Smart homes are no longer a futuristic concept — they are reshaping how India lives today. Driven by innovation, sustainability, and changing lifestyles, a new era of intelligent living is rapidly unfolding, writes RONITA D’SOUZA.
THE GREAT LEAP TOWARDS INTELLIGENT LIVING
The Indian home is no longer just a structure of brick and mortar; it is fast becoming a breathing, sensing, and learning organism. The pandemic years accelerated a shift that was already underway, catapulting home automation from a lifestyle choice for the affluent few to a pressing need for a broader swathe of the population. In a post-COVID world marked by heightened sensitivity to health, efficiency, and sustainability, the desire for smarter, safer, and more sustainable homes has evolved into a clear expectation. Indian consumers are no longer merely purchasing property; they are investing in curated experiences, optimised energy use, and integrated living ecosystems. Homes today are expected to think, adapt, and respond — offering not just comfort, but consciousness. The definition of “value” in real estate has expanded beyond square footage to include energy-saving appliances, sensor-enabled security, touchless sanitary fittings, climate-responsive lighting, and health monitoring technologies embedded within the walls themselves. The transformation is profound and irreversible. Smart home automation — once considered a futuristic indulgence or a showpiece addition — is now a critical pillar of sustainable urban living. As India urbanises at an unprecedented rate, the fusion of intelligent technologies into residential environments is emerging as not merely desirable, but indispensable — a non-negotiable cornerstone of climate resilience, carbon neutrality, energy efficiency, and social well-being. In this feature, we explore how smart living is moving from aspiration to default, how automation is redefining urban homes, and why the homes of the future must be intelligent by design — for a sustainable tomorrow.
FROM VANITY TO VITALITY — HOW SMART HOMES BECAME ESSENTIAL.
Only a decade ago, home automation was widely seen as a niche indulgence — an add-on for luxury villas, high-net-worth bungalows, and show apartments eager to impress. Smart lighting, intelligent thermostats, automated blinds, and integrated security systems were marketed as premium upgrades, not fundamental necessities. Today, that perception has been turned on its head. The pandemic brutally exposed vulnerabilities in traditional living setups: hygiene risks, inefficient resource usage, and a lack of spatial adaptability. The home, once simply a resting place, became the workplace, the school, the gym, the entertainment hub — and the health sanctuary. The need for spaces that could dynamically respond to human needs — with minimal physical intervention — became both urgent and universal. “Smartness today is not about extravagance; it’s about better choices — energy-saving, touch-free, water-efficient solutions are becoming everyday expectations, not exceptions,” says Priya Rustogi, Country Leader, LIXIL Water Technology, India and Subcontinent. In the context of homes, the same principle applies: automation that once symbolised opulence is now synonymous with sustainability, wellness, and future-readiness.
“The Indian bathroom or kitchen is no longer just a functional space; it’s an extension of the user’s lifestyle — one that demands consciousness, connection, and comfort.”
— Priya Rustogi, Country Leader and CEO: India and Subcon at LIXIL Water Technology (Grohe and American Standard Brands)
Security and Hygiene First, Then Energy and Efficiency
At the peak of the pandemic, two concerns dominated consumer consciousness: touch-free interactions and surveillance. Demand for motion-sensor lighting, biometric locks, video door phones, automated temperature controls, and touchless faucets skyrocketed across Indian cities — not just in luxury housing, but even in mid-segment developments. “We noticed a sharp rise in homeowners asking not just for basic automation, but for integrated solutions that could monitor energy, air quality, and security in real time,” notes Suman Kumar Lokanath, Head of Marketing, Sales, and Strategy at Cinebels.
“Smart homes are moving beyond comfort; they are about sustainable living, optimised energy use, and creating environments that protect and enhance the lives of residents.”
Beyond Individual Devices: Integrated Living Ecosystems
The new smart home is not a scattered collection of gadgets — it is a holistic, integrated environment. Lighting, ventilation, appliances, security systems, and even plumbing are now interconnected, controlled via smartphones, voice assistants, or intelligent hubs.
From an energy-efficiency perspective, such integration is not merely a luxury feature; it is vital to India’s larger climate goals. Automated energy management systems can cut household consumption by 20–30%, significantly easing the urban carbon burden.
Homeowners Are No Longer Passive Consumers
Another significant shift is homeowners today are better informed and more demanding. They ask about carbon footprint, water reuse, air quality monitoring, and health certification. They seek data-driven performance, not just sleek interfaces.
“It’s a mindset shift,” says Jubin Thomas,
“Today’s homeowner is looking at the ROI of automation in terms of reduced energy bills, better air quality, and improved well-being. They view their homes not just as assets, but as ecosystems of health, efficiency, and responsibility.”
TECHNOLOGY THAT LEARNS — THE EVOLUTION OF THE SMART HOME
If the early dreams of home automation promised convenience, today’s reality demands consciousness. Artificial Intelligence (AI), the Internet of Things (IoT), predictive analytics, and energy optimisation are no longer aspirational concepts — they are rapidly becoming the very building blocks of modern living spaces.
In the evolving definition of a smart home, devices no longer respond passively to commands; they learn, anticipate, and adapt to human behaviour. Homes are now expected to adjust lighting based on natural circadian rhythms, fine-tune temperatures according to occupancy patterns, and even monitor energy consumption autonomously. The shift is profound — from homes that listen, to homes that think.
“Smart homes must now evolve into intuitive ecosystems,” says Suman Kumar Lokanath.
This transformation is not driven by luxury alone, but increasingly by necessity. Rising energy costs, heightened environmental awareness, and the post-pandemic craving for wellness-centred living have made intelligent automation critical. Homeowners are now seeking not only convenience but reassurance — that their homes are healthy, efficient, and responsive sanctuaries.
“Homes are no longer reacting. They are predicting,” observes Ashish Dhakan of Hikvision. “Whether it’s managing temperature, lighting, or air quality, the new generation of automation makes the experience seamless, invisible, and instinctively human-centric.”
The innovations are subtle yet powerful. Smart lighting systems adjust brightness based on occupancy and daylight availability. Sensor-embedded faucets reduce water wastage without compromising user comfort. Intelligent HVAC solutions learn lifestyle patterns to maintain optimal air quality with minimal energy consumption. This is sustainability woven into the very fabric of daily life — not an external add-on, but a natural extension of intelligent design.
“Tomorrow’s most aspirational homes will flaunt sustainability metrics, not just super-built-up areas,” affirms Priya Rustogi of LIXIL Water Technology. “Water-saving taps, eco-flush systems, sensor-based touchless fittings — these are the new symbols of responsible, evolved living.”
Home automation today is measured not by the number of gadgets installed, but by how efficiently a home operates on its own. The best systems are invisible to the eye yet deeply intuitive to the user. A sustainable home, in this new era, is one where technology quietly orchestrates comfort, conservation, and well-being behind the scenes.
Yet, challenges remain. Device interoperability continues to be a major stumbling block in India, with homeowners often trapped between ecosystems that do not seamlessly communicate. As Aditya Khemka, Managing Director, CP PLUS (Aditya Infotech Ltd.) notes candidly, “We need an India-centric framework for smart home standardisation. Without it, the promise of integrated, intelligent living risks becoming a fragmented, elitist experience.”
Affordability is another crucial pivot. While urban elite homes are increasingly showcasing advanced automation, democratising smart technology for middle-income households remains a significant hurdle. “Scaling affordability without sacrificing quality is the holy grail,” insists Ashish Dhakan of Hikvision. “True smart living must become mainstream, not remain a symbol of privilege.”
Nevertheless, there is optimism. Just as smartphones transitioned from status symbols to everyday essentials, smart home solutions too are poised for mass adoption. As technology matures and awareness deepens, tomorrow’s middle-class Indian household may very well demand — not dream of — a home that conserves water, manages energy judiciously, and intuitively enhances health and security.
“A truly intelligent home of the future will not be the one with the most gadgets, but the one that best protects your well-being, your planet, and your future,” summarises Jubin Thomas with quiet conviction.
In an era increasingly defined by resource scarcity and climate consciousness, the next frontier of luxury is not opulence — it is intelligence. And the smartest homes will be those that tread lightly, think deeply, and live harmoniously with their environment.
“We need an India-centric framework for smart home standardisation. Without it, the promise of integrated, intelligent living risks becoming a fragmented, elitist experience,” says Aditya Khemka, Managing Director, CP PLUS (Aditya Infotech Ltd.)
“When lighting adjusts automatically to the time of day, blinds manage solar heat intelligently, and energy loads are optimised without human intervention, a home transforms from being a mere shelter to an active participant in sustainable living,” explains Suman Kumar Lokanath, Head of Marketing, Sales, and Strategy at Cinebels.
BREAKING BARRIERS — HOW TECHNOLOGY CAN DEMOCRATISE SMART LIVING
As home automation steadily cements itself into the fabric of aspirational living, the next critical challenge emerges: inclusion. For all its marvels, smart living must not remain a gated luxury reserved for a privileged few. The real victory for the Indian smart home revolution will come when innovation touches not just the penthouses of Mumbai and Delhi, but the apartments of Navi Mumbai, Jaipur, and Coimbatore. Affordability, interoperability, and consumer education are now the true frontiers of growth. Advanced technologies must become intuitive, scalable, and — above all — accessible. “Smart living is no longer an indulgence; it must be treated as a standard, much like electricity or plumbing,” says Ashish Dhakan of Hikvision. “Unless automation becomes seamlessly integrated into even mid-segment housing, we risk deepening the digital divide within our cities.” The path forward demands bold rethinking. System architectures must be modular, allowing consumers to scale their homes as budgets allow. Entry-level smart products — from basic occupancy sensors to programmable lighting — must offer the same reliability and durability as their premium counterparts. Cloud-based platforms need to enable centralised, secure control across devices from multiple manufacturers, eliminating today’s frustrating ecosystem silos. Manufacturers and developers alike are beginning to recognise this imperative. New-age builders are increasingly embedding basic smart infrastructure into projects from the outset — wiring homes for automation readiness, installing smart meters, and offering voice-activated lighting packages as standard.
“Tomorrow’s homebuyer will ask about energy dashboards, water metering apps, and air quality monitors alongside carpet area.” Jubin Thomas, Head of Residential MDU at Lutron GL Sales & Services
“Smart integration will no longer be a differentiator. It will be an expectation.” notes Jubin Thomas. However, price points alone are not the sole hurdle. Awareness remains a substantial bottleneck, particularly in Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities where the value proposition of smart homes — in terms of energy savings, security, and health benefits — is still poorly understood. “Consumers need to be educated not about technology for its own sake, but about how smart living improves everyday life,” argues Priya Rustogi of LIXIL Water Technology. “We must speak the language of life enhancement, not just product specifications.” This shift in communication strategy is critical. Rather than pitching automation as futuristic, it must be positioned as practical. A water-saving smart tap is not a gadget; it’s a guarantee against scarcity. An occupancy-sensing light Is not a toy; it’s a small but vital step towards reducing household carbon emissions. The government too has a crucial role to play. Policies incentivising smart infrastructure adoption — such as tax rebates for green-certified homes with water and energy management systems — could dramatically accelerate penetration. The Smart Cities Mission has laid some groundwork, but urban planning must now integrate home-level intelligence, not just public
infrastructure upgrades. “We must move from ‘Smart Cities’ to ‘Smart Citizens’,” says Suman Kumar Lokanath. “If intelligence is embedded in every home, sustainability becomes a ground-up revolution, not just a top-down initiative.” Yet amidst all challenges, the underlying current is one of optimism. Technological deflation — the phenomenon where technologies become dramatically cheaper and more efficient over time — is already at play. Five years ago, a smart home hub cost what an entire apartment automation system might cost today. As AI, IoT, and connectivity technologies mature, costs will continue to fall, accessibility will rise, and intelligent living will edge ever closer to becoming the new normal. The stakes are high. As climate risks deepen, resource scarcity intensifies, and urban life grows more complex, the homes of tomorrow must do more than provide shelter. They must be stewards of health, protectors of resources, and enablers of human potential. Smart living, if scaled thoughtfully, can become one of India’s quietest yet most profound revolutions — not by dazzling with gimmicks, but by embedding intelligence, efficiency, and empathy into the very heart of everyday existence.
TOMORROW’S HOME — REDEFINING LUXURY, RESPONSIBILITY, AND WELL-BEING
The future of the Indian home is quietly but decisively being rewritten. No longer will four walls and a roof define aspiration. Tomorrow’s home will be measured by how intelligently it uses every drop of water, every watt of electricity, every ounce of space — and how meaningfully it nurtures those who live within it. The definition of luxury itself is undergoing a profound transformation. In a world where clean air is becoming a privilege and climate volatility the new normal, true luxury will not be marble floors and imported chandeliers. It will be sustainable air filtration systems, zero-water-wastage bathrooms, solar integration, and homes that instinctively adapt to human wellness needs. “The idea of luxury must evolve from opulence to resilience,” says Ashish Dhakan of Hikvision. Already, early adopters are demanding technologies that were barely discussed in residential spaces a decade ago. Smart ventilation that detects and expels indoor pollutants. Voice-activated fixtures that conserve both energy and effort. AI-driven wellness systems that regulate lighting and air conditioning based on circadian rhythms, enhancing sleep and productivity. “Indian consumers are now demanding homes that work for them, not just with them,” remarks Jubin Thomas, Head of Residential MDU at Lutron GL Sales & Services. “They want systems that enhance wellbeing invisibly, naturally — without having to learn complex interfaces.” The focus on wellness is not an isolated trend. It is deeply intertwined with sustainability. Architects and developers are waking up to the reality that a building cannot be considered world-class unless it is climate-responsive. Projects that once flaunted sprawling clubhouses and towering facades are now proudly marketing low-flow sanitaryware, green roofs, IoT-based energy metering, and rainwater harvesting systems as their biggest selling points. “You cannot sell the future if you are building irresponsibly today,” asserts Priya Rustogi of LIXIL Water Technology. “Consumers are smarter than ever. They understand that true innovation lies in invisible savings — water that isn’t wasted, energy that isn’t consumed, air that isn’t contaminated.”