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Comparison · 3 picks
Aqara M3 vs SwitchBot Hub 2 vs Apple TV 4K (2026)
All three of these devices claim to be "Matter hubs", but only two of them are full Matter Controllers and only two of them are Thread Border Routers - and the overlap is not what most buyers assume. The right pick depends almost entirely on which ecosystem your phone is already locked into and how many legacy Zigbee devices you need to keep alive.
This is a head-to-head between the Aqara Hub M3 (multi-protocol bridge), the SwitchBot Hub 2 (single-ecosystem Matter bridge) and the Apple TV 4K (Apple Home's de-facto home base). If you want the wider four-way picture including the Echo Hub and Aeotec/SmartThings, see our best Matter hubs 2026 roundup first.
At a glance
All 3 options side by side.
Aqara Hub M3 | SwitchBot Hub 2 | Apple TV 4K (3rd gen, 128GB Wi-Fi + Ethernet) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | £100 | £79 | £169 |
| Best for | Best for mixed-ecosystem households and anyone planning to run Home Assistant. | Best only if you already own (or plan to buy) SwitchBot accessories and need to expose them to Matter. | the £20 step up from the 64GB version is the only way to get Thread. |
| Check price | Check price | Read more → |
The picks in detail
Aqara Aqara Hub M3
Bottom line. Best for mixed-ecosystem households and anyone planning to run Home Assistant. The only hub of the three that bridges legacy Zigbee, hosts a Thread Border Router, and acts as a full Matter Controller.
Pros
- True multi-protocol hub: Matter Controller + Thread 1.4 Border Router + Zigbee 3.0 bridge + IR blaster in one box
- Officially supported by Home Assistant - local Matter control over Ethernet without an Aqara cloud account
- PoE-powered variant lets you put the hub anywhere a Cat5e run can reach (handy for cupboards or roof spaces)
Cons
- Aqara's UK distribution is patchy - RRP swings between £79 and £160 depending on retailer and stock cycle
- Aqara app remains the weakest of the three first-party experiences if you ever drop out of Apple/Google/Amazon Home
SwitchBot SwitchBot Hub 2
Bottom line. Best only if you already own (or plan to buy) SwitchBot accessories and need to expose them to Matter. Treat it as a bridge with extras, not as a hub.
Pros
- Built-in IR blaster covers thousands of legacy AC, TV and AV remotes - usable as a Matter scene-trigger to the rest of your home
- Side-mounted temperature and humidity sensor doubles as a smart-home automation input without buying a separate device
- Cheapest way to bring SwitchBot's mechanical bots (curtain robots, button pushers, smart locks) into Apple Home, Google Home or Alexa via Matter bridging
Cons
- Not a Matter Controller - it cannot commission a Matter device for you; you still need an Apple, Google or Amazon hub to actually run the Matter fabric
- Not a Thread Border Router either - Thread devices won't talk to the network unless something else (Apple TV, HomePod mini, Echo, Aqara M3, Nest Hub Gen 2) supplies that radio
- The bridging is bounded to SwitchBot's own products, so it's a poor general-purpose Matter purchase
Apple TV 4K (3rd gen, 128GB Wi-Fi + Ethernet)
Bottom line. Best for Apple-first households and anyone who wants the most reliable Matter controller money can buy. Buy the 128GB model: the £20 step up from the 64GB version is the only way to get Thread.
Pros
- The most stable Matter Controller most households can buy - Apple Home runs the fabric, schedules and automations entirely on-device
- Thread 1.4 Border Router with redundant fail-over when paired with HomePod mini or HomePod 2 - the most reliable Thread mesh available off the shelf
- Enhanced Multi-Admin (iOS 17+) lets the same Matter device appear in Apple Home, Google Home and Alexa simultaneously without re-pairing
Cons
- Only the 128GB Wi-Fi + Ethernet model has Thread - the cheaper £149 64GB Wi-Fi-only SKU is NOT a Thread Border Router (the spec sheet hides this)
- No Zigbee radio: legacy Hue, IKEA Trådfri and SmartThings Zigbee gear still need their own hub
- Best-in-class only inside Apple Home - Android-only households get most of the value from a HomePod mini or a Nest Hub instead
What do these three hubs actually do?
Matter as a standard separates three jobs that older smart-home protocols smushed together: commissioning a new device into the fabric, routing Thread traffic to and from low-power devices, and bridging non-Matter gear (Zigbee, Z-Wave, proprietary Bluetooth) onto the fabric. A hub can do any combination of those jobs - and price isn't a reliable signal of how many.
The Aqara Hub M3 does all three. The Apple TV 4K (128GB only) does the first two but not the third. The SwitchBot Hub 2 does only the third, and only for SwitchBot's own products. That single sentence is the comparison.
When does the Aqara M3 make sense?
The M3 is the most versatile box of the three because it covers every radio a modern smart home is likely to use: Wi-Fi for app talk-back, Ethernet (USB-C or PoE depending on the variant) for stable Matter, Zigbee 3.0 for an existing Hue/Trådfri/SmartThings device library, Thread 1.4 for new Matter-over-Thread devices like the Aqara U200 lock or Eve sensors, and an IR blaster for legacy AC and AV remotes.
Because it's a full Matter Controller, it can commission Matter devices on its own - useful if your phone isn't an iPhone and you don't want to anchor your smart home to Google Home. The official Home Assistant integration is the real differentiator: M3 is one of the very few Matter Controllers that will surrender control to a self-hosted controller without forcing you through an OEM cloud account. That puts it in a different category from anything Apple, Google or Amazon sell.
When does the SwitchBot Hub 2 make sense?
The SwitchBot Hub 2 is one of the most-misunderstood products in the Matter category. The packaging says "Matter" prominently; the marketing implies it's a hub in the same sense as an Apple TV or an Echo Hub. It is not.
Under the hood it is a Matter bridge: it takes SwitchBot's own ecosystem of mechanical bots, plugs, sensors and locks and exposes them to other Matter Controllers (Apple Home, Google Home, Alexa) so they show up alongside your other smart-home devices. What it cannot do is commission a non-SwitchBot Matter device, host a Thread Border Router, or act as the brain of your automations when the iPhone or Echo isn't around.
That makes it an excellent second device for households that already invested in SwitchBot's curtain robots, retrofit smart locks or temperature-controlled plugs. As a sole purchase for a household that wants a general-purpose Matter hub, it sets buyers up for the frustrating discovery that they still need an Apple TV, HomePod mini or Echo to make the rest of it work.
When does the Apple TV 4K make sense?
For an iPhone household, the Apple TV 4K (3rd gen, 2022) is the closest thing to a one-stop Matter hub on the market. Apple Home runs entirely on-device, including all automations and scenes - there's no cloud round-trip, no monthly subscription, and Matter commissioning is a tap on the iPhone.
The caveat is on the spec sheet but Apple buries it: only the £169 128GB Wi-Fi + Ethernet model includes the Thread radio. The £149 64GB Wi-Fi-only model is otherwise identical but is not a Thread Border Router. For most readers the £20 step up is the right call - without Thread on the box, Matter-over-Thread devices like Eve sensors, Aqara U200 locks and Nanoleaf bulbs need a second device (a HomePod mini works, but that's another £99) before they'll connect to the mesh.
Beyond Thread, the Apple TV's Matter Controller is the most stable in the field because Apple ships software updates to it on the same cadence as iOS. If you live mostly inside Apple Home and Siri, it's the safest purchase of the three. If your phone is an Android or you intend to use Home Assistant as the brain, you'll get more out of the M3.
Which of these is a real Thread Border Router?
A Thread Border Router (TBR) is the device that bridges low-power Matter-over-Thread devices onto your home Wi-Fi network. Without at least one TBR live somewhere in your home, Thread devices simply won't talk to anything - you can't "opt out" of needing a Border Router if you're buying Thread gear.
Of the three hubs compared here, only the Apple TV 4K 128GB and the Aqara M3 include a Thread radio. The SwitchBot Hub 2 does not. If your only hub is a SwitchBot Hub 2, every Matter-over-Thread purchase you make will sit dark on the shelf until you add another device.
How locked-in does each ecosystem make you?
The hidden cost of each hub is the ecosystem it pulls you into for everyday control. Apple Home is the deepest experience inside the Apple TV - automations, presence sensing, Adaptive Lighting, Secure Video - but most of that experience disappears for non-iPhone households. The M3 is the most agnostic of the three: it surfaces equally well into Apple Home, Google Home, Alexa and Home Assistant. The SwitchBot Hub 2 is tied to the SwitchBot app for any device-level configuration, even when the Matter bridge is doing the day-to-day exposure.
If you're not sure which ecosystem you'll be on in five years, the M3 is the lowest-regret pick because it doesn't bias the answer. If you're certain you're staying Apple, the Apple TV 4K is the better experience.
Frequently asked questions
Q01Is the SwitchBot Hub 2 a full Matter hub?
Q02Do I need Thread to use Matter?
Q03Which Apple TV 4K has Thread?
Q04Can the Aqara M3 work without an Aqara account?
Q05Should I buy all three?
Q06What about the Apple HomePod mini as an alternative?
Which one should you buy?
For most UK households reading this comparison, the answer is one of two: the Apple TV 4K 128GB if you're committed to Apple Home and the iPhone, or the Aqara Hub M3 if you have legacy Zigbee, multiple platforms, or any plan to run Home Assistant. The SwitchBot Hub 2 is an add-on, not a primary hub.
If you're still mapping out which hub fits your home, the wider four-way best Matter hubs 2026 roundup adds the Echo Hub (the best wall-panel pick) and the Aeotec/SmartThings Hub V2 (best for Samsung-first households with large device libraries).