You can’t drill. You can’t wire. Your landlord would flip if you touched the thermostat. But you still want your lights to turn on when you walk in the door, your coffee to be ready when you wake up, and your apartment to feel like it knows you. Good news: everything in this guide is 100 percent removable, leaves zero damage, and costs under 400 dollars total.
The Foundation: What You Need First
Before you buy a single device, you need two things:
1. A Smart Speaker (30 to 50 Dollars)
An Echo Dot or Nest Mini is your command center. Voice control for everything, timers, music, intercom, and the brain behind your routines. Get the newest generation — the audio quality difference between the 3rd and 5th gen Echo Dot is noticeable if you use it for music.
2. A Reliable WiFi Network
Apartment WiFi is tricky. You share walls, interference, and bandwidth with neighbors. If your router is more than 3 years old, or if you have dead spots in your apartment, a mesh WiFi system (eero 6+, about 100 dollars for a 2-pack) will solve most connectivity issues. For more on this, see our WiFi guide.
Lighting: The Biggest Impact, Zero Damage
Smart Bulbs (10 to 25 Dollars Each)
Screw them into existing fixtures. Take them with you when you move. Wyze Color Bulbs (10 dollars each) or Philips Hue White bulbs (12 dollars each) are the best options. Wyze doesn’t need a hub. Hue needs the Bridge but offers better color and reliability.
Set up:
- Living room: 2 bulbs on “arrive home” routine (turn on at 70 percent warm white)
- Bedroom: 2 bulbs on “good morning” and “wind down” routines (bright cool white in the morning, dim warm white at night)
- Bathroom: 1 bulb on motion sensor or night schedule (dim warm white from 10 PM to 6 AM, so midnight bathroom trips don’t blind you)
- Hallway: 1 bulb on sunset schedule (turns on at sunset, off at bedtime)
LED Light Strips (20 to 30 Dollars)
Under-cabinet lighting, behind-the-TV bias lighting, or accent lighting on shelves. Govee LED strips stick on with adhesive backing (removable with a hair dryer) and add dramatic lighting effects to any room. They work with Alexa and Google Home.
Climate Control Without Touching the Thermostat
Your landlord controls the thermostat. You control everything else.
Smart Plugs on Fans and Space Heaters (8 to 15 Dollars Each)
Put Kasa smart plugs on your fan, space heater, and humidifier. Set up routines:
- Fan turns on when the temperature exceeds 75 degrees (requires a temperature sensor, 15 dollars)
- Space heater turns on at 6 AM, off at 8 AM, and when you leave the apartment
- Humidifier turns on when humidity drops below 30 percent
This gives you climate control without touching the central thermostat. For more on saving money with smart plugs, see our devices that pay for themselves guide.
Smart Curtains (60 to 100 Dollars)
SwitchBot Curtain motors clamp onto your existing curtain rod (no drilling) and open and close curtains automatically. Set them to open at sunrise and close at sunset, or trigger them with your voice or phone. They’re the single most impactful smart home upgrade for apartments because they control solar heat gain — keeping your apartment cooler in summer and warmer in winter without touching the thermostat.
Security for Apartments
Video Doorbell (Wireless, 50 to 100 Dollars)
The Ring Battery Doorbell or Wyze Video Doorbell mounts with adhesive or two tiny screws (easily spackled when you move). You’ll see who’s at your door, get package alerts, and talk to visitors from your phone. In an apartment building, this is essential — hallway traffic, food deliveries, and package theft are all real concerns.
Indoor Camera (25 to 40 Dollars)
A Wyze Cam v4 on a shelf or windowsill covers your main living area. No drilling, no permanent mounting. Take it with you when you move. Point it at the front door and you have a visual record of anyone who enters your apartment.
Contact Sensors (15 to 20 Dollars Each)
Aqara door/window sensors stick to your door frame with adhesive. They tell you when the door opens, trigger lights to turn on when you arrive, and send alerts if the door opens when you’re not home. No drilling, no wiring, completely removable.
Water Leak Sensors (15 to 25 Dollars Each)
Put Govee water leak sensors under the kitchen sink, behind the toilet, and near the washing machine. In an apartment, a water leak doesn’t just damage your stuff — it damages the unit below you. These sensors give you early warning before a small leak becomes a big problem. For more, see our leak detector guide.
Kitchen and Living Room
Smart Plugs on Everything (8 to 15 Dollars Each)
Coffee maker, air fryer, electric kettle — put them all on smart plugs with schedules. Wake up to coffee brewing, come home to the kettle boiling, and never wonder if you left the iron on. Five smart plugs cost 50 dollars and control 5 devices. See our full smart plug guide.
Smart Display (50 to 150 Dollars)
An Echo Show 8 or Nest Hub on your kitchen counter gives you recipes, timers, video calls, and a visual dashboard for your apartment. It’s the one screen you’ll actually use in the kitchen — not for watching shows, but for setting 4 timers at once and asking how many tablespoons are in a quarter cup.
The Complete Setup: Under 400 Dollars
Here’s a full apartment smart home that costs less than one month’s rent:
- Echo Dot (5th gen) — 50 dollars (command center)
- 6 Wyze Color Bulbs — 60 dollars (living room, bedroom, bathroom, hallway)
- 5 Kasa Smart Plugs — 50 dollars (coffee maker, fan, space heater, humidifier, lamp)
- 1 Govee LED strip — 20 dollars (accent lighting)
- 1 Wyze Cam v4 — 36 dollars (security camera)
- 2 Aqara door sensors — 30 dollars (front door + balcony door)
- 1 Aqara motion sensor — 15 dollars (hallway)
- 1 Aqara Hub — 40 dollars (connects sensors)
- 2 Govee water leak sensors — 30 dollars (kitchen + bathroom)
- 1 Govee temperature sensor — 15 dollars (climate monitoring)
- 1 SwitchBot Curtain — 70 dollars (curtain automation)
- 1 Ring Battery Doorbell — 65 dollars (front door security)
Total: about 480 dollars for a complete smart apartment that controls lighting, climate, security, and routines — and every single piece of it comes with you when you move. Zero drilling. Zero wiring. Zero damage.
The Bottom Line
Smart home tech for renters isn’t about what you can install — it’s about what you can remove. Every device in this guide sticks on, plugs in, or sits on a shelf. When your lease is up, you peel off the sensors, unscrew the bulbs, and take everything with you. Your landlord gets the apartment back exactly as they left it, and you get a smart home that works wherever you live next.