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Remote Control

Smart lighting controlled by a physical remote

Smart lights that come with a dedicated handheld remote. No phone app required for daily use, no voice assistant to set up — just a physical remote like an old-school TV controller.

Why remote-controlled smart lighting still makes sense

App and voice control dominate the smart-lighting conversation — but for a lot of real-world situations, a physical remote is the practical option:

Households with children or older family members — people who aren't comfortable with apps or voice assistants can still operate a remote. Familiar button layout, immediate response, no setup friction.

Rooms without reliable Wi-Fi — outbuildings, basements, extensions with weak network coverage. A remote works locally over RF or Bluetooth regardless of network state.

Guest rooms — you don't want guests needing your Wi-Fi credentials or app access just to turn the lights off at night. A remote next to the bed solves it.

Backup control — some people use remotes as a fallback alongside full smart-app integration. If the network is down or the phone isn't handy, the remote always works.

Rental properties — tenants can use the remote without onboarding to a landlord's smart-home app or Wi-Fi network.

What remote control typically covers

Remote-controlled smart lights typically support:

On/off — the primary function. A dedicated power button on the remote.

Brightness up/down — usually two buttons, incremental dimming in 10% steps.

Colour temperature shift (tuneable white fittings) — warm/cool toggle or shift buttons.

Colour change (RGB fittings) — preset colour buttons or a colour-wheel selector on higher-spec remotes.

Scenes and presets — 3 or 4 dedicated buttons for saved scenes: "evening", "reading", "full bright", "night light".

Remote control and app control usually coexist — most remote-controlled smart lights also support Wi-Fi app control. The remote is a local backup and simpler alternative, not usually the only control method.

Remote types

RF (Radio Frequency) remotes — most common. Work through walls and up to 20–30m range. Don't need line-of-sight to the fitting.

Bluetooth remotes — shorter range (usually 5–10m), line-of-sight helpful. More battery-efficient. Some pair directly to the fitting, others via a small hub.

IR (Infrared) remotes — old-school, TV-style. Need line-of-sight to the fitting's IR receiver. Largely phased out on modern smart lights in favour of RF.

Fittings available in this range

Remote-control smart lighting covers the same format range as other smart categories — ceiling lights, pendants, wall lights, table lamps — just with a physical remote bundled in the box. See related categories below for format-specific filtering.

Frequently asked questions

Do remote-controlled smart lights still work with Alexa and Google Home?

Most do, yes. Remote control is usually an additional control method, not a replacement for app and voice control. A single fitting might be controllable by its remote, its companion app, and voice commands through Alexa or Google — whichever suits the moment.

Can I buy extra remotes?

Often yes — most remote-compatible fittings support additional remotes paired to the same fitting. Useful for two-remote setups (one bedside, one by the door) or replacing a lost remote. Check the product page for compatible remotes.

What if I lose the remote?

App control usually still works. For remote-only fittings, a replacement remote can be ordered and paired to the existing fitting. Some remotes are generic — a single remote controls several compatible fittings.

Do I need batteries for the remote?

Yes — most use standard coin cells (CR2032) or AAA batteries, lasting 12–24 months of normal use. A small number of higher-end smart remotes are rechargeable via USB-C.

Related categories

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