The best smart boiler controls for UK homes in 2026 are the tado° Wireless Smart Thermostat Starter Kit V3+, Hive Active Heating 2, Google Nest Thermostat, Drayton Wiser Heat Hub, and the Honeywell Home T6. Each suits a different combination of boiler type, budget, and smart home ecosystem — and the difference between OpenTherm and basic on/off control matters more for your heating bills than most buyers realise.
Why upgrade your boiler control?
Most UK homes still use a basic on/off programmer — a timer that fires the boiler to full power at set times and switches it off when target temperature is reached. This is simple and reliable, but it is fundamentally inefficient. When the boiler blasts heat at 100% capacity and then cuts out, it cycles on and off repeatedly, spending much of the day outside the efficient condensing range that modern combi and system boilers are designed to operate in.
A smart thermostat replaces this with more precise scheduling — including geofencing that turns heating down when you leave the house and back up before you return, and room-by-room control when paired with smart TRVs. The Energy Saving Trust estimates that smart thermostats can save a typical UK household up to £75 per year on heating bills. Use it well, and the hardware pays for itself within two to three heating seasons.
OpenTherm vs simple on/off control
This is the most important technical decision you will make when choosing a smart boiler control. On/off control works like a light switch: the boiler fires at full power until the room setpoint is reached, then shuts off. The result is temperature overshoot, cycling, and significant time spent in the non-condensing range — where a condensing boiler is no more efficient than a conventional one.
OpenTherm is a two-way digital communication protocol between the thermostat and the boiler. Instead of simply switching the boiler on or off, an OpenTherm thermostat modulates the boiler's flow temperature — turning it down when demand is low rather than switching it off. This keeps the boiler running continuously in the efficient condensing range. Independent testing shows OpenTherm can deliver 8–12% gas savings compared with on/off control on a compatible boiler, and the boiler also cycles less, which reduces wear.
Not every boiler supports OpenTherm. The protocol is standard on most combi boilers manufactured by Vaillant, Worcester Bosch, Ideal, Intergas, and Baxi from around 2012 onwards, but you should check your boiler's manual or the manufacturer's website to confirm. If your boiler does not support OpenTherm, a smart thermostat on basic on/off control still saves energy through better scheduling — it is just a smaller saving.
UK boiler compatibility
Almost every smart thermostat listed here works with UK gas combi boilers, heat-only (regular) boilers, and system boilers. The key compatibility questions are:
- OpenTherm terminal: does your boiler have an OpenTherm or BUS terminal? Check the boiler manual — it is often labelled "OT" or "BUS".
- Hot water control: combi boilers heat water on demand, so separate hot water control is irrelevant. Heat-only and system boilers with a cylinder need a thermostat that supports a separate hot water channel — Hive and tado° both offer this.
- Wiring: most UK installations are S-plan or Y-plan. Wireless thermostats (tado°, Hive, Drayton Wiser) use a receiver wired to the boiler and communicate wirelessly with the thermostat — making them easier to position away from a poorly-sited existing thermostat backplate.
The five best smart boiler controls for UK homes
1. tado° Wireless Smart Thermostat Starter Kit V3+ — Best for OpenTherm and geofencing
Price: from around £150–£170, prices vary by retailer. The tado° V3+ is the strongest OpenTherm performer in the consumer market. Its Auto-Assist feature combines geofencing, open-window detection (the thermostat detects a rapid temperature drop and pauses heating), and weather adaptation (it reads the local outdoor temperature and adjusts flow temperature accordingly). If your boiler supports OpenTherm, tado° uses it to modulate the flow temperature rather than cycling on and off.
tado° is one of the few consumer thermostats that genuinely unlocks the full potential of a modern condensing combi boiler. The app is polished, and multi-zone setups using tado° Smart Radiator Thermostats slot into the same system. The core subscription — required for some advanced features including Auto-Assist geofencing — costs around £2.99 per month or £24.99 per year. Basic scheduling and app control are free. Check current price on Amazon. For a detailed head-to-head see our Hive vs tado° UK comparison.
2. Hive Active Heating 2 — Best for British Gas households
Price: from around £170–£200 including professional installation option, prices vary by retailer. Hive Active Heating 2 is the most widely-installed smart thermostat in the UK, backed by British Gas's installer network. It operates on basic on/off control rather than OpenTherm modulation, which means it does not extract the full efficiency of a condensing boiler. However, its scheduling, app control, geofencing, and Alexa/Google integration are all reliable and well-supported.
The key advantage of Hive is availability: British Gas customers can get the hardware installed by a qualified engineer, often with a warranty, making it the path of least resistance for those who do not want a DIY installation. Hive supports hot water control for heat-only boiler setups, and the Hive hub connects all Hive devices including plug-in smart sockets and Hive Active Lights. Check current price on Amazon. See our Hive vs tado° UK comparison for a full breakdown of which suits your boiler.
3. Google Nest Thermostat — Best for Google Home households
Price: from around £119–£139, prices vary by retailer. The Google Nest Thermostat (the 2021 model available in the UK) uses Nest's proprietary learning algorithm combined with Home/Away Assist for geofencing. It does not support OpenTherm modulation on most UK installations — it operates on on/off relay switching — but its scheduling intelligence and deep Google Home integration make it a strong choice for households already using Nest Protect smoke alarms, Nest Hub displays, or a Google-centric smart home.
The Nest Thermostat is the easiest of the five to self-install if you already have a conventional two-wire thermostat circuit. It includes a Heat Link receiver unit that connects to the boiler. Nest's Auto-Schedule feature learns your preferred temperatures after a week of manual adjustments and then programmes itself. Check current price on Amazon. For a Nest vs tado° comparison see our tado° vs Nest UK guide.
4. Drayton Wiser Heat Hub — Best for multi-zone control on a budget
Price: from around £130–£160 for the starter kit, prices vary by retailer. Drayton Wiser is a UK-brand system (Drayton is part of Schneider Electric) that offers OpenTherm support on compatible boilers alongside one of the most affordable multi-zone TRV ecosystems available. The Wiser app is well-regarded, and the Heat Hub connects over Zigbee — which means it also works with Home Assistant using the official Wiser integration. For home automation enthusiasts who want open-protocol smart heating without spending tado° prices on every radiator, Wiser is the standout choice. Check current price on Amazon.
5. Honeywell Home T6 — Best for simplicity and reliability
Price: from around £70–£90, prices vary by retailer. The Honeywell Home T6 is the most straightforward smart thermostat in this list — a wired, Wi-Fi connected unit that replaces a conventional thermostat backplate without any hub or receiver. It supports OpenTherm on compatible Honeywell/Resideo boiler interfaces. The T6 is the right choice if you want remote control, basic scheduling, and app access without a subscription and without ecosystem complexity. It integrates with Alexa and Google Home for voice control. Check current price on Amazon.
Installation difficulty compared
All five thermostats can be self-installed by a competent DIYer. Wireless models (tado°, Hive, Drayton Wiser) are generally easier to position because you only need to wire the receiver at the boiler, not the thermostat itself. The Honeywell T6 and Nest Thermostat require routing a cable to the thermostat location.
If your boiler uses an S-plan or Y-plan wiring configuration with zone valves, or if you have a heat-only boiler with a hot water cylinder, the wiring is more involved — particularly for Hive's multi-channel setup. Hive and tado° both offer professional installation services if you are not confident with boiler wiring. Always isolate power before working on boiler controls, and if in doubt, use a Gas Safe registered engineer.
Savings potential
The Energy Saving Trust estimates smart thermostats save a typical UK household up to £75 per year. For homes upgrading from a basic programmer with no thermostatic control at all, savings can be higher — particularly if geofencing eliminates the habit of leaving heating on during empty hours. Upgrading to an OpenTherm-compatible thermostat (tado° or Drayton Wiser) on a compatible condensing boiler can add a further 8–12% gas saving on top, which on an average UK gas bill equates to another £50–£100 per year.
For Home Assistant users, Home Assistant's climate integrations support Drayton Wiser, tado°, and Nest natively, enabling custom automations that go beyond what any manufacturer's app offers — including presence detection using phone-based tracking rather than cloud geofencing.
Our verdict
For most UK homeowners with a modern condensing combi boiler, tado° V3+ is the best smart boiler control in 2026 — it is the only consumer thermostat that fully exploits OpenTherm modulation, weather adaptation, and geofencing in one package. Hive Active Heating 2 is the right choice if you want British Gas installation support and a proven ecosystem. Google Nest Thermostat suits Google Home households at a lower entry price. Drayton Wiser is the pick for multi-zone control on a budget, especially for Home Assistant users. The Honeywell T6 is the best option if you want simplicity and no subscription. For more detailed comparisons, see our tado° vs Nest UK guide.
Related: best smart thermostats UK, Hive Active Heating review, and best combi boilers UK.




