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Matter (standard)

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Smart-home connectivity standard

Matter
Matter smart home connectivity standard
A picture of the matter logo with the text matter and a logo showing three arrows pointing into the centre with curved and rounded edges.
StatusPublished[1]
Year started18 December 2019; 5 years ago (2019-12-18)
First published4 October 2022; 3 years ago (2022-10-04)
Latest version1.4.2
11 August 2025
Committee
AuthorsThe connectivity standards alliance and open source contributors
Base standardsInternet Protocol (IP)
Related standardsZigbee,Z-Wave,Thread,Wi-Fi,Aliro
Domain
LicenseProprietary, by certification. Code and documentation published under theApache License.
Websitecsa-iot.org/all-solutions/matterEdit this at Wikidata

Matter is atechnical standard forsmart home andIoT (Internet of Things) devices.[2][3][4] It aims to improveinteroperability and compatibility between different manufacturers and security, and always allowing local control as an option.[5][6][7]

Matter originated in December 2019 as the Project Connected Home over IP (CHIP) working group, founded byAmazon,Apple,Google and the Zigbee Alliance, now called theConnectivity Standards Alliance (CSA).[3][5] Subsequent members includeIKEA,Huawei, andSchneider.[8][9] Version 1.0 of the specification was published on 4 October 2022.[1][10][11] The Mattersoftware development kit isopen-source under theApache License.[12]

Asoftware development kit (SDK) is providedroyalty-free,[13][14] though the ability to commission a finished product into a Matter network in the field mandates certification and membership fees,[15][16] entailing both one-time, recurring, and per-product costs.[17] This is enforced using apublic key infrastructure (PKI) and so-called device attestation certificates.[15]

Matter-compatible software updates for many existing hubs became available in late 2022,[18][19][20] with Matter-enabled devices andsoftware updates starting to release in 2023.[21]

The primary goal of Matter is to improve interoperability for the current smart home ecosystem. CSA and its members aim for the Matter logo to become ubiquitous and for consumers to instantly recognise it as a smart home device that will "just work".[22]

Background

[edit]

In December 2019, Amazon, Apple, Google, SamsungSmartThings and theZigbee Alliance announced the collaboration and formation of the working group of Project Connected Home over IP. The goal of the project is to simplify development for smart home product brands and manufacturers while increasing the compatibility of the products for consumers.[23][24]

The standard operates onInternet Protocol (IP) and functions via one or more controllers that connect and manage devices within your local network, eliminating the need for multiple proprietary hubs. Matter-certified products are engineered to operate locally and do not depend on an internet connection for their core functions.[25] LeveragingIPv6 addressing,[26] the standard facilitates seamless communication with cloud services. Its goal is to facilitate interoperability among smart home devices, mobile apps, and cloud services, employing a specific suite of IP-based networking technologies such asmDNS andIPv6.[27] By adhering to a network design that operates at theApplication Layer of theOSI 7 layer model, Matter differs from protocols like Zigbee orZ-Wave and theoretically can function on any IPv6-enabled network. Presently, official support is limited toWi-Fi,Ethernet, and the wireless mesh networkThread.[28]

Versions

[edit]

Updates to the standard are planned to occur biannually.[29]

  • Version 1.0 of the specification was published on 4 October 2022.[30] It introduced support for lighting products (such asmains power plugs,electric lights andswitches),door locks,thermostats andheating, ventilation, and air conditioning controllers, blinds and shades, home security sensors (such as door, window andmotion sensors), and televisions and streaming video players.[31]
  • Version 1.1 of the specification was published on 18 May 2023. Although a new version, it did not include any new categories, only bug fixes and enhancements to existing SDK, API and devices.[32]
  • Version 1.2 of the specification was published on 23 October 2023. This version added nine new device types (refrigerators, portable air conditioners, dishwashers, laundry washers,robotic vacuum cleaners, smoke and carbon monoxide alarms, air quality sensors, air purifiers, and fans). It also provides revisions and additions to existing categories, improvements to the specification and SDK, and certification and testing tools.[33]
  • Version 1.3 of the specification was published on 8 May 2024. This version added support for water and energy management devices as well as appliance support for ovens, microwave ovens, cooktops, extractor hoods, laundry dryers, and Matter-casting media players. Scenes and command-batching were also added.[34]
  • Version 1.4 of the specification was released on 7 November 2024, introducing an expanded focus on electricity-related areas, including batteries, solar systems, home routers, water heaters, and heat pumps. It also featured enhancements to existing areas, such as increased support for electric vehicle chargers, along with significant improvements to Threads devices.[35]
  • Version 1.4.1 of the specification was released on 7 May 2025. This minor version adds NFC onboarding and multi-device setup.[36]
  • Version 1.4.2 of the specification was released on 11 August 2025. The minor update made security enhancements to Matter networks and standardized various existing behaviors to improve networking. The update also made some changes to device support requirements for routers and other "network infrastructure managers," requiring them to be certified for Thread 1.4 and support addressing at least 150 devices.[37]

For future versions, the working group has been working on support for ambient motion and presence sensing, environmental sensing and controls, closure sensors,energy management, Wi-Fi access points, cameras, andmajor appliances.[29]

Supported devices

[edit]

CSA maintains the official list of Matter-certified products,[38] and restricts use of the Matter logo to certified devices. Matter product certification is also stored on the CSA's Distributed Compliance Ledger (DCL),[39] which publishes attestation information about certified devices.

Supported ecosystems and hubs

[edit]
CompanyPlatformsDevice typesHubs
Product name(s)Thread support included?
GoogleAndroid, Wear OS, iOS, iPadOSAir purifiers, bridges, dishwashers, dryers, lights, locks, outlets, robot vacuums, sensors (air quality, contact, flow, humidity, illuminance, motion, occupancy, pressure, & temperature), speakers, thermostats, washers, and window coverings (except tilting)[40][41]Chromecast with Google TV (4K)[42]No
Google Home speaker[43][44]No
Google Home miniNo
Google TV StreamerYes
Nest MiniNo
Nest AudioNo
Nest Hub (first-gen)No
Nest Hub (second-gen)Yes
Nest Hub MaxYes
Nest Wifi ProYes
SamsungAndroid, Wear OS, iOS, iPadOS, watchOS, WindowsAir conditioners, air purifiers, basic video players, battery storages, cook surfaces, cooktops, dimmable plug-in units, dimming lights, dishwashers, door locks, electric vehicle supply equipments, enhanced color lights, extractor hoods, fans, generic switches (buttons), heat pumps, laundry dryers, laundry washers, matter bridges, microwave ovens, mounted dimmable load controls, mounted on/off controls, on/off lights, on/off plug-in units, oven (ranges), pumps, refrigerators, robotic vacuum cleaners, sensors (air quality, contact, humidity, light, occupancy, pressure, rain, and temperature), smoke & co alarms, solar power devices, speakers, temperature color lights, temperature controlled cabinets, thermostats, water freeze detectors, water heaters, water leak detectors, water valves, and window coverings[45][46]Samsung SmartThings Hub v2[47][48]No
Samsung Family Hub refrigerator (2017 and newer)No
(can be added using external dongle)
Samsung Smart Monitors 2022 modelsNo
Samsung smart TVs 2022 modelsNo
Aeotec SmartThings Smart Home HubYes
Aeotec SmartThings Smart Home Hub 2Yes
Samsung SmartThings StationYes
Samsung SmartThings Hub DongleYes
Samsung SmartThings Hub v3Yes
Samsung Smart TVs CU8000 and CU7000 (2023)Yes
Samsung MicroLED TV MNA89MS1BA (2023)Yes
Samsung Smart Monitor M80C (2023)Yes
Samsung Soundbar HW-Q990C (2023)Yes
Samsung NEOQLED 8k and 4K (2023)Yes
Family Hub refrigerator, model numbers RF29CB9900QKAA (US), RF23CB9900QKAA (US), RF85C9581APW (Korea)Yes
AppleiOS, iPadOS, macOS, tvOS, watchOSAir conditioners, bridges, lights, locks, outlets, switches, blinds & shades, sensors (motion, ambient light, contact, temperature, and humidity), thermostats, and window coverings[49]HomePod (first-gen)No
HomePod (second-gen)Yes
HomePod MiniYes
Apple TV HD (2015)No
Apple TV 4K (2017)No
Apple TV 4K (2021)Yes
Apple TV 4K Wi-Fi (2022)No
Apple TV 4K Wi-Fi + Ethernet (2022)Yes
AmazonAndroid, iOS, iPadOSAir conditioners, air purifiers, dishwashers, fans, lights, locks, outlets, robot vacuums, switches (including generic), sensors (air quality, contact, humidity, light, motion, smoke, and temperature), thermostats, and window coverings[50]Echo (2nd Gen, 3rd Gen)No
Echo (4th Gen)Yes
Echo Dot (2nd Gen and newer)Yes
Echo Dot with Clock (2nd Gen and newer)Yes
Echo FlexNo
Echo HubYes
Echo InputNo
Echo Plus (2nd Gen)Yes
Echo PopNo
Echo Show 5No
Echo Show 8 (1st Gen, 2nd Gen)No
Echo Show 8 (3rd Gen)Yes
Echo Show 10 (3rd Gen)Yes
Echo Show 15 (1st Gen)No
Echo Show 15 (2nd Gen)Yes
Echo Show 21Yes
Echo Spot (2024)No
Echo Studio (1st Gen & 2nd Gen)Yes
eero 6 & eero 6+Yes
eero BeaconYes
eero Max 7Yes
eero Outdoor 7Yes
eero PoE 6Yes
eero PoE gatewayYes
eero ProYes
eero Pro 6E & eero Pro 6Yes

See also

[edit]
  • Amazon Alexa – Amazon's smart assistant and home control system
  • Google Nest – Google's smart home system, formerly calledGoogle Home
  • HomeKit – Apple's smart home system
  • KNX – an open standard (see EN 50090, ISO/IEC 14543) for commercial and residential building automation
  • Thread – low-power mesh protocol designed for battery-powered devices, which Matter uses as one of its supported transport layers
  • X10 – a home automation protocol developed in the 1970s
  • Zigbee andZ-Wave – wireless mesh protocols for home automation, can be used with Matter and a compatible bridge

References

[edit]
  1. ^ab"V1.0.0 Release".GitHub. 30 September 2022. Retrieved4 October 2022.
  2. ^"What Is Matter? The New Smart Home Standard, Explained".PCMag. Retrieved17 March 2023.
  3. ^abKastrenakes, Jacob (18 December 2019)."Apple, Google, and Amazon are teaming up to develop a smart home standard".The Verge. Retrieved24 December 2019.
  4. ^Purdy, Kevin (5 August 2022)."Wemo's confused Smart Dimmer shows how hard standardizing IoT may be".Ars Technica. Condé Nast. Retrieved5 August 2022.
  5. ^ab"With Amazon, Apple and Google onboard, this new alliance aims to make your smart home work properly".ZDNET. Retrieved17 March 2023.
  6. ^Hall, Christine (4 October 2022)."Matter's Internet of Things standard, certification ready for developers".TechCrunch. Retrieved17 March 2023.
  7. ^Seifert, Dan (16 April 2021)."Amazon, Apple, and Google's smart home partnership is close".The Verge. Retrieved17 March 2023.
  8. ^Mihalcik, Carrie."Apple, Amazon, Google, and others want to create a new standard for smart home tech".CNET. Retrieved24 December 2019.
  9. ^Strategy, Moor Insights and."CHIP Shot: Will Project Connected Home Over IP Get Us Onto The IoT Green?".Forbes. Retrieved3 September 2020.
  10. ^"Matter 1.0 arrives".Connectivity Standards Alliance. 4 October 2022. Retrieved4 October 2022.
  11. ^Tuohy, Jennifer Pattison (4 October 2022)."Matter 1.0 is finally finalized — so what's next?".The Verge. Retrieved4 October 2022.
  12. ^"project-chip/connectedhomeip". Connectivity Standards Alliance. 14 June 2021. Retrieved15 June 2021.
  13. ^Hill, Simon (3 April 2022)."What's the Matter? We Explain the New Smart Home Standard".Wired. Condé Nast. Retrieved30 April 2022.
  14. ^project-chip/connectedhomeip, Connectivity Standards Alliance, 25 June 2024, retrieved25 June 2024
  15. ^ab"Device Attestation - latest - Silicon Labs Matter Silicon Labs".docs.silabs.com. Retrieved26 June 2024.
  16. ^"Certification Process | Why Certify |".CSA-IOT. Retrieved26 June 2024.
  17. ^"Become a Member | The Future of IOT".CSA-IOT. Retrieved26 June 2024.
  18. ^"Apple rolls out software updates for matter". 25 October 2022. Retrieved7 January 2023.
  19. ^"Matter is now available on Google Nest and Android devices". 15 December 2022. Retrieved7 January 2023.
  20. ^"Amazon announces a phased rollout of Matter to its Alexa smart home platform". 3 November 2022. Retrieved7 January 2023.
  21. ^"One Brand Dominates the CES Smart Home Conversation This Year". Retrieved7 January 2023.
  22. ^Connectivity Standards Alliance (3 November 2022).Matter: Making the smart home a more connected, comfortable, and helpful place. Retrieved22 April 2024 – via YouTube.
  23. ^Gurman, Mark; De Vynck, Gerrit (18 December 2019)."Apple, Google, Amazon Want One Language for Smart Devices".Bloomberg. Retrieved24 December 2019.
  24. ^Haselton, Todd (18 December 2019)."Apple, Google and Amazon are cooperating to make your home gadgets talk to each other".CNBC. Retrieved24 December 2019.
  25. ^"What is Matter?".Google Home Developers. Retrieved22 April 2024.
  26. ^"Thread and IPv6 | Matter".Google Home Developers. Retrieved22 April 2024.
  27. ^"Matter Specification - Version 1.2"(PDF). Connectivity Standards Alliance. 18 October 2023.
  28. ^Matter Network Transport - Connectivity Standards Alliance. Retrieved22 April 2024 – via www.youtube.com.
  29. ^abMatter, the new Global Standard for the Smart Home, Debuts at the Amsterdam Launch Event, 3 November 2022, retrieved19 November 2022
  30. ^"Newsroom | Articles & Blogs | IOT".CSA-IOT. Retrieved19 November 2022.
  31. ^"The Matter Smart Home Standard Is Finally Available: Here's What It Means for Your Home".Consumer Reports. 3 November 2022. Retrieved19 November 2022.
  32. ^"Matter 1.1 release — Enhancements for developers and devices".CSA-IOT. 18 May 2023. Retrieved14 September 2023.
  33. ^"Matter 1.2 Arrives with Nine New Device Types & Improvements Across the Board".Connectivity Standards Alliance. 23 October 2023. Retrieved5 November 2023.
  34. ^"Matter 1.3 Specification announced".Connectivity Standards Alliance. 8 May 2024. Retrieved16 May 2024.
  35. ^Gomes, Vitor (7 November 2024)."Matter 1.4 chega com suporte a Energia Solar e promessas de economia de energia elétrica".PontoBYTE (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved22 December 2024.
  36. ^"A Smarter Start: Matter 1.4.1 Makes Setup Easier".Connectivity Standards Alliance. 7 May 2025. Retrieved7 May 2025.
  37. ^"Matter 1.4.2 | Enhancing Security and Scalability for Smart Homes".CSA-IOT. 11 August 2025. Retrieved30 August 2025.
  38. ^"Certified Products Search".Connectivity Standards Alliance. 2024. Retrieved9 June 2024.
  39. ^"Distributed Compliance Ledger".webui.dcl.csa-iot.org. Retrieved22 April 2024.
  40. ^"Supported devices | Matter".Google Home Developers. Retrieved1 December 2023.
  41. ^"What's new in the Google Home app".Google Nest Help. 23 July 2025. Retrieved21 August 2025.
  42. ^"Google TV Streamer (4K)".Google Store. Retrieved6 August 2024.
  43. ^"Matter is now available on Google Nest and Android devices".Google. 15 December 2022. Retrieved1 December 2023.
  44. ^"Google devices with Matter - Android - Google Nest Help".support.google.com. Retrieved1 December 2023.
  45. ^"Home API Reference | Developer Documentation | SmartThings".developer.smartthings.com. Retrieved1 December 2023.
  46. ^"Connect Matter Devices with SmartThings | SmartThings".Connect Matter Devices with SmartThings | SmartThings. Retrieved21 August 2025.
  47. ^Tuohy, Jennifer Pattison (27 January 2023)."All the smart home products that work with Matter".The Verge. Retrieved1 December 2023.
  48. ^"Smart Home Hub - Hub Everywhere | SmartThings".Smart Home Hub - Hub Everywhere | SmartThings. Retrieved1 December 2023.
  49. ^"Pair and manage your Matter accessories".Apple Support. Retrieved1 December 2023.
  50. ^"Understand Smart Home Matter Support | Alexa Skills Kit".Amazon Alexa. Retrieved1 December 2023.

Further reading

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