I killed three basil plants and a rosemary bush before accepting that my watering instincts are terrible. Too much, too little, wrong time of day — I managed every possible failure mode. Then I installed a $35 soil sensor and a $70 smart irrigation controller. My garden hasn't looked better, and I haven't touched a watering can in eight months.
Smart garden automation isn't just for tech nerds with unlimited budgets. A basic setup costs under $150, saves significant water, and takes the guesswork out of keeping plants alive. Here's how to build one.
Why Automate Your Garden?
Water Conservation
Traditional sprinkler timers water on a fixed schedule regardless of conditions. It rained 2 inches yesterday? Timer doesn't care — it waters anyway. It's 95°F and the soil is bone dry? Timer gives the same 10 minutes it always does.
Smart irrigation controllers adjust watering based on actual conditions: soil moisture, weather forecasts, temperature, humidity, and evapotranspiration rates. Studies from the EPA's WaterSense program show that weather-based smart controllers reduce outdoor water use by 15-30% compared to conventional timers.
For a typical suburban lawn and garden using 50 gallons per day on irrigation, that's 2,700-5,500 gallons saved per year. At $0.005-0.01 per gallon (US average), smart irrigation saves $14-55 annually on water alone. The controller pays for itself within 1-3 seasons.
Plant Health
Overwatering kills more houseplants and garden plants than underwatering. Waterlogged roots develop root rot (a fungal infection), can't absorb nutrients, and eventually die. Soil sensors prevent this by telling you (or your automation) exactly how much moisture is in the soil.
Different plants need different moisture levels. Succulents want dry soil (below 20% moisture). Tomatoes prefer consistent moderate moisture (40-60%). Ferns want consistently moist soil (60-80%). Without a sensor, you're guessing. With a sensor, you're measuring.
Time Savings
A properly automated garden needs minimal manual intervention. Set it up once, review the data occasionally, and adjust seasonally. Instead of daily watering rounds with a hose, you check a dashboard on your phone once a week and let the system handle everything.
The Components
1. Soil Sensors
Soil sensors measure one or more of: moisture level, temperature, light exposure, and soil conductivity (nutrient levels).
ECOWITT WH51 Soil Moisture Sensor ($16)
The best value soil sensor available. Measures soil moisture using capacitive sensing (more accurate and durable than resistive probes). Communicates via 433 MHz radio to an ECOWITT gateway, which pushes data to your WiFi network. Battery life is 12+ months on two AAA batteries. IP67 waterproof.
Integrates with Home Assistant through the ECOWITT integration for real-time moisture data, historical graphs, and automation triggers.
SwitchBot Outdoor Meter ($30)
Measures soil moisture, temperature, humidity, and light intensity. Connects via Bluetooth to a SwitchBot Hub. More expensive per unit but includes more sensor types in one device.
Xiaomi/HHCC Plant Sensor ($12)
Tiny sensor measuring moisture, light, temperature, and soil conductivity. Bluetooth connection, Home Assistant compatible. Great for indoor plants and small outdoor pots.
2. Smart Irrigation Controllers
Rachio 3 Smart Sprinkler Controller ($150-230)
The gold standard. Weather Intelligence adjusts watering dynamically using local weather data, satellite imagery, and forecasts. Features weather skip, seasonal shift, flow monitoring, and soil type calibration. Excellent Home Assistant integration.
Orbit B-hyve ($55-100)
Budget-friendly alternative. 8-zone WiFi model is about $55. Includes weather-based adjustments and EPA WaterSense certification. Home Assistant integration available.
OpenSprinkler ($150)
For DIY enthusiasts. Open-source firmware, deep Home Assistant integration. Works locally forever — no cloud dependency.
3. Smart Hose Timers
Eve Aqua ($75) — Thread/HomeKit smart water controller. Works without WiFi via Thread mesh.
Orbit B-hyve Hose Faucet Timer ($35) — WiFi-connected with weather-based scheduling. Best budget option.
4. Drip Irrigation Kits
Raindrip R560DP Drip Kit ($25-35) — Covers up to 75 feet. Includes mainline tubing, adjustable emitters, stakes, and connectors. Pair with a smart hose timer for full automation.
Building a Complete System: Step by Step
Step 1: Map Your Zones
Walk your garden and identify areas with different watering needs:
- Zone 1: Lawn (frequent, shallow watering)
- Zone 2: Vegetable garden (deep, consistent moisture)
- Zone 3: Flower beds (moderate watering)
- Zone 4: Container herbs (frequent, small amounts)
Step 2: Install Soil Sensors
Place sensors in each zone, burying probes 4-6 inches deep. Install the gateway indoors within radio range. Set up integrations in Home Assistant.
Step 3: Install Irrigation Control
- In-ground sprinkler: Replace your timer with Rachio 3 or OpenSprinkler
- Hose-based: Attach Orbit B-hyve or Eve Aqua to your outdoor faucet
Step 4: Create Automations
Moisture-based watering:
- Trigger: Moisture drops below 40%
- Condition: No rain in last 24 hours
- Action: Water zone for 15 minutes
Weather-aware watering:
- Trigger: Daily at 6 AM
- Condition: <50% rain chance AND moisture below 50%
- Action: Run lawn zone for 20 minutes
Freeze protection:
- Trigger: Temperature below 35°F (2°C)
- Action: Disable all irrigation until above 40°F
Step 5: Monitor and Adjust
First few weeks require observation. After tuning, the system runs itself. Check dashboard weekly, review logs monthly, adjust seasonally.
Cost Summary
| Component | Budget | Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Soil sensors (3x) | $48 (ECOWITT) | $90 (SwitchBot) |
| Gateway | $20 | $30 |
| Irrigation controller | $35 (B-hyve hose) | $150 (Rachio 3) |
| Drip kit | $25 | $50 |
| Weather station | — | $80 |
| Total | $128 | $400 |
The Bottom Line
Smart garden automation is one of the most satisfying smart home projects because the results are visible. Your plants are healthier, your water bill is lower, and you spend zero time dragging hoses around the yard.
Start with a single soil sensor and a smart hose timer. See the data. Adjust your watering. Watch your garden thrive.
Originally published on SmartHomeMade
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