Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Ideal Home
Ideal Home
Ginevra Benedetti

The touchless tech that will transform your daily routines - how to control your home, hands-free

Dog sleeping in front of a wooden coffee table and blue sofa with multicoloured cushions.

Fundamentally, when we mention 'hands-free' or 'touchless tech', this refers to the ability to control an appliance or device without actually swiping a surface or touching buttons. 

While it’s fair to assume that the rise in this hands-free way of living might be a hangover from the pandemic and one of the latest smart home trends, this functionality has been growing and developing for many years. 

From voice assistants to sensors, and even devices that can be programmed to work autonomously, there are so many areas in the home now where you don’t have to lift a finger.

Simple orders

(Image credit: Amazon)

If you're keen to make your home a 'smarter' one, you'll know it's possible to make your life easier with voice assistants. But if you’re just using your smart speaker to set timers, check the weather, or ask trivia questions, then there’s a whole raft of functionality that you have yet to tap into. 

Doing so will involve investing in different smart home products, but the possibilities of what you can do via voice command can really expand, from controlling your lighting, smart home security system, central heating, music, vacuum cleaner, coffee machine, TV, and much more.

Smart sensors

While sensor-activated appliances are clearly beneficial for those with mobility problems, there are many reasons why this clever functionality would benefit all homes.

Public bathrooms are already full of motion sensors on flushes, taps, and hand dryers which help with hygiene and save water and energy. But for convenience, this simple tech is also available in plenty of areas in the home.

(Image credit: Philips Hue)

For starters, you can open the fridge door of LG’s Signature Door-in-Door fridge freezer by waving your foot in front of a sensor at the base, perfect if your hands are full.

The same goes for any number of rubbish bins, from brands like Eko and Simplehuman, with lids that open when you swipe your hand above the sensor (the latter also opening via voice control). 

Philips Hue’s Motion Sensor will trigger smart lighting to turn on automatically, ideal for nighttime trips to the loo or outdoors for added security. And just like public loos, you too can have bathroom or kitchen taps and soap dispensers with sensor activation.

Automated controls

(Image credit: Shark)

The concept of an automated home feels strangely futuristic, but the reality is that much of this functionality is now commonplace in many homes across the UK. 

Smart lighting and smart heating thermostats can be programmed to turn on and off automatically, at different brightness and temperatures at various times of the day. Robot vacuums can be programmed to give your flooring a once over at a time of day when the house is empty so it can zoom around without distraction. 

You can program your smart home ecosystem to use the GPS on your phone so various devices, like lighting and heating, switch on when it detects that you’re close to home, and off again when you leave.

Outdoors, smart watering sprinklers and robot lawnmowers can work to set routines for watering at dusk or cutting the grass in the afternoon.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.