Bottom Line
TP-Link Kasa Smart Plug Mini (EP10)
Best price available on Amazon — ships free with Prime.
The smart plug we recommend to everyone — reliable, compact, no hub required, and under $10. The simplest entry point to smart home security.
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Scored on: effectiveness (40%) · ease of use (25%) · value (20%) · privacy (15%)
"The TP-Link Kasa Smart Plug Mini is the most reliable budget smart plug we've tested — it connects via Wi-Fi without a hub, works with Alexa and Google Home out of the box, and costs under $10. For security-conscious homeowners, smart plugs on timers create the occupied-home illusion that deters opportunistic burglars, making this the cheapest security device you can buy."
The single most effective deterrent against opportunistic burglary is the appearance of an occupied home. FBI Uniform Crime Report data consistently shows that the majority of residential burglaries are opportunistic — a burglar checks whether anyone is home, and if the house appears empty, they proceed. Lights on timers have been a standard recommendation from police departments for decades. Smart plugs do the same thing, but better.
A traditional mechanical timer turns a lamp on and off at the same time every day, creating a pattern that observant criminals can detect. The Kasa Smart Plug's Away Mode randomizes the on/off schedule within a window you specify — lights turn on sometime between 6:00 PM and 7:30 PM, off sometime between 10:00 PM and 11:30 PM, varying every day. Multiple plugs on different lamps in different rooms create a convincing pattern of normal home activity that looks natural from the outside.
At $10 per plug, you can outfit four rooms for $40 — less than one month of professional monitoring from most security companies. No subscription, no monthly fee, no contract. The security value per dollar is unmatched by any other smart home device.
The Kasa EP10 ships ready to use out of the box. Plug it into an outlet. Download the Kasa app. Create a TP-Link account (email and password). The app discovers the plug automatically over Wi-Fi. Name it ("Living Room Lamp"), assign it to a room, and you're done. The entire process takes about three minutes per plug.
The setup simplicity is the EP10's competitive advantage over Zigbee or Thread smart plugs, which require a hub (SmartThings, Echo, HomePod) before they function. Wi-Fi plugs work immediately with just your existing router. For someone buying their first smart home device, this zero-friction setup is worth more than the protocol advantages of Zigbee.
Voice control setup is equally simple. In the Alexa app, tap "Discover Devices" — Alexa finds the Kasa plug automatically through TP-Link's cloud integration. Same process for Google Home. Within minutes of unboxing, you can say "Alexa, turn off the living room lamp" and it works. This immediate gratification is why we recommend Kasa as the first smart home device for people who have never used smart home products before.
The Kasa app's Away Mode is purpose-built for the occupied-home simulation use case. Enable it, set the time window (e.g., 6 PM to 11 PM), and the plug randomly turns connected devices on and off within that window. Each day, the pattern is slightly different — mimicking the natural variation of someone actually being home and turning lights on and off throughout the evening.
You can configure Away Mode independently for each plug, creating overlapping but different patterns. The living room lamp might come on at 6:15 PM one day and 6:45 PM the next. The bedroom light might turn on at 9:00 PM and off at 10:30 PM. From outside, this looks like a normal household moving between rooms throughout the evening.
The scheduling engine also supports fixed schedules (same time every day), sunrise/sunset-based schedules (automatically adjusts as daylight hours change throughout the year), and countdown timers (turn off in 30 minutes). The sunrise/sunset option is particularly useful for porch lights — they turn on when it gets dark and off when it gets light, adjusting automatically throughout the year without manual schedule changes.
Every Wi-Fi smart plug connects directly to your router as an individual device. Unlike Zigbee or Thread devices (which connect to a hub, reducing router load), Wi-Fi plugs each consume a connection slot on your router. This isn't a problem with two or three plugs, but becomes relevant at scale.
Most consumer routers handle 20-30 simultaneous Wi-Fi devices before performance degrades. A typical household already has 10-15 connected devices: phones, laptops, tablets, smart TVs, gaming consoles, and existing IoT devices. Adding 10 smart plugs brings you to 20-25 devices — approaching the limit where cheaper routers start dropping connections or slowing down.
Our recommendation: if you plan to use more than 5-6 smart plugs, invest in a decent mesh router system first. TP-Link's own Deco mesh routers handle 100+ devices without degradation. Alternatively, for larger smart home installations (15+ devices), consider Zigbee-based plugs with a SmartThings or Echo hub — they connect to the hub rather than your router, keeping your Wi-Fi network clean.
For most users buying 2-4 plugs for key rooms, the Wi-Fi approach is fine. The setup simplicity of Wi-Fi plugs outweighs the router load concern at small scale.
Origin note: TP-Link is a Chinese-owned company headquartered in Shenzhen, China. Kasa smart plugs are manufactured in China. TP-Link collects usage data (device on/off times, schedules, energy consumption) on servers that may be subject to Chinese data jurisdiction laws.
For a smart plug controlling a table lamp, the privacy risk is objectively low — the data collected is that a light turned on and off. This is not comparable to the privacy implications of a Chinese-owned camera recording video inside your home. However, usage patterns (when you're home, when you're away, your daily routine) are technically inferable from smart plug data, and users should be aware of who collects this data.
If data sovereignty is a priority, alternatives include the Meross Smart Plug (also Chinese-owned but supports HomeKit local control) or the Eve Energy (German company, Thread-based, fully local control with no cloud). For most users, the TP-Link Kasa's reliability and price make the data trade-off acceptable for lamp-level automation.
Kasa EP10 ($9.99) is the base model — on/off control, scheduling, Away Mode, Alexa and Google Home support. No energy monitoring. Best for: lamps, fans, and basic automation where energy tracking isn't needed.
Kasa EP25 ($12.99) adds real-time energy monitoring, showing wattage, voltage, and cumulative energy consumption. Useful for identifying energy-hungry devices and estimating electricity costs. Best for: users who want both automation and energy awareness.
Amazon Smart Plug ($24.99) is the Alexa-native option with Matter support and energy monitoring. More expensive but integrates more deeply with Alexa routines. Best for: all-Amazon households willing to pay the premium for native integration.
Eve Energy ($39.99) is the privacy-first option — Thread-based, fully local control through Apple HomeKit, no cloud required, German company. Best for: Apple households and privacy-conscious buyers. The premium price reflects zero data collection.
For the best balance of reliability, features, and price, the Kasa EP10 at $9.99 remains our recommendation for most buyers. Upgrade to the EP25 if energy monitoring matters. Switch to Eve Energy if privacy outweighs price.
Bottom Line
TP-Link Kasa Smart Plug Mini (EP10)
Best price available on Amazon — ships free with Prime.