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Motion vs presence sensors in a smart home: pros, cons, and real uses

Motion vs presence sensors in a smart home: pros, cons, and real uses

Choose the right sensor for lighting and automations: fast PIR motion detection vs mmWave presence (including zoning with devices like Aqara FP2) and how to combine both in Home Assistant.

comparisonsDairis Štagers4/4/20263 min read
In this article
Smart lighting and sensors in a modern living space
Motion sensors react quickly on entry; presence sensors keep lights and scenes stable while someone stays still.

What is a motion sensor?

In home automation, a motion sensor (typically PIR) detects that something moved in a zone—usually someone walking in, passing through, or making a larger gesture. They are ideal when the priority is fast detection to turn on lights or trigger a scene.

Pros

Motion sensors are usually cheaper, simpler, and very snappy. They work well in hallways, storage, stairwells, and utility rooms where people pass through and you do not expect anyone to sit still for long.

Cons

The main downside is sensitivity to small motion: lights may turn off while someone is still in the room. Reading, working at a desk, or watching TV often produces tiny movements the sensor misses.

What is a presence sensor?

Presence sensors aim to infer that a person is still there—not only that motion occurred. Many modern units use mmWave radar, which can pick up subtle movement such as breathing. That makes them better for rooms where people stay seated for a long time.

Pros

Presence sensors improve comfort: lights stay on when someone remains in the space. Advanced models split the room into zones so automations can target a sofa area, desk, or bed independently—opening richer, easier-to-maintain logic.

Cons

They typically cost more and are more sensitive to installation and tuning. You may need to adjust sensitivity, account for room shape, and mask noise sources such as fans, curtains, swaying plants, running water, or reflective surfaces.

Why combining both often wins

A strong pattern is to use motion for fast on and presence for hold/off logic: motion turns lights on immediately when you enter; presence prevents premature off while you are still there. In Home Assistant, this layered approach often feels the most natural to occupants.

Aqara Presence Sensor FP2

The Aqara FP2 is an mmWave presence sensor marketed for finer room occupancy. Manufacturer-facing specs commonly cite coverage up to about 40 m², up to 30 zones, 320 configurable cells, and tracking up to five people, plus a built-in light sensor. Always verify current datasheet and hub compatibility before you standardize on it in a project.

Strengths

  • holds occupancy when movement is minimal;
  • supports multi-zone layouts and zone-specific automations;
  • fits living rooms, offices, bedrooms, and dining areas;
  • can support efficiency by reducing lights or HVAC when a zone is empty.

What to watch

  • mounting angle and height matter;
  • multi-person and multi-zone setups need deliberate planning;
  • accuracy can be affected by fans, plants, water, glass, and reflections;
  • it is smarter—and pricier—than basic PIR-only hardware.
Example of zoning one open room for different automations
Zoning concept: one space divided into logical areas—similar to how multi-zone presence sensors drive different automations.

Practical FP2-style use cases

  • Living room: sofa zone drives lounge lighting; TV wall or entry can run different scenes.
  • Office: desk zone keeps task lighting on while you work.
  • Bedroom: bed vs circulation zones enable night-friendly automations.
  • Dining: distinguish “walking past” from “actually at the table”.

Takeaway

Use motion when you need a simple, fast, budget-friendly trigger in transient spaces. Use presence when comfort and “still here” detection matter. Devices like the Aqara FP2 are compelling when you want zoning and finer context—paired with careful mounting and validation on site.

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