Best of CES 2026: The smart home & home security gear edition

The latest edition of the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas is already drawing to a close, and once again, we’ve seen some truly impressive smart home and home security innovations—and as usual, some are more likely to ship than others. We’re not counting on the robot lawn mower that picks fruit and lobs tennis balls to canines to actually land in stores, but it certainly counts as one of the biggest attention-getters in Vegas this week. We also saw some far more practical smart products that wowed us, from the smart lock that’s powered by light waves to the new go-almost-anywhere Ring sensors that connect to Amazon’s growing patchwork of Sidewalk neighborhood networks. Read on for the best smart home and home security tech we saw at CES this year, starting with… Govee Sky Ceiling Light Availability: TBD Price: TBD Govee Pining for more natural light in your gloomy apartment? A skylight would likely do wonders for your mood, but getting one installed might be either too expensive or completely impractical. Enter Govee and its Sky Ceiling Light, a ceiling-mounted lighting fixture designed to mimic the look of daylight. Equipped with a total of 180 RGBICWW (red, green, blue, and warm white) beads and employing “custom-engineered LED and architectural gradient illumination,” the Sky Ceiling Light can shine at up to 5,000 lumens at a daylight-equivalent 6,500 Kelvin, and you can let the AI-powered DaySync feature adjust the color temperature automatically depending on the time of day. — Ben Patterson, Senior Writer Read more: Govee’s smart ceiling light doubles as a virtual sky light LG Evo W6 Wallpaper TV Availability: TBD Pricing: TBD LG After an absence of nearly seven years, LG’s Wallpaper OLED TV line is back, and this latest entry in the series comes with an ace up its sleeve. While earlier Wallpaper panels such as the W7, the W8, and W9 are somewhat thinner than the new Evo W6—the older models range from 2.57- to 3.8mm in thickness, compared to roughly 9mm for this latest set—the W6 puts most of its electronic in a separate hub that wirelessly transmits 4K video and lossless audio to the TV, leaving just a single power cable connected to the display. The result? The LG Evo W6 can be hung practically flush against the wall, allowing this new Wallpaper TV to truly live up to its name. — Ben Patterson, Senior Writer Read more: LG’s Evo W6 Wallpaper TV is thin and wireless to win Mammotion Spino S1 Pro robotic pool cleaner Availability: Later in Q1 2026 Pricing: TBD Mammotion Best known for its robot lawn mowers, Mammotion is looking to make a splash in the robotic pool cleaner market with its second offering: a machine that can lift itself out of the water when its job is done and its battery needs recharging. The Spino S1 Pro comes with a dock that resides on the pool’s deck. The dock has a set of robot arms that can reach down into the pool, retrieve the scrubber, and place it on its charging dock. And since Wi-Fi signals don’t travel far in water, Mammotion’s AutoShoreCharge technology also includes an in-water wireless link that can help the bot find its way back to the dock when its battery runs low. — Michael Brown, Executive Editor Read more : Mammotion’s Spino S1 Pro robotic pool cleaner lifts itself out of the water Lockin V7 Max light-powered smart mortise lock Availability: U.S. launch slated for August Price: TBD Christopher Null/Foundry This Lockin smart lock/handle caught our attention at CES for a couple of reasons. One, it’s a mortise-style smart lock rather than the far-more-common deadbolt variety. Second, its internal battery isn’t recharged with a cable or a solar panel, but by light waves. Using a plug-in transmitter placed on a table or mounted to a wall, Lockin’s optical AuraCharge system draws power from a standard wall outlet and beams that energy via light waves to an optical panel on the interior escutcheon and from there to the lock’s battery. The transmitter must be within 13 feet of the lock with clear line-of-sight, so periodic blockage of the beam–when someone stands in front of it or the door is open–interrupts battery charging only temporarily. As with most mortise-type locks, the Lockin V7 Max will require professional installation. Pretty cool—and good enough for a CES 2026 Innovation Award. – Ben Patterson, Senior Writer Read more: The Lockin V7 Max smart lock is powered by light waves NexLawn Master X robot lawn mower concept Availability: Still in development Price: TBD NexLawn Some of the most eye-popping products at CES are destined to never ship, and this is likely one of them. Alongside its more traditional Navia 6000 AWD robot lawn mower, NexLawn showed off the Master X, a “concept” model that comes with a fold-up mechanical arm that can extend nearly a meter in length while utilizing interchangeable tools. Among the Master X’s various tricks is collecting yard debris (which it can deposit in an attached bucket), picking fruit, and watering plants with a watering can. The robot can even play fetch with a pooch. Pretty wild, but again, the Master X is just a concept. Don’t count on it show up at Home Depot anytime soon. – Ben Patterson, Senior Writer Read more: NexLawn’s concept robot mower can water plants and play fetch Ring next-generation Sidewalk network smart devices Availability: March Price: $29.99 to $69.99, depending on the device Ring We must admit that Sidewalk, Amazon’s “neighborhood” network that leverages nearby Echo and Ring devices to connect low-power smart devices–including some third-party products–that might otherwise be out of Wi-Fi range, was a technology that had largely slipped our minds. So we were caught by surprise—pleasantly—when Amazon-owned Ring announced not one, not two, but more than a dozen new Sidewalk-enabled products, ranging from door/window contact, motion, water leak, and other types of sensors to smart light switches and plugs. There’s even a car alarm that leverages both Sidewalk networks and GPS to track your vehicle’s location. You can place or install these devices practically anywhere in your neighborhood, provided you’re in the vicinity of a Sidewalk network—and more likely than not, you are. — Ben Patterson, Senior Writer Read more: Ring goes big with sensors powered by Amazon’s Sidewalk Displace TV’s Displace Hub wireless TV retrofit system Availability: TBD Pricing: $1,999 Displace TV We’ve been fascinated with Displace TV’s line of totally wireless, battery-powered OLED TVs that mount to a wall with a suction system without drilling holes in your wall or requiring any other hardware. The company’s new Displace Hub not only brings that same technology to almost any flat-screen TV (screen sizes between 55- and 100 inches and weighing up to 150 pounds), but it also includes the same Intel N-150 quad-core CPU, 16GB of RAM and 128GB of internal storage that delivers local AI processing for enhanced privacy. Displace TV says that in the unlikely situation where its suction mount system should fail, an airbag-like safety system will safely lower the TV to the floor to prevent catastrophic damage to the TV. — Michael Brown, Executive Editor Read more : Displace Wireless Pro 2 TVs will feature local AI to enhance privacy Xthings Ulticam HaLow security camera Availability: TBD Price: $249.99 Ulticam HaLow Long-Range Wireless Security Camera Xthings Here’s a camera system perfect for monitoring far-flung spaces. The Ulticam HaLow Long-Range Wireless Security System is built on the new “HaLow” (802.11ah) Wi-Fi specification, which allows signals to go through walls and travel as far as 1.5 miles by tapping into sub-1.5GHz wireless frequences. Thanks to Wi-Fi HaLow, the Ulticam HaLow kit can keep tabs on detached buildings, barns, parking lots, warehouses, or any other distant area a traditional Wi-Fi security camera couldn’t reach. The system comes with a hub that supports up to four cameras, while Xthing’s Intelligent Vision technology allows for on-device person and vehicle detection. — Ben Patterson, Senior Writer Read more: AI-powered Xthings Ulticam security cam series gains a HaLow model Xthings Ultraloq Bolt Sense smart lock with biometrics Availability: Q2 2026 Pricing: TBD Xthings Xthings announced a bunch of smart locks at CES this year, but we’re most interested in the Ultraloq Bolt Sense. Palm vein and facial recognition are the hot new trends in this category in 2026, but we’ve never seen the technology in a lock this compact. Xthings says the lock will recognize registered palms and faces in as little as 0.5 seconds and can be programmed to automatically unlock when it recognizes either. The lock is also outfitted with Ultraloq’s semi-circle numeric PIN pad, and it connects to your Wi-Fi network with an onboard Wi-Fi 6 adapter. Its planned Matter support will render it compatible with the Alexa, Apple Home, Google Home, Samsung SmartThings, and Home Assistant smart home ecosystems. — Michael Brown, Executive Editor Read more : Xthings Ultraloq smart lock line gains UWB, biometrics, Z-Wave LR Samsung Micro RGB smart TVs Availability: Some models available for pre-order now Pricing: TBD, will vary according to screen size Samsung Micro RGB television technology marks a significant advance over the current generation of LCD TVs, because it uses red, green, and blue LEDs for backlighting, reducing the need for the color filters that conventional LED-backlit LCD panels need. The new technology resides in the middle ground between the increasingly mainstream mini-LED TVs and the still ludicrously expensive micro-LED sets (which, like OLED, have self-emissive pixels. Samsung says it will ship eight models of its two Micro RGB series: 65-, 75-, 85- and the massive 130-inch monster shown above in the model R95H series, and 85-, 98-, and 100-inch models in the step-down R85H series. — Michael Brown, Executive Editor Read more : Samsung goes all in on Micro RGB TVs at CES 2026 Emerson Smart SmartVoice appliances Availability: TBD Price: TBD IAI Smart We’re used to smart devices that respond to our voices with the help of smart speakers, but there’s a growing trend of smart appliances that can hear your commands without the help of Alexa, Google Assistant/Gemini, or Apple’s Siri. Last year at CES, for example, we saw a new range of smart lights with built-in AI microphones . Now comes smart home manufacturer IAI Smart with a new line of Emerson Smart appliances—including tower fans, space heaters, air fryers, and smart plugs—with built-in SmartVoice assistants that work entirely offline, meaning no need to worry about privacy, Wi-Fi connectivity, or cloud outages. — Ben Patterson, Senior Writer Read more: These appliances don’t depend on smart speakers for voice control Beatbot AquaSense X robotic pool cleaner Availability: Now available for pre-order Price: $4,250 Beatbot Robotic pool cleaners handle the grunt work of keeping your swimming pool clean, but until now, they’ve left the dirty work of cleaning the muck trapped in their debris baskets and filters to you. The Beatbot AquaSense X looks to change that situation, with a box-like docking station dubbed the AstroRinse Cleaning Station. When the robot has finished its cleaning run and you retrieve it from the pool, you’ll place it on top of the AstroRinse, which will charge its battery, empty its debris basket into a 23-liter bin below, and flush the AquaSense X’s filter. A bag inside the bin is said to be large enough to last for two months, based on two cleanings per week. What could be better? Why, a robotic pool cleaner that combines Beatbot’s auto-cleaning dock with Mammotion’s auto-retrieving dock, of course. — Michael Brown, Executive Editor Read more: Beatbot looks to raise the bar for robotic pool cleaners—again Check out PCWorld’s live CES blog , with all the must-see tech sights in Las Vegas this week, and don’t miss PCWorld’s picks of the hottest innovations in PCs and other technology.