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Wemo discontinuation of service

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Belkin Wemo smart home devices require cloud connectivity to work. On 10 July 2025, Belkin announced the shutdown of cloud services supporting most Wemo devices, effective 31 January 2026.[1] These devices remain for sale on Belkin's Amazon WeMo store[2] and advertising them as working with Google, Alexa, and more.[3]

This shutdown will disable remote access and automation functionality for 27+ device models sold between August 2015 and November 2023, affecting thousands of customers who purchased these devices as permanent smart home solutions. The incident is one example of a broader trend of IoT device abandonment and software tethering practices that enable manufacturers to remotely disable purchased products.

Background

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First launched in 2011, Wemo is a smart home product line developed by Belkin. The product line includes smart plugs, light switches, motion sensors, dimmers, and connected appliances like coffee makers and humidifiers. These devices were marketed as one-time purchases with cloud features, app control, and integration with voice assistants including Amazon Alexa, Google Home, and Apple HomeKit.

Wemo gained popularity for its convenience, ease of use, and broad compatibility with voice assistants and cloud automation programs. Devices were sold with no disclosed end-of-life timeline for cloud functionality.

2025 shutdown announcement

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Email from Belkin about Wemo shutdown
Email notification sent to Wemo customers about the January 2026 shutdown

On 10 July 2025, Belkin created a support page and began e-mailing customers informing them that most Wemo devices would stop working on 31 January 2026.[1] The company described this as a "difficult decision" to shut down cloud services for Wemo products, stating they needed to "focus our resources on different parts of the Belkin business."

The shutdown affects any feature requiring cloud connectivity, including:

  • Wemo app functionality
  • Amazon Alexa integration
  • Google Home integration
  • Remote access capabilities
  • Automation and scheduling features
  • Technical support

Devices affected

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This shutdown impacts 24 different device models spanning smart plugs, switches, specialty appliances, and sensors sold between August 2015 and November 2023, including:

  • Wemo Smart Plug (multiple generations)
  • Wemo Smart Light Switches
  • Wemo In-Wall Dimmers and Switches
  • Wemo connected appliances (smart crockpots, air purifiers, coffee makers, humidifiers)
  • Wemo Motion Sensors and LED lighting kits
  • Wemo Outdoor Smart Plug
  • Wemo Mini Smart Plug
  • Various specialty devices and older models

Only four Thread-based[Clarify] models will continue functioning through Apple HomeKit after the shutdown date, and only if configured prior to 31 January 2026.

Timing and warranty issues

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Devices with three-year warranties sold as recently as November 2023 will lose core functionality before warranty expiration. Belkin offers only partial refunds for devices still under warranty after the shutdown date, requiring consumers to wait until their devices are non-functional before seeking compensation.

Belkin suggests disposing of the devices

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Belkin's official response recommends that customers dispose of out-of-warranty devices at authorized e-waste recycling centers, despite the devices remaining physically functional:[1]

"For any Wemo devices you have that are out of warranty, will not work with HomeKit or if you are unable to use HomeKit, we recommend disposing of these devices at an authorized e-waste recycling center."

This recommendation is particularly controversial for in-wall switches and dimmers that are permanently installed in customers' homes. One Ars Technica forum user suggested "boxing them up and shipping them directly to Belkin corporate headquarters."[4]

Continued sales of soon-to-be-dead products

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Despite announcing the shutdown, Belkin continues selling affected Wemo devices through Amazon and other retailers without disclosing the impending service termination.[3] As of July 2025, the Wemo Amazon store prominently displays compatibility claims with Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, and other platforms that will stop functioning in six months.

Consumer response and criticism

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Immediate reaction

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Customer response was swift and negative, with users expressing feelings of abandonment and frustration over recent purchases becoming obsolete.[6] The company provided only six months of notice for a shutdown affecting fourteen years of product sales.

Technology community backlash

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Ars Technica's coverage criticized Belkin's move as reflecting an industry that "has grown too comfortable with bricking customers' stuff" without offering adequate recourse or transparency.[7]

Reddit discussions in r/WeMo revealed widespread customer anger:

"They just guaranteed I'll never buy Belkin again. Half the light switches in my house are going to need replacing."[8]

"I figured it's made by a trusted brand so it would be better than using no name Amazon junk. What a joke. [...] Belkin is never getting a dollar from me again."[9]

Users called for firmware updates enabling local control and drew parallels to digital game preservation campaigns such as the Stop Killing Games campaign.

Technical workarounds

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While technical solutions exist for maintaining some device functionality, they require a good amount of technical expertise that most consumers lack:

  • Apple HomeKit: Devices configured with HomeKit before the shutdown will continue working through Apple's ecosystem.
  • Home Assistant: Open-source platform offering local control through universal plug-and-play device discovery.
  • Third-party firmware: Projects such as Tasmota enable complete device replacement, though requiring technical modification
  • Pywemo: Supports joining and changing Wi-Fi settings, and local control via Wemo's local API (which is not documented by Belkin). GitHub project link

The existence of these workarounds demonstrates that the shutdown represents a business decision rather than out of technical necessity, as devices can continue functioning locally without cloud services.

Industry context

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The Wemo shutdown represents part of a broader pattern of IoT device abandonment affecting millions of devices globally. Similar shutdowns include:

  • Google Cloud IoT Core termination (2023)
  • Amazon Web Services IoT service discontinuations (2024—2026)
  • Complete collapse of Insteon's smart home system (2022), affecting 1.3 million customers[10]

Academic research has identified this phenomenon as "regulation by bricking"[11], a form of corporate control where manufacturers retain the ability to remotely disable devices after purchase through licensing agreements and cloud service dependencies.

Consumer protection and regulatory response

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The incident shows the gaps in consumer protection frameworks for software-dependent devices. Current warranty laws assume hardware failure rather than service termination, creating uncertainty about whether cloud service shutdowns count as defective products.

Consumer advocacy organizations, led by Consumer Reports, have mobilized against IoT device abandonment practices, coining the term "software tethering" to describe manufacturer control over post-purchase device functionality.[12] The coalition has petitioned the FTC to address these practices and establish mandatory disclosure requirements for device support timelines.

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On 28 January 2026, ClassAction.org issued a website form for people affected by the Wemo cloud shutdown to contact them regarding a potential mass arbitration event.[13] In addition, the Sauder Schelkopf law firm launched their own investigation into the Wemo cloud shutdown.[14]

See also

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References

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  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Belkin Official Support - Wemo Support Ending – What You Need to Know". Belkin. 10 Jul 2025. Archived from the original on 27 Jan 2026. Retrieved 17 Feb 2025.
  2. "Wemo Smart Plug with Thread - Smart Outlet for Apple HomeKit - Smart Home Products, Smart Home Lighting, Smart Home Gadgets - Homekit Smart Plug - Works W/ Apple iPhone, Easy NFC Set Up, White". Amazon. Archived from the original on 22 Feb 2026. Retrieved 17 Feb 2026.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Wemo". Amazon. Archived from the original on 27 Feb 2026. Retrieved 17 Feb 2026.
  4. ReaderBot (11 Jul 2025). "Belkin shows tech firms getting too comfortable with bricking customers' stuff". Ars Technica. Archived from the original on 22 Feb 2026. Retrieved 17 Feb 2026.
  5. "WeMo Smart Light Switch 2ND Gen". Amazon. Archived from the original on 4 Sep 2025. Retrieved 13 Jul 2025.
  6. "Wemo - Apps on Google Play". Google. Archived from the original on 9 Jan 2026. Retrieved 17 Feb 2026.
  7. Harding, Scharon (12 Jul 2025). "Belkin shows tech firms getting too comfortable with bricking customers' stuff". Ars Technica. Archived from the original on 19 Nov 2025. Retrieved 17 Feb 2026.
  8. whitebean (10 Jul 2025). "It's officially ending. I just got this email. Glad I started switching to Zigbee last week". Reddit. Archived from the original on 22 Feb 2026. Retrieved 17 Feb 2026.
  9. ho_merjpimpson (10 Jul 2025). "It's officially ending. I just got this email. Glad I started switching to Zigbee last week". Reddit. Archived from the original on 22 Feb 2026. Retrieved 17 Feb 2026.
  10. Amadeo, Ron (18 Apr 2022). "Shameful: Insteon looks dead—just like its users' smart homes". Ars Technica. Archived from the original on 13 Dec 2025. Retrieved 13 Jul 2025.
  11. Tusikov, Natasha (18 Jun 2019). "Regulation through "bricking": private ordering in the "Internet of Things"". Internet Policy Review. 8 (2). doi:10.14763/2019.2.1405. Archived from the original on 7 Aug 2019. Retrieved 13 Jul 2025.
  12. Brookman, Justin; Higginbotham, Stacey; et al. (13 Jul 2025). "Consumer Reports, U.S. PIRG, and 15 other groups call on FTC to create clear guidance for 'software tethering'". Consumer Reports. Archived from the original on 19 Nov 2025. Retrieved 13 Jul 2025.
  13. "Belkin Wemo End of Life Arbitration: Affected by Discontinued Belkin Wemo Support?". ClassAction.org. 28 Jan 2026. Archived from the original on 29 Jan 2026. Retrieved 29 Jan 2026.
  14. "Belkin Ends Support for Wemo Smart Home Products Class Action Lawsuit Investigation". Sauder Schelkopf Attorneys At Law. 2025. Archived from the original on 29 Jan 2026. Retrieved 17 Feb 2026.