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Why Should I Buy A Nest Thermostat


Price is an important factor when it comes to smart thermostats. Because, while their intelligence, voice control and smartphone app integration are all useful, the real reason to buy a smart thermostat is its ability to lower your energy bills.




why should i buy a nest thermostat


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It learns your ways. Nest 3rd generation contains both short and long-range sensors. These sensors (combined with the geofencing) pick up your habits for the first week the thermostat is installed, by learning your whereabouts and preferred temperature. Nest then creates a schedule that caters to your household temperature preferences.


Nest is very smart home compatible. Nest thermostat is compatible with many other devices including Alexa, Google Assistant, Philips Hue bulbs, IFTTT, smart appliances, smart watches, and more.


The Ecobee4 is also the same price as Nest 3rd gen and has Alexa built-in, so you can ask Alexa to turn on the lights while walking past your thermostat. This is an impressive feature for a competitive thermostat priced the same as Nest is hard to ignore.


Nest 3rd gen looks nice on our wall. We have it hooked up with several smart home devices and have also tested it alongside the Nest x Yale lock and Nest Cams. I even recommended a Nest thermostat and Nest x Yale lock to my parents since they were setting up new smart home tech and wanted everything to work within one app and be very simple.


We have had our Nest Thermostat since the beginning of last winter. It worked great dueing the winter months. Did not have to babysit the thermostat at all. We usually have our settings for winter home temperature set fairly low. 68F daytime 65F nights. Worked perfectly. However its crap during summer months. It doesnt permit a set temperature for daytimes or nights. I would prefer a set temp. Of 72F all the time. I CANNOT seem to input a cooler temp without bumping it manually every couple of hours.


No more thinking about how to program your thermostat. Nest self-learning thermostats make it easy to save money and energy on heating and cooling costs by learning and adapting to your schedule automatically. It also shows you how energy is used in your home and sends cute cues to save even more.


As new generations of the product come to market, (the company just released its 3rd generation model), homeowners should take a second look at the benefits of installing this beautiful and energy-efficient device.


If the kids are coming home early, you can adjust the thermostat from your phone so that the home is already comfortable by the time they arrive. As long as you have your phone on you, you can change the temperature from anywhere.


The Nest Thermostat will alert you on your phone if something is wrong, such as low temperatures that can cause frozen pipes or a furnace that is malfunctioning. Not only that, you can connect the Nest to your smoke and CO alarms. If the smoke alarm goes off, the thermostat will turn the fan off. If the CO detectors sounds, the thermostat will shut down the heating system.


Smart thermostats are also good for the planet: According to Energy Star, if every US household installed a smart thermostat, the energy savings would be equivalent to 1.2 million fewer vehicles on the road. Because of those potential savings, energy companies frequently offer rebates and incentives to replace a traditional thermostat with a smart one.


For example, you might configure your thermostat to lower the temperature when you leave the house and lock your front door. And it can automatically start warming the house when your garage door opens as you arrive home. These smart-home ecosystems are continually growing, so the interactions your thermostat is capable of are expanding as well (though sometimes only with the purchase of additional hardware).


Since this guide has been produced by two different reviewers, some smart thermostats mentioned throughout have been tested in different locations. For this most recent update, all of our thermostat picks except the Mysa were tested in a freestanding, single-zone home with a one-zone electric HVAC system, operating a heat pump (not a furnace).


These systems work well together to balance comfort and energy use, and in our testing the thermostat did a very good job of maintaining a comfortable temperature, while not using excessive energy when we were home.


An HVAC monitoring feature detects and notifies you of any problem with your system, such as a furnace shutdown or extended heating or cooling times. We had some experience with this feature in our testing of the more basic Nest Thermostat (see Other good smart thermostats).


Another essential smart feature of the Nest is its Eco Mode. This uses a combination of presence sensing and geofencing to determine when the house is empty and then tells the thermostat to keep temperatures within an energy-saving range. When it senses you are home or coming home, based on your habits and the location of your smartphone, it returns to its normal schedule.


The big caveat is that to make all the heating units in your system smart, you will need to replace every thermostat; this gets expensive quickly (though over time that up-front cost could be offset by energy-bill savings, since electric baseboard heating is so much less energy-efficient than other systems).


None of these companies offer discounts or incentives for upgrading from an older model. However, both Ecobee and Nest are widely available at discounted prices from utility companies through partner programs. And though all of the companies encourage owners to recycle devices when they eventually die, only Nest will provide a free shipping label and box to send in any thermostat for reclamation and data destruction; learn more about that here.


Although we strongly recommend our picks for most people, there are some scenarios in which they might be more than you need or not the right fit for your setup. Here are a few other smart thermostats that are worth considering.


Thermostats are just one of the many household items to get a smart upgrade in the recent push toward home automation and interconnectivity. Is it worth getting a smart thermostat though? Read on as we review the Nest Learning Thermostat and tell you what we think after three months of living with it.


You know what we hated the most about our old programmable thermostat? Even if you had memorized the arcane and numerous button combinations required to program the device it still took a significant amount of time to reprogram it which meant you were left standing there in the living room, your arms losing feeling, poking away at it for 15 minutes or longer anytime you wanted to do any significant reprogramming.


By simply adjusting the thermostat to our preferred comfort levels a few times a day (when waking, coming home, and going to bed) the thermostat learned our preferences and automatically started making adjustments. This screenshot of the energy use in early February highlights both how effective it was and how great the Nest is at communicating with the user.


Although the focus of this article is the Nest itself, we also installed a Nest Protect ($99) shortly after we installed the Nest. The Nest Protect is a smart smoke and carbon monoxide detector that interfaces with the Nest thermostat.


Finally the Protect sports a really fantastic behind the scenes feature that could, no hyperbole here, save your life. When the Protect detects carbon monoxide it also simultaneously, thanks to its link with the Nest thermostat, kills the heating system in the house. Given that a significant number of carbon monoxide related deaths are caused by faulty combustion based heating systems this smart interplay between between the detector and the furnace means that even if you cannot hear the alarm or are incapacitated the removal of the probable source of the carbon monoxide buys you precious time.


So, which Nest model is the best? Below we'll dig into the key differences between these two Google thermostats. (Once you do pick one, we've got a guide for how to install your Nest thermostat. We've also got comparisons of Nest Thermostat vs. Amazon Smart Thermostat, Nest Thermostat vs. Ecobee3 Lite and Ecobee Smart Thermostat Premium vs. Nest Learning Thermostat.)


Its classic turn dial design lets you navigate among the settings and you can press down on the thermostat to make a selection. It's easy enough to use, but I prefer the new Nest Thermostat's side controls (more on this in the next section). You can still set up this model using the Nest app and control it in the Google Home app. The new Nest Thermostat, in contrast, only works in the Google Home app.


The Nest Thermostat is the first of the company's thermostats that doesn't work with the Nest app (the original app that still houses some legacy products, including the Nest Learning Thermostat). Instead, this model can only be set up and controlled in the Google Home app.


It also won't learn your schedule over time and adjust accordingly. It lets you enter a schedule and will automatically switch between home and away modes based on the thermostat's built-in proximity sensor.


There's no wrong answer here; both thermostats are excellent. Just consider your specific needs before you buy. If you're looking for a more substantial, premium design, go for the Learning Thermostat. It has more color finish options, comes with a trim kit and offers some advanced features, such as the learning algorithm, the Farsight feature and compatibility with the optional Nest Temperature Sensor accessory.


The Nest Thermostat is considerably less expensive than the Learning Thermostat. It offers an updated mirrored design in four color finishes and a refreshed side control thermostat interface. Your purchase doesn't include a trim kit and the thermostat isn't compatible with the Nest Temperature Sensor. It also doesn't have the same learning algorithm or Farsight. But for over $100 less than the Learning Thermostat, the new Nest Thermostat is an excellent option that holds its own against Google's flagship thermostat. 041b061a72


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