The Home app, which unifies all devices into one app, was introduced on iPhones and iPads on September 13, 2016, with
iOS 10, and on
Apple Watches with
watchOS 3. The app also added support for automations using a fourth generation
Apple TV, and preprogrammed scenes which can set multiple devices using a single command. Home toggles can also be added to the Control Center, allowing control over connected devices without having to use Siri or open the Home app. The Home app was introduced on Macs with
macOS 10.14 Mojave, which was released on September 24, 2018. With the release of
iOS 16,
iPadOS 16 and
macOS Ventura in 2022, Home received a major redesign to make the app easier to navigate. With iOS 16.4, iPadOS 16.4,
tvOS 16.4 and macOS Ventura 13.3 released on March 27, 2023, Home received the option to upgrade to a new architecture which was rebuilt from the ground up to be more efficient for users with multiple Apple Home devices. Once a home is upgraded to the new architecture, it is no longer accessible by devices using older operating systems. iOS 18 brought guest access and in-app electricity usage integration.
iOS 26,
iPadOS 26,
tvOS 26 and
macOS Tahoe removed support for the previous Apple Home architecture. Functionality using older operating systems ended on February 10, 2026.
Apple TV & HomePod Fourth-generation and newer
Apple TVs can control Apple Home devices using Siri voice commands.
tvOS 14, which was released on September 16, 2020, added direct control of devices in Control Center and camera feeds and picture-in-picture monitoring for HomeKit-enabled security cameras. The
HomePod supported Apple Home at launch in February 2018, as did the
HomePod Mini in 2020. They lack a
graphical user interface to control Apple Home devices and instead use Siri voice commands. Neither HomePods nor Apple TVs can unlock or open secure appliances like locks.
Home hubs Since
iOS 16,
Apple TVs (4th generation or newer) and all
HomePod family speakers are fully supported as home hubs to control Apple Home appliances remotely, grant guest access, and set up automations.
Thread networking is supported by the
HomePod Mini, second generation
HomePod and
Apple TV 4K (2nd generation and later). Automations based on temperature and humidity are supported by the HomePod Mini and second generation HomePod. Prior to
iOS 18, the Home app automatically selected the home hub if multiple were available.
iPads were supported as home hubs starting with
iOS 10 but were phased out with
iPadOS 16. iPads running iOS 10 to iPadOS 15 will not function as a home hub in homes upgraded to the new architecture introduced in iOS 16, nor will they work with
Matter devices, but retain all functionality introduced before iPadOS 16. Support for the legacy Home architecture was discontinued in 2025 alongside the release of
iPadOS 26. The third-generation Apple TV only supported remote access in homes using the legacy architecture before it was discontinued in February 2026, and supported automations before iOS 10. == Other standards ==