Stay in or venture out? Wrap up warm or dust off your deckchair? Precision-engineered sensors measure temperature, humidity, and barometric pressure with unrivaled accuracy – keeping you up to date with current conditions, right on your doorstep.
"Hey, Siri..."
"...what’s the temperature on the patio?" Ask Siri what the temperature's like outside, so you can dress for the day's weather before setting out.
Know what the weather’s going to do
Eve Weather automatically analyzes the local barometric pressure changes and uses this data to provide you with a 12-hour weather trend. Are the skies likely to clear? Or are they going to cloud over? You’ll be able to tell at a glance just by looking at the icons on the display or in the Eve app.
Track your home’s microclimate
What’s the coldest week of the year? How do humidity levels fluctuate throughout the day? Has low pressure prevailed since yesterday? The Eve app records and visualizes weather conditions over time, empowering you with microclimate insights.
Embellish any place
With its masterfully-crafted body and IPX4 water resistance, you can add a touch of functional elegance wherever it makes sense – from your patio wall or tabletop to your gazebo or garden nook.
Future-proof
Alongside Bluetooth, Eve Weather supports Thread. This technology makes your smart home network more responsive, and robust, and increases its reach – the only thing you need is a HomePod mini or the new Apple TV 4K. Thread is also a pillar of the new Matter standard.
Automate other accessories.
Eve Weather slots seamlessly into your connected ecosystem, enabling smart automation together with other HomeKit-enabled accessories.
Protect plants – the really easy way
For perfect cultivation conditions all year round, Eve Weather turns on Thomas’s humidifier automatically when needed. And thanks to the insights he gained from past climate data, Thomas can easily see when he can move his delicate patio plants outside.
Say goodbye to being late
Julia no longer is late in the morning. If the weather is frosty, she has her living-room lamp light up to remind her to leave earlier scraping ice off her windshield.
The ideal temperature
Maria likes to go jogging when it’s not too hot and not too cold, so she times her jogs to coincide with the best time of day. Just by glancing at the temperature data right outside her front door, she can tell as soon as things start to cool down in summer or slowly warm up in winter. And off she goes.