meross Smart Power Strip Compatible with Apple HomeKit, Siri, Alexa, Google Home and SmartThings, WiFi Surge Protector with 4 AC Outlets, 4 USB Ports and 6ft Extension Cord, Voice and Remote Control
Original price was: $42.99.$32.78Current price is: $32.78.
Price: $42.99 - $32.78
(as of Oct 14, 2024 11:05:23 UTC – Details)
Product Description
Voice Control
Simply use your voice commands to control the home appliances.
APP Remote Control
Control 4 outlets separately and 4 USB ports together via Meross app/ Home app remotely.
1 Voice Control
2 APP Remote Control
Timer & Schedule
Countdown&Timer, sunrise sunset settings are supported.
Superfast Local Control
Millisecond response and no drop-off with superfast local control when you’re at home.
Offline Control
When the Internet is down, you can still control smart plugs in Home Wi-Fi network via Meross app.
1 Timer & Schedule
2 Superfast Local Control
3 Offline Control
Powerful & Mountable
Hardware Features Apple HomeKit Smart Power Strip
Input: 100-250V~, 50/60Hz, 15A; Output: 15A maximum load5V/2.4A for single USB port; 5V/4.0A for four USB ports14 AWG CORD(3*2.08 mm²), 6ft long.V-0 fire protection Material (ABS+PC ).Wireless Standards: IEEE 802.11 b/g/n, 2.4GHz only, 1T1R.
Individually Control 4 Smart Outlets
4 separately controllable outlets and 4 always-on USB ports to control your home devices.
4 Outlets and 4 USB Ports: Equipped with 4 individually controlled Outlets (15A maximum load) and 4 group controlled USB ports. Up to 4.0A for four USB ports. You can charge your cellphone, tablets, and other USB gadgets with smart power strip.
HomeKit Remote Control:This smart Wi-Fi surge protector with 4 Outlets and 4 USB Ports, ideal for home and office use. To enable HomeKit remote control, a HomePod, an Apple TV 4K or Apple TV HD or an iPad is needed as a Homekit bridge to connect it to your home WiFi network. If you don’t have these devices or you are an Android user, you can use the meross app to control home devices from anywhere anytime. No distance limitation.
Voice Control: Compatible With Apple HomeKit(iOS 13 or above), Siri, Alexa, Google Home and SmartThings, control your devices hands free, just make a voice command to turn on/off the connected devices. Works with any 2.4GHz or Dual Band WiFi router. No hub required.
Schedule and Timer Setting: WiFi Surge Protector supports to turn on and off the home or office devices automatically. Added benefit of saving energy when devices are not needed or are left on by accident. Support sunrise and sunset setting.
Safety Design:The smart power strip is made of flame retardant PC material and has been approved for safety and quality assurance (ETL and FCC certificate) and it supports any home device up to 15A. Never allow other low quality surge protector endanger the safety of your family.
Customers say
Customers like the functionality, ease of setup, and controllable ports of the power strip. They mention it works great with automation and Siri voice commands, and is simple to add to the app. Some are satisfied with the value for money, design, and quality of the product. However, some customers have reported issues with connectivity and build quality.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
13 reviews for meross Smart Power Strip Compatible with Apple HomeKit, Siri, Alexa, Google Home and SmartThings, WiFi Surge Protector with 4 AC Outlets, 4 USB Ports and 6ft Extension Cord, Voice and Remote Control
Add a review
Original price was: $42.99.$32.78Current price is: $32.78.
NYC Reader –
Bought one, couldn’t buy the second one fast enough.
I purchased one of these to put under my bed to control the lamps, and everything else on the nightstand. It took minutes to setup, works with the native app, HomeKit and Alexa. I have not had to think about it since installing and it’s worked perfectly.
Lala –
Works great with HomeKit
I’ve tried a lot of these and this one is the only one that stays connected and responds without issue. Their other products for HomeKit are good too.
Anthony Horabin –
Love this thing
The fact that you can program it as a single unit or as individual sockets is great. No issues with Apple
Logan Chesebro –
A few issues at first, but works fine now
When I first connected it I lost connections a few times, but after running all the troubleshooting steps I got it working and itâs been great since then! Have it set up with my wife and my bedside lamps, fans, and our phone chargers!
Rick –
EXCELLENT
Works very well with Apple Home whether I am at home on the same network or 800 miles away it works allowing complete control without having to buy additional bridges/hubs which other mfg. require. Great price so now I buying more…
Shopping ABR –
Better than expected
I have purchased 2 of these smart power strips and found them to be so useful in my overall smart home setup.the photos you see from my TV setup where there are 4 plugs TV, Network switch, Govee lights and Apple TV. it helps me reboot or start devices from the comfort of my couch.I was able to easily configure it on my Home Assistant and write some automations to start the Govee lights only after sunset as it does not get the right effect in broad daylight as i have a open plan in my living room.
Stephen M. Adams –
Decent Power Strip â AVOID if you use Homekit
Pros:Four 3-prong indivially controlled socketsFour USB-A recepticles controlled as a groupIntegrates well with Homekit and ShortcutsSolid constructionCons:2.4Ghz onlyHomekit setup is extremely difficult, even for a technical person (See below)A bit expensive for four socketsI emailed tech support with the problem, including all the steps I had done and all the errors. A response came in 24 hours simply restating the steps I had followed. They didn’t even bother to read the email.Homekit SetupIn 2022, no device should refuse to connect to 5Ghz, and yet, this power strip rquires 2.4Ghz. If you use a modern WiFI router both networks likely have the same SSID. If so, you have to disable 5Ghz (or change the name of your 2.4Ghz network, if your router permits it), switch your iPhone to that network, and then try to connect. This failed miserably with my Eero WiFi mesh routers, even after disabling 5Ghz and WPA3, and setting the router in ‘legacy mode’.In order to get this device to connect, I had to dig out an old Airport Express router, configure it with separate SSIDs for 2.4Ghz and 5Ghz. Even then it wasn’t simple, as the Homekit configuration failed every time. Eventually, I configured it with the Meross app without Homekit support. That finally worked, and I could then add it to Homekit.It literally took two hours to do something that should take five minutes, mostly because this unit only supports 2.4Ghz and doesn’t like WiFi6 routers.Note, my Ring equipment does not directly support Homekit, but using Homebridge I was able to integrate it into Homekit in less than 30 minutes start to finish, including downloading specialized software (a Docker container) to my Synology. Meross needs to get their act together.-2 stars for the lack of 5Ghz and the hoops necessary to connect to Home kit.-1 star for poor tech support-1 for sugestion of turning off 5Ghz AND turning off Wifi 6 on my Eero to resolve this problem.
Displaced Desert Rat –
Cool Smart-Gadget – Integrates Easily
What will they think of next? A smart-surge-protector, really? I jumped on this one as soon as I saw it. Iâve wanted to stop âvampireâ power-drain from the devices in the living room (TV, game-consoles, BD Player, etcâ¦), but letâs face it, having a traditional power-strip behind or under the cabinet and having to reach down every time you need to use a device is just not practical. Thatâs why the ability to have a smart-plug that can control multiple devices and offer surge-protection as well was a no-brainer for me.The basics here are that there are four AC outlets and four USB ports which are all controllable from the app or via a schedule. The AC outlets can be controlled individually, while the USB ports are all controlled as one. The app has all of the standard features youâd expect, just remember that it calls schedules âroutinesâ instead.I was able to set it up right away using the meross app, and then I just went into the Alexa app and added a new device using Add Device -> Plug -> Other. I didnât have to add a skill doing it this way. Also, if you want to be able to control individual outlets from Alexa, just rename them in the meross app first, and then re-discover them from the Alexa app, and theyâll be listed individually.I have three game consoles, and a Blu-ray player connected to the AC outlets, and the USB ports are taken up by a FireTV stick, a Google Chromecast, and two USB cables to charge game controllers. I expect to leave the USB ports on most of the time, and only turn on the AC outlets as we need them either via the app, or by asking Alexa to do it. This is also better than having a bunch of individual smart-plugs controlling each device.The cord is six feet long, and the surge-protector itself is a little bulkier than a standard surge protector. Itâs larger in every area, which I guess is to account for the WiFi, the controller board, and the USB charger, but not so much that it became a problem for me. What a welcome addition to our ever-growing automated household.
Skeeter –
We used this to control via HomeKit our 120 gallon aquarium. Lights x2 (2 outlet) , CO2 (1 outlet), lights x2 (1 outlet with splitter) and one spare outlet leftWorks great
Denis Laplante –
ike all the meross products that I have bought this bar is perfect and very easy to connect to the network I recommend it
Apizana –
Excelente producto, muy fácil de programar, y mediante la app de Meross se controla todo. Muy recomendable
José J. –
Excelente producto, totalmente compatible con home kit de apple, lo he usado por varios dÃas y meses y funciona muy bien.
Ahmad M. –
Works perfectly with apple homekit on all devices, seamless interaction, very easy to set up, although aside from individual control, I would’ve preferred to be able to control the USB ports individually rather than all 4 ports being controlled as a whole. But it’s perfect for the desk, you can set up automation so that one of the plug-ins turns off when your device is fully charged, and Siri responds to it just fine.