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Review: SwitchBot Curtain Rod 2

This retrofit robot makes your drapes smart, so you can open or close them on a schedule or with a voice command.
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SwitchBot Curtain Rod 2
Photograph: SwitchBot
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Rating:

7/10

WIRED
Schedule your curtains to open and close automatically. Long battery life. Easy to use. Solid smart-home integration.
TIRED
Expensive (you need two SwitchBots for a pair of curtains). Remote control sold separately. Makes a whining sound when it operates.

What smart home is truly complete without self-opening curtains? In movies, automatic curtains usually signal that we’re in the future (or that the protagonist is way too rich). With the SwitchBot Curtain, you can get a little taste of the good life by automating your curtains to open and close with the sun or on your preferred schedule. Pick up a SwitchBot Hub and you can even tell your preferred smart assistant to open the curtains while you lounge in bed.

The promise of sunlight gently waking you and curtains that automatically close to keep things cozy at night is exciting, but there is a price. A single SwitchBot Curtain Rod 2 costs $99, and you need two for a pair of curtains. A SwitchBot Remote is $19, and the SwitchBot Mini Hub is $39. Altogether, it's comparable with the shallow end of the motorized curtain market, but SwitchBots can be retrofitted to your existing curtains quickly and easily without any drilling or need for a power outlet.

This is the second-generation SwitchBot. I tried the original last year and found it flawed, but the company has made several improvements that make this smart gizmo a worthwhile addition to your home. 

Curtain Call
Courtesy of SwitchBot

The original Switchbot had different versions you could buy for different types of curtains, but the revamped model only applies to standard rods. (There have been app updates that do apply to all models.) I have lightweight ring-top curtains with a uniform rod. The original SwitchBot Curtain Rod had a single clamp to go over the top of the rod, but the new version has two separate clamps that clip neatly into the bot body, which hangs after the first ring on your curtains. (It still might not work with all curtain types.)

The SwitchBot app guides you through the setup process, which is now much easier to follow. You connect to the bots via Bluetooth on your phone and calibrate the open and closed positions. Pick “open in the middle,” and you are prompted to add them as a pair, so they open and close together. I was pleasantly surprised to see that the newly designed Curtain Rod 2 opens and closes my curtains smoothly and consistently, which wasn't the case with the original.

You can schedule the curtains to open automatically at set times, with different schedules for weekdays and weekends, or you can have them open and close when the sun rises and sets. Begin to open or close them by hand, and the motor kicks in and finishes the job for you. You can also use the app to open your curtains, and there is a slider if you want them partially open. This is a nitpick, but the app takes a few seconds to load and then another few seconds to respond, which is annoying.

If you want to get the most from your SwitchBot Curtains, you'll need to make a few extra purchases. The two-button SwitchBot Remote ($19) offers a simple way to open and close them, though it really should be included with the SwitchBot itself. To use voice commands via Google Assistant, Alexa, or Siri, or to set up automation through IFTTT, you need a SwitchBot Mini Hub ($39). I use Google Assistant, and it works flawlessly. Voice command is my favorite way of opening and closing the curtains; it feels opulent to have your digital butler draw the drapes.

It does run off a battery, but you'll only need to charge them once every few months via the USB-C port on the back. Alternatively, you can snag a SwitchBot Solar Panel ($19), which plugs into the back of the SwitchBot, or you can attach them to your curtains with adhesive-backed Velcro. Smart!

One last neat trick to mention, though it requires yet another separate purchase, is the option to have a specific temperature or humidity level trigger your curtains. Assuming you have the hub already, the SwitchBot Meter Plus ($15) sports an LCD that displays temperature and humidity, and it can be configured via the SwitchBot app or IFTTT to close your curtains, for example, when it gets too warm.

The Final Curtain

My experience with the new and improved SwitchBot Curtain Rod 2 has been far better than my time with the original, but it still makes a whining sound when it goes to work. It’s not especially loud, and any motorized curtain will make some sound (unless you spend a lot). But it's an unpleasant sound to wake up to. You can switch from Performance to Silent in the settings, which is a touch quieter and slower, but it doesn’t make a huge difference.

The SwitchBot Curtain is also a bulky plastic device (it comes in white or black), though you can at least mostly hide it behind the curtain. Sadly, its light-sensing feature, which would open the windows when it detects sunlight outside, didn't work for me because our curtain rod is high enough above the window that the sensor is blocked on the back. I also find that, just like its predecessor, the Curtain Rod 2 fails to completely shut my curtains. It leaves just enough space for a ray of light to come through in the middle, so I have to make a wee adjustment by hand every night.

Still, these issues aside, the SwitchBot Curtain Rod 2 is a major step up from its predecessor and a gadget I can recommend for anyone seeking smart curtains on a budget. It’s also the easiest and least intrusive way to make your curtains smart. Whether you need smart curtains at all—I say maybe, my wife says no—is a whole different argument.