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Aqara Launches New HomeKit-Compatible Presence Sensor

Aqara today introduced a new Presence Sensor that is designed to keep smart home products like lights turned on when someone is in the room. The Presence Sensor FP1E uses Zigbee, but it is able to connect to HomeKit and other smart home platforms through an Aqara Matter bridge.

aqara presence sensor
The Presence Sensor FP1E uses millimeter wave technology to detect even minute human movements for prompt presence detection that can be used to trigger ‌HomeKit‌ automations. If you want to have a light come on in the laundry room when you go inside, for example, you need a HomeKit-compatible sensor.

A Presence Sensor differs from a motion detection sensor by continuing to recognize when someone is in the room, keeping the automation active. A standard motion sensor might turn on the lights, but will turn off on a timer rather than the continued presence of a person. The FP1E is able to determine that a person is in the room even when the person is sitting or lying still, plus it can recognize when a person leaves the room to trigger an automation to turn off the lights or other home product.

Aqara says that the new Presence Sensor is able to detect presence within a distance of up to 20 feet, and it can monitor a room that is up to 538 square feet in size if it is mounted on the ceiling. The sensor is able to distinguish human movement from pets and inanimate objects like curtains that might shift from the air conditioner.

The FP1E Presence Sensor joins Aqara's previous Presence Sensor FP2, which offers multi-person detection and zone-based automation triggers. The FP1E Presence Sensor is more affordable at $50, and it can be purchased from Amazon starting today.

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Top Rated Comments

21 months ago
Why do companies continue to do this crap. Matter and thread is supposed to improve the smart home, yet some devices still require a hub, and so many lack thread.

Why?
Score: 8 Votes (Like | Disagree)
21 months ago
Siri has been sucking so bad lately I fear a light sensor in my laundry room will cause my garage door to open.
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
satpalram Avatar
21 months ago
Needs the Aqara Hub.

Can Matter remove the need for a hub from each and every brand?
Score: 6 Votes (Like | Disagree)
macduke Avatar
21 months ago

If you want to have a light come on in the laundry room when you go inside, for example, you need a HomeKit-compatible sensor.
So for applications like this, I find it's more effective to get a cheaper alternative like the Lutron Maestro Motion Sensor Switch ('https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B005WM3C42'). Specifically for a laundry room, and other rooms like closets, the garage, my workshop, and storage room in the basement, it's great because I don't need smart control over those rooms in the sense of being able to control them with my phone or voice. They are more contained and dark spaces that I just need a basic IR sensor that can detect when I enter the room. You don't always need an expensive connected setup!

I have them set for different deactivation intervals depending on the room. The laundry room and walk in closet are small so it will always pick up on motion, and it's great for when you're carrying a basket in and don't have the hand available to turn on the switch, so I have it set to 1 minute delay before it turns off after it stops detecting motion for those rooms. For my garage, it is larger and sometimes if I'm in the corner getting something off a shelf behind the car it might turn off so I set it to a 5 minute delay, which works great with the high powered LEDs that I installed that make my high ceiling garage really bright. Same 5 minute timer for the storage room, which have a lot of lights that turn on including an LED bar that I wired in over our deep freezer. Then for my workshop, I put a 15 minute timer, as my workshop is a bit sprawling so if I'm in the back around the corner looking for something in storage or looking through my wood stock, I don't want it to go off. It works very well since I'm usually in the main section working 99% of the time where the sensor can see me.

My main problem with them is that you can't set an exact light level at which they will activate, so it might not be the best for some rooms, but I heard that if you turn them off shortly after they auto turn on, it's supposed to pick up on that and be less sensitive after a while. But the biggest problem is I wish that there was a way to easily deactivate the motion sensing, or have the motion sensing only work on a set schedule. That's where something like this would be more useful. After my wife shut down her daycare business last year, I have been slowly working towards repurposing that space for a movie room downstairs and have been planning out everything. A smart sensor like this would be great because I could hook it into scenes to make it not activate while watching a movie. I could setup automations such that if the Apple TV downstairs is playing, it could activate movie mode and only turn on the ambient backlight behind the TV and disable the motion sensors so it won't turn on any of the other lighting.

So while this is useful, I don't see the point in using it for simple spaces like laundry rooms, but I do see the application in some shared living spaces or bedrooms where you want to keep the motion sensors from activating at night but still want smart control.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
CalMin Avatar
21 months ago

Why do companies continue to do this crap. Matter and thread is supposed to improve the smart home, yet some devices still require a hub, and so many lack thread.

Why?
Agree. This is really frustrating, expensive, and hostile to the consumer. HomeKit was supposed to integrate this but no-one wants to give that much control to Apple or shut-out Android users.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
kylelerner Avatar
21 months ago
Now we just need a Homekit-enabled toilet-lid motor.
Score: 4 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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