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Wake on LAN & Home Assistant
Wake on LAN integrates with Home Assistant to bridge network infrastructure and smart home hubs into a unified system. Connect routers, mesh networks, and device bridges that act as the backbone for your smart home devices.
With Wake on LAN connected to Home Assistant, your network infrastructure becomes visible and automatable. Track connected devices for presence detection, monitor network health, and manage hub-connected devices alongside direct-integration devices.
How Wake on LAN Works with Home Assistant
Getting Wake on LAN connected to Home Assistant and running reliably.
Connect your hub
Add Wake on LAN through the integrations panel. Hub-connected devices, network clients, and system health metrics appear as entities in Home Assistant.
Device tracking & presence
Use Wake on LAN network data for presence detection. Know who's home based on which phones are connected to your network — no app required on their devices.
Network-aware automation
Build automations based on network state. When a specific device connects or disconnects, trigger scenes, adjust settings, or send notifications.
Common Wake on LAN Issues
The problems installers run into with Wake on LAN and Home Assistant — and how a managed setup prevents them.
Hub firmware update breaks child devices
When Wake on LAN pushes a hub firmware update, the Zigbee/Z-Wave/Thread radio behavior can change, causing child devices to drop off the network. Recovery requires manual re-pairing.
Dual management conflicts
Managing Wake on LAN hub devices through both the manufacturer's app and Home Assistant simultaneously can cause state conflicts. Changes in one system may not reflect in the other.
Presence detection false positives
Using Wake on LAN router data for presence detection can be unreliable — phones in sleep mode may disconnect from Wi-Fi temporarily, causing false 'away' triggers that arm the alarm or adjust the thermostat.
mDNS/SSDP discovery blocked
Enterprise-grade Wake on LAN networking equipment often blocks multicast by default. This prevents Home Assistant from discovering devices, requiring manual firewall and IGMP snooping configuration.
Why installers choose managed Wake on LAN network infrastructure
- Hub firmware updates tested in staging before deployment to client networks
- Single-management-plane configuration to avoid dual-control conflicts
- Tuned presence detection with debounce timers and multi-source confirmation
- Network configuration optimized for smart home discovery protocols
Frequently Asked Questions
More Network & Hubs Integrations
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