LED strip lights have come a long way from the cheap, single-colour reels of a few years ago. Today's smart strips offer independent segment control, millions of colours, voice assistant compatibility, and even Matter support — all at prices that have never been lower. Whether you're after bias lighting behind a TV, cosy bedroom ambience, or a full smart-home lighting scene, there's a strip for every budget and use case. Here are the five best LED strip lights you can buy in the UK right now.
1. Govee RGBIC LED Strip H61C3
Best budget pick for most homes. The Govee H61C3 is the go-to recommendation for anyone new to smart strip lights. It uses RGBIC technology — independent colour control for each LED segment — so you can display multiple colours on one strip simultaneously rather than a flat wash of a single hue.
- Length: 5 m (10 m version also available)
- Connectivity: 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi + Bluetooth, Govee Home app
- Voice control: Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant
- Price: around £25–£35 for 5 m
Pros: excellent value, intuitive Govee Home app, music-sync mode, easy peel-and-stick install.
Cons: no Zigbee or Matter support; app can feel busy; adhesive may lift on painted plaster over time.
If you already own other Govee products, read our full Govee smart lights UK review for a deeper look at the ecosystem.
2. Philips Hue Gradient Lightstrip
Best premium pick for Hue households. If you're already invested in the Philips Hue ecosystem, the Gradient Lightstrip is the most polished smart strip on the market. It produces true simultaneous gradient effects — multiple colours blending across the strip in a single scene — something no other mainstream strip replicates as cleanly.
- Length: 2 m base (extendable to 10 m with extension packs)
- Connectivity: Zigbee (requires Hue Bridge)
- Voice control: Alexa, Google Assistant, Apple HomeKit, Siri
- Price: around £70–£90 for the 2 m base kit
Pros: stunning gradient colour rendering, rock-solid Zigbee reliability, deep home-automation integration, works with Home Assistant via the Hue integration.
Cons: requires a Hue Bridge (sold separately, around £50); premium price; extension packs add up quickly.
Weighing up Philips Hue against a rival ecosystem? See our best smart bulbs UK guide for a wider comparison.
3. LIFX Z Strip
Best hub-free multizone strip. LIFX takes a different approach to Philips Hue: everything runs over Wi-Fi with no hub required. The LIFX Z delivers 8 individually addressable zones per metre, RGBW colour (including a proper warm white), and up to 1,400 lumens on a 2 m starter kit — genuinely bright enough for task lighting as well as ambience.
- Length: 1 m starter kit (extendable to 10 m)
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi only (no hub needed)
- Voice control: Alexa, Google Assistant, Apple HomeKit, Siri
- Price: around £40–£55 for the 1 m starter
Pros: no hub or bridge required; RGBW covers warm white properly; excellent brightness; clean LIFX app.
Cons: pricier per metre than competitors; LIFX's cloud dependency means local control requires Home Assistant setup; limited UK retail availability.
4. TP-Link Tapo L930-5
Best budget RGBIC strip with Matter support. The Tapo L930 punches well above its price point. It offers 50 addressable colour zones across 5 m, PU-coated LEDs for improved colour diffusion, and — crucially — Matter support, meaning it works natively with Apple Home, Google Home, Amazon Alexa, and Samsung SmartThings without any brand-specific bridge.
- Length: 5 m (L930-5) or 10 m (L930-10)
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi, Matter-over-Wi-Fi
- Voice control: Alexa, Google Assistant, Apple HomeKit
- Price: around £30–£46 for 5 m
Pros: Matter-compatible for future-proofed smart home integration; 50 colour zones; PU diffusion coating; music sync; good app.
Cons: slightly bulkier connector than rivals; Tapo app required for initial setup even with Matter.
5. Twinkly Dots
Best for festive and creative lighting. Twinkly Dots takes a different form factor: individually addressable LED dots on a flexible string rather than a continuous strip. Each dot is independently controlled via the Twinkly app, enabling pixel-mapped animations, custom patterns, and effects that look spectacular as shelf lighting, window displays, or garden features.
- Length: 10 m (200 LEDs) and 20 m (400 LEDs) versions
- Connectivity: Wi-Fi, Bluetooth (for initial setup), IP44 rated
- Voice control: Amazon Alexa and Google Home
- Price: around £35–£55 for 10 m
Pros: pixel-mapping creates unique effects; IP44 rated for outdoor use; vibrant app with preset animations; suitable for creative and seasonal displays.
Cons: not a traditional strip (gaps between dots); no warm-white option; app can be slow to load effects; less useful as everyday bias lighting.
Which LED Strip Light Should You Buy?
For most UK buyers, the Govee RGBIC H61C3 is the obvious starting point — it costs around £25–£35 for 5 m, installs in minutes, and looks genuinely impressive. If you're building a Philips Hue ecosystem, the Gradient Lightstrip is worth the premium for its colour quality and reliability. The Tapo L930 is the smartest value pick for anyone who cares about long-term smart-home compatibility, thanks to its Matter support. The LIFX Z wins on raw brightness and hub-free simplicity, while Twinkly Dots are the creative choice for festive or feature lighting.
Before buying, check the length of the run you need: most strips advertise a 5 m roll, but adding extensions beyond 10 m often requires a second power supply. Also confirm your Wi-Fi band — most budget strips require 2.4 GHz, not 5 GHz.




