Philips Hue’s Biggest Launch Ever Floods Smart Homes With Light

Kai Brauer
By
Kai Brauer
Tech writer at All Things Geek. Covers consumer audio, home entertainment, and AV technology.
8 Min Read
Smart home hub and remote on a wooden table.

Philips Hue new smart lights represent the company’s largest product launch ever, with eight distinct products and one major software feature arriving throughout June 2026. The simultaneous expansion targets every corner of the home—indoors and out—while integrating with the existing Hue ecosystem via the Hue Bridge, Matter, and Thread support.

Key Takeaways

  • Eight new Philips Hue products launching June 2026, plus free Sports Sync software for World Cup tie-in.
  • Festavia Globe Outdoor String Lights offer 10m length with 25 warm white bulbs, IP65 weatherproofing, and battery power for up to 20 hours.
  • Secure Floodlight Camera integrates 2700-lumen lighting with 1080p motion-detection camera for security and ambiance.
  • Portable Go light delivers 4 color zones in a battery-powered 5-48 hour spotlight with magnetic mounting.
  • Pricing ranges from £60 (Go Portable) to £250 (Signe Floor Lamp), with most products requiring Hue Bridge for full control.

Philips Hue New Smart Lights Expand Indoors and Out

The Philips Hue new smart lights lineup breaks into three distinct categories: outdoor entertainment, portable accents, and indoor fixtures. The Festavia Globe Outdoor String Lights anchor the outdoor push with 10 meters of warm white globe bulbs (2700K color temperature), rated IP65 for weatherproofing and powered by battery for up to 20 hours between charges. The Play Wall Washer, a two-pack of RGBW strip lights, delivers 1600 lumens per unit and syncs with music and television for entertainment-focused lighting. Both products arrive in June 2026 at £150 and £200 respectively.

Indoors, the Iris Table Lamp and Signe Floor Lamp target different spaces. The Iris combines RGBW color with two color zones in a dome-diffused table lamp powered via USB-C, while the Signe stretches to 1.2–1.8 meters in height with a gradient RGBW effect and footswitch control. The Signe Floor Lamp commands the highest price at £250, reflecting its height and lumen output of 1100. Both launch in June 2026 and integrate with the Hue Bridge for full scene customization.

Security and Portable Spotlights Join the Lineup

The Secure Floodlight Camera represents Philips Hue’s deepest push into security integration, combining a 2700-lumen floodlight with a 1080p camera, PIR motion sensor, and 160-degree field of view. Two-way audio and AI detection enable real-time alerts and communication, while wired installation ensures constant power. At £220, it arrives in late May 2026—earlier than most of the June lineup—and integrates with Hue Secure cameras for cohesive outdoor surveillance. The Go Portable Accent Light takes a different approach, trading power for mobility with a battery-driven 4-color-zone spotlight offering 16-meter range and 5-48 hour battery life depending on brightness settings. Its magnetic mount and IP54 rating suit gardens, patios, and portable entertaining at just £60.

The Ensis Outdoor Spotlight rounds out the outdoor range with adjustable RGBW heads delivering 300 lumens each. Available as a single unit (£80) or twin pack (£140), the Ensis lights daisy-chain together and require the Hue Bridge for control. All outdoor products arrive by June 2026.

Sports Sync Ties Hue to World Cup 2026

The Sports Sync Module is not a physical product but a free app update launching June 11, 2026—the same day the World Cup begins. The feature syncs unlimited Hue lights in real time to sports events, supporting team color customization and dynamic scene changes as play unfolds. No additional hardware is required; existing Hue Bridge users gain the feature automatically. This timing positions Hue as an entertainment-focused smart home brand, not merely a lighting provider, and addresses a gap where competitors like WiZ lack sports-integrated features.

How Philips Hue New Smart Lights Compare to Rivals

WiZ smart bulbs undercut Hue on price, ranging from £6 to £15 compared to Hue’s £15–£50 per bulb, and operate via direct Wi-Fi without requiring a Bridge. However, WiZ lacks Hue’s ecosystem depth, advanced syncing, and integrated security features. IKEA Tradfri offers even lower prices but sacrifices smart functionality and design coherence for cost savings. Hue’s simultaneous launch of eight products with Matter and Thread support positions it as a premium, ecosystem-first competitor—a strategy that justifies higher per-unit costs for users committed to deep home automation.

The Secure Floodlight Camera also competes with dedicated security cameras like Blink Outdoor, but Hue’s integration of lighting and motion detection in a single fixture creates a unique value proposition for homeowners prioritizing both ambiance and surveillance.

Pricing and Availability Details

All Philips Hue new smart lights are priced in British pounds and available via the Philips Hue website, Amazon, and John Lewis. The Secure Floodlight Camera arrives in late May 2026 at £220; all other products launch in June 2026. The Festavia Globe costs £150, the Play Wall Washer two-pack £200, the Go Portable £60, the Ensis single spotlight £80 (twin pack £140), the Iris Table Lamp £150, and the Signe Floor Lamp £250. Sports Sync arrives as a free app update on June 11, 2026, with no additional cost for existing Hue Bridge users. US pricing runs approximately 20% higher than UK figures, with the Festavia around $180 equivalent.

Do I Need a Hue Bridge for All These New Lights?

Most Philips Hue new smart lights require the Hue Bridge for full control, remote access, and scene automation. The Festavia Globe Outdoor String Lights and Go Portable Accent Light can operate via Bluetooth and Matter/Thread for direct app control without a Bridge, but the Play Wall Washer, Ensis Outdoor Spotlight, Iris Table Lamp, and Signe Floor Lamp all mandate Bridge connectivity. If you lack a Bridge, budget an additional £80–£120 for the Hue Bridge Pro, which also enables Thread support.

Which Philips Hue New Smart Lights Should I Buy First?

Start with your use case. The Iris Table Lamp or Signe Floor Lamp suit indoor ambiance seekers, while outdoor entertainers should prioritize the Festavia Globe Outdoor String Lights or Play Wall Washer. If security matters, the Secure Floodlight Camera justifies its £220 price by combining lighting and motion detection. For renters or those testing Hue without commitment, the Go Portable at £60 offers low-risk entry with no Bridge required.

Philips Hue’s eight-product launch signals a company betting heavily on ecosystem lock-in and entertainment-focused lighting rather than competing on price. For users already invested in Hue or committed to Matter-based smart homes, the breadth of choices justifies the premium. For budget-conscious shoppers, WiZ remains the more affordable path—but Hue’s integrated security, sports syncing, and design cohesion create a more complete smart home story.

Where to Buy

£5.60

Edited by the All Things Geek team.

Source: T3

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Tech writer at All Things Geek. Covers consumer audio, home entertainment, and AV technology.