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THIRDREALITY Smart Soil Moisture Sensor,Zigbee hub Needed,Accurate Measure,Capacitive Probe,Moisture/Temperature Meter for Garden Planting,Compatible with Homey,Hubitat, SmartThings,Home Assiastant

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$19.99

$ 9 .99 $9.99

In Stock

About this item

  • Zigbee Hub Required: Compatible with standard Zigbee 3.0, including Home Assistant (ZHA & Z2M), Hubitat and SmartThings Aeotec. A Zigbee Hub is needed for optimal performance. NOTE: Not compatible with Alexa Echo Devices.
  • Remote Monitoring and Automation: Receive real-time alerts on your smartphone, allowing you to take action anytime, anywhere, ensuring your plants get the right care. Integrated with smart home systems, these sensors enable automated watering schedules, so you can manage and control your garden's irrigation remotely, saving both time and effort.
  • Reliable and Accurate: Equipped with a sensing probe for instant and accurate moisture readings, this meter is suitable for most environments, ensuring your plants receive the right amount of water. Consider Zigbee's signal range, better for indoor using.
  • Capacitive Monitoring: Unlike traditional probes, capacitive sensors are less affected by soil salinity and pH, offering greater durability and a longer lifespan in various soil types. Suitable for various gardening places including farms, greenhouses, nurseries, gardens, and potted plants.
  • More Smart Assistant Supported: With the Smart Bridge MZ1 (sold separately), integrate with Apple Home and Google Home to monitor plants and create automation routines via an app. Additionally, it supports software OTA (Over-The-Air) updates, allowing for effortless firmware upgrades.



Product Description

Smart Soil Moisture Sensor
Take care of your plants

THIRDREALITY Smart Soil Moisture Sensor

Allows remote control and data viewing, making plant care more convenient than traditional methods. It features a reliable capacitive probe for accurate, instant moisture readings, suitable for both indoor and outdoor use. You can also build a smart irrigation system to automate watering, even while away on vacation.

Smart Soil Moisture Sensor
zigbee

Tips

soil sensor

Application scenarios

Garden
  • Insert the sensor into the soil, aligning the marking line with the soil surface for accurate measurement. Create automation or manually water the plant when soil moisture drops below a set value, based on your plant and soil conditions.

  • Please change the device type to "Third Reality Soil Moisture Sensor" in Hubitat, then it should work properly. Note: Update the Hubitat system to latest version.

  • No, it can not compatible with Echo devices. Alexa does not support humidity, so it is not recommended to use.

  • If your soil sensor is located far from the hub, it may go offline. Consider adding some Zigbee repeater to enhance the Zigbee range, like Zigbee smart plugs, Zigbee smart bulbs, etc.

  • This is because the measurement methods are different. The Soil Temperature and Humidity Sensor only detects soil surface temperatures for reference purposes only.


T
2025-08-12 16:33:27
I recently had a problem with root rot in my indoor Tea Rose. I'd been looking for a zigbee soil monitor for a while and my discovery of this lined up with my holiday shopping, so it seemed like the time to give it a try.The Good:Connects immediately to SmartThings, and so will also work with most other smart home ecosystems.Measures both temperature and "humidity".Waterproof (safe for outdoor use).Includes a battery.The Bad:What the description doesn't tell you - this thing is HUGE. Way bigger than the illustrations let on.The default SmartThings driver does not include battery level, but the device does report it.The ThirdReality Temp/Humidity driver includes battery, but only reports temperature OR humidity on the icon (you have to open the device in the app to see both readings).The Ugly:Digital soil meters are still not very common. This means there's no standards for measuring soil moisture and no standards for when to water various plants based on that digital reading.Humidity readings are reported very infrequently and take a while to update when the moisture level changes or if the meter is removed and replaced.I've had this for a couple weeks now. Overall I like it and would recommend, but it's not going to immediately solve all of your over/under watering problems. Set your expectations.It's not clear in the description or documentation how this device measures humidity. However, the design of the sensor post suggests it's measuring soil conductivity, like most analog moisture meters. It's also not clear how the reading is calibrated. And of course there are no instructions regarding what moisture levels are appropriate for what plants (though this is understandable, since ThirdReality is a tech company not a gardening company). What all of this means is that you'll have to do some science: Water according to your normal schedule and monitor the readings from this device in order to "calibrate" yourself.Once you've gone through a few watering cycles and seen how this reads, you can set your automations or alerts accordingly.Removing and replacing the sensor will alter its readings! I tested removing and replacing the meter. The reading went from 36% before to 0% removed and 10% after. I dug down a couple inches to confirm that the soil is still damp down below. This is likely just due to poor soil contact with the sensor probe, which will improve with watering and soil settling. This means that once you've place it and started your "calibration", it should stay put; removing it will require you to "recalibrate".For a version 2, I think they could reduce the size quite a bit if they tried. A smaller sensor would be nice, and most of the size is to accommodate the battery. I'd also like to see a version that could be externally or solar powered to reduce battery waste. And updating the ThirdReality ST driver to display both temp and humidity in the device thumbnail would be nice. But most of all, including a chart of "ideal water levels" for some common plants would elevate this substantially, making it a lot more user friendly for beginners or those trying to compensate for a "black thumb" (including this in a custom driver would be AMAZING).Still, after all that, tl;dr: It's worth the $20 and if you're reading this review then you should get it. But let's also hope they come out with an upgrade.I will probably buy several more of these and I'm considering the watering kit too.
thrawnis
2025-08-10 09:28:38
Reasonably easy to add into Home Assistant via Zigbee2MQTT. Exposes soil temperature, humidity (which is the indication of soil moisture level), and a couple other sensors. It updates every 5-15 mins but that’s more than enough in most cases.The main issue I have seems to be range related. It doesn’t have great range so I’ve had to add a Zigbee power adapter to act as mesh repeaters to bridge the gap.Otherwise they seem reasonably accurate and easy to use.
R. Loy
2025-06-13 18:23:15
So far, this is a great sensor. Only used it indoors so far, but planning to use it outdoors this summer to see how well that works. Using with ZHA (Home Assistant) - get Humidity, Temperature and Battery sensor. Do not particularly care if the humidity % is correct, although it seems correct, it's more about knowing at what level to send a reminder to water the plant.One thing I would ask Third Reality to improve is to lessen or adjust the frequency of reporting. I think it will burn through the battery quicker. So far I've had this for about 1 month and it burned through 10% of the battery. Not bad, but could be a little better.Price-wise, I think this would be a much better value at about $15. I would be interested in purchasing many more and use them as a more intelligent lawn sprinkler system.
Jeremiah
2025-04-30 15:35:17
I have used these for about a month now - they are quite reliable and provide good perspective on soil hydration. My temp sensor is pretty much right on with the other temp sensors in the reasonable range in our house. I keep the house around 70 and this thing seems to agree with the thermostat. If it were not accurate, it would be easy to fix - all thermos need calibrated from time to time and its fairly normal for one sensor to not match another. Pick the easiest to calibrate accurate - calibrate that one - then adjust the offset on everything else to match it. Quite easy to do this in Z2M - see the settings in photo attached.As far as the humidity in the soil - thats kind of a known problem as far as measurement goes. There isn't really a great way to test how much water is in soil... especially if you are attempting to do it with constant reporting over the course of a year with a AAA battery or two. The accuracy isn't the value here though. The value is in the trend reporting. I legit couldnt care less what the actual number is (or, more accurately, what its correlation to "true" is) - what I can do, however, is notice that after this sensor reports below 35 ( or whatever ) the leaves on my plant start drooping. That is the calibration - that is the accuracy. And this device is perfect in that scenario - I can see the trends and know what to do from there... No device at this price point or this level of energy efficiency will be able to do more than that - there are simply too many variables (everyone's rain and soil is different!). After observing trends for a while, you will realize the actual number doesn't matter. If it does matter, put it in the driest soil you can find and offset that to 0!As far as connectivity goes - I have had no issues. I have a robust zigbee network and it has a multitude of lightbulbs and other mains powered zigbee devices from which to join the mesh in its vicinity. A quick glance at my Z2M map shows it comically connected to one of the furthest possible bulbs at the moment and the connection quality is still fine.My only complaint on these (have a couple more on the way actually) is that shipping from Amazon is so slow but I am chalking that up to being a newer product.
Ty
2025-04-03 09:09:25
Works exactly as intended and has great range given my circumstances with my house. Instantly connected and started working without issues.
kleines_himbeerschnittchen
2025-03-21 11:46:03
Funktioniert mit Zigbee2MQTT, ganz nativ. Gehäuse ist etwas größer und dicker als eine AA Batterie (die auch drinnen ist). Passt alles. Danke.
Customer
2025-02-02 11:46:37
While I don't have any way to verify the results they seem quite accurate. I can clearly see the soil humidity change as I water my plants and it slowly changes throughout the day.They were very easy to setup and just worked out of the box with Home Assistant ZHA.I would say these are really worth it for the price. As an all in one low powered solution. It would be difficult to custom build something with parts for the same price.
Christopher
2025-01-14 18:30:19
No issues with setup or adoption via HA, it did take time to stabilize the reading and after adding water took a time to reach the real humidity value (see image over 2 weeks)
Rix.Lumb
2024-12-18 15:10:34
IT PAIRS WITH H@BIT&T ELEVATION WITHOUT ISSUES, 2 year battery life. Driver available in the HUB
Kirby
2024-12-08 11:44:35
I have no way to verify the results, but the results »seem« right. Honestly, I don't really care how accurate it is, I just want something to give me some information to remind me to water them. It serves that function well
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