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Open-Meteo & Home Assistant

Open-Meteo 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 Open-Meteo 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 Open-Meteo Works with Home Assistant

Getting Open-Meteo connected to Home Assistant and running reliably.

1

Pair your sensors

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

2

Trigger automations

Use Open-Meteo 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 Open-Meteo 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 Open-Meteo Issues

The problems installers run into with Open-Meteo and Home Assistant — and how a managed setup prevents them.

Battery-powered sensor reporting delays

Open-Meteo 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

Open-Meteo 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 Open-Meteo 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 Open-Meteo 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 Open-Meteo 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

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