Skip to content
Tech News
← Back to articles

We really need a way to hand over ownership of an Apple Home

read original more articles
Why This Matters

This article highlights a significant gap in Apple's smart home ecosystem: the lack of a straightforward way to transfer ownership of smart home devices. As smart homes become more mainstream, this issue poses challenges for both sellers and buyers, emphasizing the need for better ownership transfer solutions to enhance user experience and property value.

Key Takeaways

Me being me, one of the first things I wanted to do in my new home was set up the smart home technology. That’s now almost complete (I’m currently engaged in mortal battle with presence detectors) and I’ll have an update soon.

But there was also the matter of the smart home tech I was leaving behind – and that was less straightforward thanks to a surprising omission in the Apple Home ecosystem …

Smart homes get mixed reviews from real estate agents. Some take the view that it adds value to a property and should therefore be included in the sale. Others say that fear of complexity may put off some buyers and that you should sell the home without it.

I decided the, uh, smartest thing to do was to play it by ear: I’d test the reaction of potential buyers when they viewed the property by demonstrating several different elements of it.

As it turned out, my buyer was extremely keen on the smart home tech, and we therefore agreed that I’d leave it all in place. That wasn’t such a sacrifice from the perspective of my new home, as some of the tech had moved on and I’d have been tempted to upgrade in any case. For example, I used the new Hue Gradient Light Strips in place of the one-color-at-a-time versions I had in my old place, and I now want a smart lock with Apple Key support.

Actually, handing over my former smarthome to its new owner proved more problematic, however, because Apple doesn’t provide any mechanism to do this.

Until a year or two ago, this would have been a relatively esoteric problem. However, smart home technology is becoming increasingly mainstream, and this issue is going to become more and more common. We had to use a workaround to provide a temporary solution that would allow my buyer to move into a working smart home on day one and have a bit of time to plan his own takeover of all the kit.

That workaround was to add him as an additional Resident in the Apple Home app, and to arrange with my broadband provider to leave the service in place for a couple of weeks after I moved out. That part went to plan, and everything worked for him on arrival. But it was only a temporary solution.

In theory, we could have made it permanent. He could have used the same SSID and password for his new router, and we could have left me as the owner of the Apple Home and him as a Resident. A Resident, unlike a Guest, can add and remove accessories, scenes, automations, and other users. However, there are still some things they cannot do, like add HomePods, Apple TVs, or AirPlay devices.

More significantly, it would be a nuisance for me to have an additional home in the app, and it would be an obvious security and privacy risk more generally for previous owners of homes to retain full access to all the smart home tech – including locks.

... continue reading