, indoor/outdoor use
Leak sensorsLowGood near sinks, laundry, water heaters, and aquariums if placement is allowedBattery, alert method, hub requirement, where it can sit safely
Contact sensorsLow to mediumDepends on adhesive and surfaceRemoval method, paint risk, hub requirement, lease rules
Portable camerasMediumOnly where lease, privacy, and placement rules allowRecording rules, account security, power cord safety, field of view

Verify product-specific specs, compatibility, and availability before publishing.

What to skip first

Skip hardwired smart switches, drilled doorbells, permanent camera mounts, and complex security systems until you have clear permission. These can create lease issues, electrical risk, or move-out repair work.

Good first-room setups

Living room

  • smart plug for a lamp
  • smart bulb if the fixture allows it
  • tabletop speaker/display if you already want voice routines
  • cable management before adding more devices

Kitchen or laundry area

  • leak sensor near water-risk spots if placement is allowed
  • smart plug only for safe, appropriate loads
  • avoid automating heat-producing appliances casually

Bedroom

  • smart bulb or plug-in lamp routine
  • button or voice shortcut for lights
  • avoid cameras unless there is a very specific and privacy-safe reason

Pet or family spaces

  • keep cords controlled
  • avoid small loose devices where kids or pets can reach them
  • use sensors and routines to reduce friction, not create more things to manage

Pros

  • Reversible setups are easier to undo before moving out.
  • Plug-in and bulb-based devices are simpler than rewiring.
  • Room-by-room upgrades keep the budget controlled.

Cons

  • Adhesive can still damage paint.
  • Camera rules can vary by lease, building, and household.
  • Hardwired changes are not renter-safe without permission and proper electrical context.

Before buying smart home devices for an apartment

  • Check whether the install is reversible.
  • Verify ecosystem, hub, Matter, Wi-Fi, or voice-assistant requirements.
  • Avoid hardwired changes unless you have permission and qualified help where required.
  • Confirm whether adhesive, cameras, sensors, or hallway-facing devices are allowed.
  • Check load ratings and manufacturer instructions before using smart plugs.
Live tool

Smart Home Starter Kit Builder

Choose a conservative starter-kit shape by ecosystem, budget, rooms, kids, pets, and no-drill constraints.

Sources checked

FAQ

Do renters need a smart home hub?

Not always. Many starter devices can work through a phone app, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, Matter controller, or a common voice-assistant ecosystem. The exact requirement depends on the product.

Are adhesive sensors safe for apartment walls?

Sometimes, but adhesive can still damage paint or finishes. Check lease rules, manufacturer removal instructions, and test carefully in a low-visibility spot if allowed.

Are smart plugs safe for every appliance?

No. Check the smart plug rating and the appliance manufacturer guidance. Avoid casual automation of high-draw, heating, or safety-sensitive appliances.