Selora Homes Selora Homes
Met Office logo

Met Office & Home Assistant

Met Office integrates with Home Assistant to feed environmental data into your smart home automation. Temperature, humidity, air quality, motion, door/window contacts, and water leak detectors all become triggers and conditions for your automations.

With Met Office sensors connected to Home Assistant, your home responds to real conditions instead of rigid schedules. Turn on the dehumidifier when moisture rises, alert when a water leak is detected, or adjust climate based on actual room-by-room temperatures.

Cloud-based Requires internet connection
Home Assistant HA Documentation

How Met Office Works with Home Assistant

Getting Met Office connected to Home Assistant and running reliably.

1

Pair your sensors

Add Met Office through the integrations panel. Sensors appear as entities with real-time readings for temperature, humidity, motion, contact, and more.

2

Trigger automations

Use Met Office sensor readings as triggers and conditions in automations. A motion sensor triggers lights, a contact sensor arms the alarm, a temperature reading adjusts the HVAC.

3

Historical analytics

Track Met Office sensor data over time with graphs and statistics. Identify patterns — when is the house warmest, which rooms have humidity issues, how often doors open.

Common Met Office Issues

The problems installers run into with Met Office and Home Assistant — and how a managed setup prevents them.

Battery-powered sensor reporting delays

Met Office battery sensors may report only every few minutes to conserve power. For time-sensitive automations like motion-triggered lights, this delay makes the system feel sluggish.

Sensor value spikes and noise

Met Office sensors occasionally report erroneous spikes — a temperature jumping from 72F to 200F for one reading. Without filtering, these spikes trigger false automations.

Wireless range limitations

Battery-powered Met Office sensors often have limited wireless range and can drop off the network if placed too far from a hub or mesh node.

Duplicate entities from re-pairing

Replacing a Met Office sensor battery sometimes causes it to re-pair as a new device, creating duplicate entities and breaking automations that referenced the original.

Why installers choose managed Met Office sensor deployments

  • Mesh network design that ensures reliable coverage for every sensor location
  • Statistical filtering that suppresses erroneous spikes without masking real events
  • Battery monitoring with proactive replacement alerts before sensors go offline
  • Entity management that handles re-pairing without breaking automations

Frequently Asked Questions

More Sensors & Environment Integrations

Ready to Install Met Office Professionally?

Stop troubleshooting Met Office integration issues. Let Selora handle the setup, monitoring, and maintenance so you can focus on your clients.