Become a MacRumors Supporter for $50/year with no ads, ability to filter front page stories, and private forums.

MacRumors

macrumors bot
Original poster
Apr 12, 2001
67,464
37,702


Meross makes a wide range of HomeKit-compatible smart home devices for multiple regions around the world, including garage door openers, air purifiers, smart plugs, and more. With Meross's smart LED bulb, LED light strip, ambient light, and desk lamp, I was able to create a HomeKit lighting setup to put the company's smart home accessories to the test.

meross-smart-lighting-review.jpg

Compared to its direct competitors, Meross's smart lighting products are among the most affordable HomeKit-compatible devices on the market and set themselves apart with no need for a hub or a third-party app. It is possible to add, control, automate, and manage Meross's devices entirely through Apple's Home app, providing a more streamlined HomeKit experience.

Setup

Meross's smart home offerings differ from many other brands in the same space, such as Philips Hue smart lighting, because they do not require a hub or use of a third-party app. In theory, you need only open the Home app on your iPhone, tap Add Accessory, and scan the code on the device. Accumulatively, this significantly eases the setup process compared to the clunky hubs and apps that many other smart home brands demand.

While this is the ideal scenario for most smart home accessories, I had issues setting up some of Meross's devices on my network, where they repeatedly failed to connect with the Home app. Some users may need to temporarily disable their router's firewall and the 5GHz portion of their network during pairing to get around these potential problems. This may not be necessary in your case, and Meross's setup experience is generally very good, but prospective customers should be prepared to troubleshoot their network in the event of any problems.

Smart Wi-Fi LED Bulb

The Meross Smart Wi-Fi LED Bulb features an all-white enclosure and a frosted diffuser, with a HomeKit pairing code on the side. The bulb is a standard size and can be purchased with a range of bases for different light fittings, including the E26, E27, and B22. It is not weatherproof or suitable for outdoors use.

meross-smart-wi-fi-led-bulb.jpg

The bulb can emit up to 810 Lumens, which means it can be as bright as a 60W bulb, and can display up to 16 million colors, with color temperature adjustments from 2,700K to 6,500K. The bulb handles small adjustments in color temperature well and color reproduction is good, particularly for blues, reds, and pinks. The greens, yellows, and oranges are a little flat, with more faint, pastel tones, but overall vibrancy and dynamic range is good for a low-cost bulb of its type.

Meross's bulb is bright and vibrant enough for most uses, but more expensive competitors are slightly more dynamic in terms of brightness and and color reproduction. That being said, it is vital to remember that Meross's Smart Wi-Fi LED Bulb is one of the cheapest HomeKit-enabled bulbs available starting at just $18.99 each, and is more than sufficient for most HomeKit setups. The company also offers multi-packs, with two-bulbs available for $27.99.

Smart Wi-Fi Light Strip

Retailing for $34.99, the Smart Wi-Fi Light Strip looks fairly standard for products in its category, featuring a series of LEDs evenly spaced along its length. The strip is 16.4ft long and comes wrapped around a plastic reel, and it comes with a control module, power adapter, and a range of mounting clips and adhesive pads.

meross-smart-wi-fi-light-strip.jpg

Setting up the strip was easy, simply needing to connect the strip to the controller module, and the controller module to the power adapter. A button on the module functions as a manual control and can be used to reset the strip, and Meross includes an adhesive pad specifically to help keep it out of the way.

meross-smart-wi-fi-light-strip-with-controller.jpg

The strip delivers up to 16 million different colors and lights up evenly across different brightness levels. Red tones are very rich, and blues are also quite good. Yellows and purples are not reproduced very well, but the overall range of colors is more than serviceable.

The light strip can be mounted with the adhesive mounting clips included in the box, but the strip itself also has an adhesive back if that is more suitable for your implementation. The strip is also easy to cut down to size thanks to guides along its length.

Meross's light strip is ideal for accent lighting, such as running along the underside edge of furniture, rather than as a room's sole light source. The strip's even glow along its length makes for a great, understated lighting addition to any room.

Smart Wi-Fi Ambient Light

The Meross Smart Wi-Fi Ambient Light is a lamp with a sleek, cylindrical design, featuring white glossy plastic at the base and transparent plastic extending over the rest of the device. The top of the lamp contains a touch-sensitive capacitive area embedded below the plastic enclosure.

meross-smart-wi-fi-ambient.jpg

The lamp is just under eight-inches tall and four-inches wide, making it the perfect size for small side tables or nightstands. The design looks good, even when it is turned off, and its cylindrical shape puts the hues of the lamp at the forefront since it can emit light around its entire circumference. The light inside the diffuser is distributed fairly well, even though you can tell that the actual light source is at the bottom of the enclosure, but it doesn't negatively affect the overall look.

The lamp features touch-sensitive controls for added convenience, working to turn the lamp on and off, adjust brightness, and cycle through colors. The manual control option is definitely a worthwhile feature. For example, simply double tapping of the top control area turns the lamp off, which is perfect for when you don't have a device with the Home app or Siri nearby.

meross-smart-wi-fi-ambient-light-at-night.jpg

The lamp is powered by a barrel connector port on the back, which is not as convenient, secure, or easily replaceable as a USB connection. Strangely, there is also a superfluous small LED power indicator light at the back, which doesn't seem very useful since it is very small, obscured from view, and unnecessary for determining if the lamp is powered.

In terms of lighting, the lamp can emit up to 400 lumens, which is respectable for its size. With its small design, the lamp does not really provide enough lighting to be used as a sole light source in a room and works better as an accent piece depending on the other lighting conditions in the environment. I would have appreciated greater peak brightness to make the lamp more useful, but positioned as an accent, it is still a worthwhile part of virtually any HomeKit lighting setup.

meross-smart-wi-fi-ambient-light-colors.jpg

Colors were much the same as Meross's other offerings, with white, red, and blue looking rich and vivid, while greens and yellows look a little washed out in darker shades. The lamp seems to be priced very fairly at $42.99, offering plenty of versatility with its design, controls, and HomeKit functionality.

Smart LED Desk Lamp

At $68.99, the Smart LED Desk Lamp is one of Meross's pricier smart lighting items. The lamp features an ultra-slim matte-black design that is perfect for minimalist desk setups. The base is made of plastic, but the top two sections of the lamp are made from aluminium for better heat dissipation and durability. The design seems to dissipate heat well in daily use, and while it gets warm at full brightness, it is never uncomfortably hot.

meross-smart-led-desk-lamp.jpg

The top arm articulates easily and holds its position well, and there is a magnet toward the base of the lamp to keep it closed shut when desired. There is also a set screw that you have to screw in to attach the light to the base, but there is no stop for the screw and it is very easy to accidentally screw it in too far, which seemed like a small design oversight.

Unfortunately, I feel that the hollow plastic base let down the lamp's design significantly. The matte plastic looks considerably less premium than the top of the lamp and shows any scuffs and scratches very easily, with my lamp already having plenty of scuffs straight out of the box. The base looks and feels cheap, which stands in stark contrast to the premium, solid aluminium design of the rest of the accessory. Moreover, it feels as if there is not enough weight in the plastic base, making the lamp a little more precarious and wobbly than it should be.

meross-smart-led-desk-lamp-base.jpg

The arm houses 46 LEDs that can produce up to 400 lumens of brightness. The light has no flicker, even on lower brightness settings, which is essential for avoiding eye strain with a desk lamp. While it cannot display colors, the Meross desk lamp supports white color temperature adjustments ranging from 2,700K to 6,000K.

The base features touch-sensitive controls for added convenience, allowing the lamp to be turned on and off and brightness to be changed with just a tap, which is often more convenient than calling out to Siri or using the Home app at a desk.

The desk lamp is excellent at lighting for a specific task since it is concentrated in a small area, but not great for lighting an entire desk. It works very well, offering practical functionality with a premium feel, but it is a shame that the design is let down by the plastic base.

Connectivity and HomeKit Support

Once the devices were paired, they had good responsiveness and provided a reliable connection to the Home app, and worked well with automations. Unlike some of the other HomeKit devices I use, the Meross offerings are consistently connected to my network, with no "no response" alerts. Meross's smart lighting is also quick to respond to app and voice commands, including toggling on and off, switching colors, and adjusting brightness, which all takes place within seconds.

Colors were not always accurately translated from the Home app to the accessory, so it can occasionally take a little longer to find your preferred shade in the app. This is due to the slight issue with color reproduction with some shades on some devices, but this is fairly normal for LED smart lighting, particularly for shades such as green and purple, and most users are unlikely to notice it.

The devices work over 2.4GHz Wi-Fi only, directly connecting to the router rather than via a hub. As a result, the Meross devices can be slow or refuse to reconnect to the network when Wi-Fi is temporarily unavailable, but this is a random occurrence and cycling power seems to fix the problem.

The Bottom Line

Overall, Meross's HomeKit accessories are good, cost-effective smart lighting solutions. The company's devices are well-designed, with practical benefits such as intuitive manual controls and no need for a hub or third-party app. Occasional problems with my network during setup and slight oversights such as the plastic base of the desk lamp are easy to overlook and I would not hesitate to grow my HomeKit setup with more Meross devices.

If you are looking for smart lighting with the best possible color reproduction, high brightness output, or weather-resistance, then Meross's devices may not be for you, but they are excellent for their price point and are worthy rivals to many of their competitors. For users looking to kickstart a HomeKit setup on a budget, Meross's smart lighting is a very good place to start.

How to Buy

In the U.S., Meross's range of devices are available from Amazon as well as the company's own website:


Note: MacRumors is an affiliate partner of Meross. When you click a link and make a purchase, we may receive a small payment, which helps us keep the site running. Meross provided MacRumors with a Smart Wi-Fi LED Bulb, Smart Wi-Fi Light Strip, Smart Wi-Fi Ambient Light, and Smart LED Desk Lamp for the purpose of this review. No other compensation was received.

Article Link: Review: Meross Offers Affordable, Hub-Free HomeKit Smart Lighting Solutions
 
Last edited:
I’ve been using Meross smart bulbs for about six months now. For the price, they’re pretty great. I do worry about bulb longevity, and, occasionally, they suffer from network connectivity issues, but they do undercut the competition by a significant amount and they don’t seem to put out an exceptionally high amount of RF interference in my minimal testing.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ssspinball
Tried the meross light bulb and found it to be horrible. They are known to be the low end of the low end smart devices for apple homekit

The main issue for me was their app is really lackluster in controlling functionality. Because Apple Homekit app is so limited in functionality you have to use the manufactures app to set various bulb functions/values/timings easily.

Returned the Meross and purchased Vocolinc which has a lot better app. Their app allowed me to setup the bulbs with various timings, specific temperature values etc. It's still awkward but I blame the Apple Homekit and i still fight myself to not just go get a Google Home system which appears far better but no privacy....
 
I have been using three Meross bulbs and a switch for a few months now. Initially there were some serious latency issues but a firmware update seems to have fixed them. I have these along side hue lights and the hue are slightly more responsive but we are talking maybe half a second. For the difference in price and lack of a hub requirement this might very well be worth it.
 
  • Like
Reactions: ssspinball
No mention of responsiveness/latency in the review? These home automation devices lose their shine (so to speak) if it takes five seconds for a light to come on after the command is issued.
I just gave mine a test. Latency usually isn’t an issue in my experience (and the test was essentially immediate), though there are a few times (maybe 1 or 2 in 100), where it seems slow. But it could also be Siri having issues sending the command. Occasionally (less than once a month, for sure), they become unresponsive to network requests and need to be reset (or removed from HomeKit and re-added, this being much rarer), but that’s been quite rare.
 
Tried the meross light bulb and found it to be horrible. They are known to be the low end of the low end smart devices for apple homekit

The main issue for me was their app is really lackluster in controlling functionality. Because Apple Homekit app is so limited in functionality you have to use the manufactures app to set various bulb functions/values/timings easily.

Returned the Meross and purchased Vocolinc which has a lot better app. Their app allowed me to setup the bulbs with various timings, specific temperature values etc. It's still awkward but I blame the Apple Homekit and i still fight myself to not just go get a Google Home system which appears far better but no privacy....
When it comes to creating HomeKit scenes, I usually use the Eve app, and this despite not owning any Eve equipment. It’s just that the Eve app will let you do pretty much everything.
 
  • Like
Reactions: WannaGoMac
When it comes to creating HomeKit scenes, I usually use the Eve app, and this despite not owning any Eve equipment. It’s just that the Eve app will let you do pretty much everything.
Thank you, I will check it out!

I have found homekit so convoluted and confusing. The settings just overlap on each other etc. It works, and i got it to mostly work as i want but weird things still happen. There is no way would i suggest a non-technical person to try and setup these devices.

The entire experience is so un-apple in terms of making it easy for the end user.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kc9hzn
I have one of their smart plugs. When it works, it's fine. But sometimes it will say "updating" and will get stuck on that, and I can't turn it on and off. Which requires me to unplug it and plug it back in again. Annoying.
 
  • Like
Reactions: rdav and name99
WiFi only though. Those things will be slower to respond and less reliable like most WiFi-only devices. Nanoleaf bulbs with Thread are just as cheap and respond almost instantly
I just bought some Nanoleaf bulbs on Friday to replace the Ikea bulbs I had from 2017 as the Hub refused to connect anymore.. So far they're great, I had their triangles in 2017 also. But Apple has the three pack for $50 and I got another 3% off with Apple Card.
 
Thank you, I will check it out!

I have found homekit so convoluted and confusing. The settings just overlap on each other etc. It works, and i got it to mostly work as i want but weird things still happen. There is no way would i suggest a non-technical person to try and setup these devices.

The entire experience is so un-apple in terms of making it easy for the end user.
I mean, obviously the vendor’s app is still required for firmware updates. But I find that the Eve app gives me the sort of granular control I want for lighting automations, and it’s been pretty good for temperature based controls in my experience, too.
 
For those of us in the 200+ countries and territories that use the metric system, the lightstrip 16.4ft mentioned in the article equals to 5 meters, which is pretty generous, since the Hue one starts at 1 meter and cost 3 times as much to bring it to 4.

Regarding the brand, I bought a two pack of the recently released flood light, one was DoA, the other one did turned on, but I was never able to add it to the Home app, so, they went back the very next day...
 
I mean, obviously the vendor’s app is still required for firmware updates. But I find that the Eve app gives me the sort of granular control I want for lighting automations, and it’s been pretty good for temperature based controls in my experience, too.
I think i will delete everything and start over using the Eve app. Though I dont see how to set a specific color temperature in the Eve app which the vocolinc app has as an option (I dont want to pick a color, i want to set it at 4500k so I know its the same everywhere).

I will probably have to use all three apps (eve, vocolinc, and Apple Homekit) to get all the things set as i want again...
 
  • Like
Reactions: kc9hzn
I live in Costa Rica, and experience a lot of brief power outages. My Lutron switches always reconnect and continue working, while the Meross need re-connecting constantly. I'm removing them one by one for Lutron replacements - just not worth the grief for the savings.
 
  • Like
Reactions: rdav and SantaFeNM
I live in Costa Rica, and experience a lot of brief power outages. My Lutron switches always reconnect and continue working, while the Meross need re-connecting constantly. I'm removing them one by one for Lutron replacements - just not worth the grief for the savings.
Ok, that’s a valid point. Not everyone lives in a place with electricity as stable as the US. But that’s just not something I’ve had to think about in my experience with home automation, so it’s not the sort of thing I’d try to induce in testing. So it’s interesting to hear a developing world perspective on home automation, it catches issues a developed world perspective would miss.
 
I have the light strip, ambient lamp, a few plugs, garage door opener, and the outdoor plug. All respond nearly instantly in most cases and have been rock solid as far as connectivity. I very much like their stuff.
 
I'm using the Meross light strips for accent lighting around the ceiling in two rooms in my house. They're ok, and work well for the most part, but they're not my favorite HomeKit accessory. They highly recommend you install the Meross app for firmware updates, which I've done, and that seemed to help some connectivity issues I had out of the box.

I've had moments where they wouldn't respond to Siri commands, but worked fine from Google Assistant commands. But I've also had the opposite, so that seems a little random. They work best when I set a schedule to have them automatically turn on and off at a certain time.

The strips are bright enough for my needs. I have four of them in each room, and it really lights it up nicely.

I would have preferred to go with Hue strips, but the Meross price can't be beat. They're $45 each in Canada for 16 feet, while Hue is $90 for 6.5 feet. The Meross cost me $180, while Hue would have cost $900 for the same amount of light strips. No thank you.

I also purchased a Lepro LED strip light kit from Amazon. It was $50 for 65 feet, and it ran off one of those tiny remote controls with no smart home integration. I thought that would be an ok option hooked up to a smart plug, but it just wasn't good. They weren't bright enough, the colors weren't that great, and the power supply got really hot which I wasn't impressed with. I've had no issues with the Meross power supply feeling too hot.
 
Tried the meross light bulb and found it to be horrible. They are known to be the low end of the low end smart devices for apple homekit

The main issue for me was their app is really lackluster in controlling functionality. Because Apple Homekit app is so limited in functionality you have to use the manufactures app to set various bulb functions/values/timings easily.

Returned the Meross and purchased Vocolinc which has a lot better app. Their app allowed me to setup the bulbs with various timings, specific temperature values etc. It's still awkward but I blame the Apple Homekit and i still fight myself to not just go get a Google Home system which appears far better but no privacy....
Not only are they horrible, but they tend to fill up bots on reddit downvoting anyone who questions their quality or brings up issues.
 
I bought their power strip on amazon, couldn't get it to sync with their app, and it would constantly fail with HomeKit. Had it replaced and the second one works perfectly. It's a fantastic device, I use it to keep my stereo system plug off, as it heats up terribly even when it's turned off. It's really a great product, when it work properly. I really wish more brands would add HomeKit to their products, I mean your options are cut down to almost none, when you want HomeKit vs Alexa and google.
 
  • Like
Reactions: kc9hzn
I've been using their switches and garage door openers for a year now (I think I have 7 switches, and 3 garage door openers) and they are all rock solid. An incredible value for the price, especially for the garage doors. I previously used a Liftmaster MyQ in my garage, and it's 3x the price and 1/10 as reliable. Highly recommend.
 
Register on MacRumors! This sidebar will go away, and you'll see fewer ads.