Best Home Assistant Hardware 2026: Yellow, Green, Odroid, or Mini PC? (Complete Buyer’s Guide)

Best Home Assistant Hardware 2026: Yellow, Green, Odroid, or Mini PC? (Complete Buyer’s Guide)
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Best Home Assistant Hardware 2026: Yellow, Green, Odroid, or Mini PC? (Complete Buyer’s Guide)

The Raspberry Pi is finally not the default answer.

For most of the last decade a Home Assistant install started with “put HAOS on a Pi 4.” In 2026 that is quietly no longer the best pick for anyone who plans to run HA seriously. Nabu Casa now sells purpose-built Home Assistant hardware, Odroid offers legitimate Pi replacements, and a $150 Beelink mini PC crushes them all on performance if you are willing to run Home Assistant OS as a VM. This guide covers what to actually buy in 2026.

Disclosure: affiliate links below. We earn a small commission at no cost to you.

The four real Home Assistant hardware paths in 2026

  1. Home Assistant Yellow or Green from Nabu Casa — official, purpose-built, no VM knowledge needed
  2. Odroid N2+ or M2 — the community-favorite “Pi alternative” with better performance and reliability
  3. Mini PC running HAOS in a VM (Proxmox) — the enthusiast path with the most performance headroom
  4. Raspberry Pi 5 — still valid for small deployments; not our recommendation for anyone planning to add cameras or Frigate

Which one is right for you?

  • Getting started, no Linux experience: Home Assistant Green ($99). Plug in, follow the wizard, done in 15 minutes.
  • Best all-round for enthusiasts: Home Assistant Yellow with an M.2 SSD upgrade ($149-249). Zigbee built-in, PoE optional, expandable.
  • Already own a Raspberry Pi 5: Use it. Add an SSD. Do not buy new hardware for HAOS on day one.
  • Running Proxmox already: Skip everything above and add HAOS as a VM. Best performance per dollar.
  • Adding Frigate for AI camera detection: Mini PC with a Coral USB accelerator. Nothing on this list except a full mini PC handles Frigate at more than 2 cameras.

Option 1: Home Assistant Green ($99)

The Green is Nabu Casa’s answer to “just make it work for regular people.” A pre-loaded HAOS on custom Odroid hardware in a small dark-green case. $99 gets you the box, a power supply, and an SD card. Plug in Ethernet and power, wait 10 minutes for first boot, and you have a working Home Assistant install.

What you give up: No built-in Zigbee or Thread radio (needs a USB stick). No PoE. No M.2 slot. Storage is on the SD card unless you plug in a USB SSD (recommended).

What you get: Zero-hassle setup, official support from Nabu Casa, and hardware that will keep receiving HAOS updates as a first-class citizen.

Option 2: Home Assistant Yellow ($149-249)

The Yellow is the enthusiast-tier Nabu Casa box. It ships as a Compute Module 4 or 5 kit with the Home Assistant motherboard, and gives you three big features the Green does not:

  • Built-in Silicon Labs MGM240P radio — Zigbee and Thread out of the box, no USB stick needed
  • Real M.2 NVMe slot — add a 256GB or 500GB SSD for full performance
  • PoE option — single Ethernet cable delivers power and data if you have a PoE switch

The catch: you buy the kit without a CM4 or CM5 (typically $120-180), so total cost with a CM5 8GB and a 500GB NVMe is around $300. Worth it if you plan to run any of the popular HA add-ons (AdGuard, MotionEye, Frigate at 1-2 cameras, Node-RED, Zigbee2MQTT).

Option 3: Odroid N2+ or M2 (community favourite)

Before Nabu Casa made their own hardware, the Odroid N2+ was the gold standard “buy this instead of a Pi 4” recommendation. That has not changed in 2026 — the N2+ is still legitimately faster than a Pi 5 for HA workloads, especially recorder database writes. The M2 (released 2025) uses an even faster RK3588 SoC and blows past the Pi 5 by a wide margin.

Best fit if: you want the Nabu Casa hardware experience but at a lower price, and you are comfortable installing HAOS yourself from an image file (not hard, but not zero-touch).

Option 4: Mini PC running HAOS as a Proxmox VM (best long-term)

The path most home lab operators land on within 12 months of starting with HA. A $180 Beelink EQ13 (N100) or similar mini PC has 4-8x the CPU and RAM of any purpose-built HA hardware. Run Proxmox as the hypervisor, install HAOS as a VM, and use the leftover resources for AdGuard, Pi-hole, Node-RED, MQTT, Frigate, Immich, or anything else.

Why this is the right answer for most enthusiasts:

  • Room to grow — add more services without buying new hardware
  • Snapshot-based backups — roll HAOS back to a working state in 60 seconds if an update breaks something
  • Real Ethernet (1GbE or 2.5GbE), real storage (2x M.2 slots on many models)
  • Better long-term reliability — consumer NVMe SSDs are far more reliable than SD cards or eMMC modules

The catch: 60-90 minutes of one-time Proxmox setup, and you should be comfortable in a Linux terminal for troubleshooting.

See our detailed mini PC guides for the full shortlist:

Option 5: Raspberry Pi 5 (still valid, but do this right)

The Raspberry Pi 5 is still a legitimate HA host if you already own one or if your total household is under 20 devices. Two rules keep it from becoming the reason your HA install crashes at 3 a.m.:

  • Do not run HAOS on the SD card. Boot from an M.2 NVMe SSD using the official HAT+ adapter or a USB-to-M.2 enclosure. SD card wear is the #1 killer of HA installs on Pis.
  • Add active cooling. The Pi 5 throttles heavily under sustained load without a heatsink and fan. Frigate at 1 camera will bring it to its knees without cooling.

Comparison at a glance

Path Cost all-in Ease Zigbee built-in? Frigate friendly?
HA Green $99-130 Zero-touch No (add stick) No
HA Yellow $250-320 Easy Yes 1-2 cameras
Odroid N2+ / M2 $110-180 Moderate No M2 yes, N2+ no
Mini PC + Proxmox $180-350 Advanced No (add stick) Yes, 4+ cams
Raspberry Pi 5 $120-180 Easy No Not really

Zigbee, Thread, and Matter dongles — what you actually need

Your HA host is only half the story. The other half is a radio to talk to your zigbee, Thread, and Matter-over-Thread devices. Three good options:

  • Home Assistant SkyConnect ($40) — Nabu Casa’s official Zigbee + Thread combo. Rock-solid, best-supported.
  • Sonoff Zigbee 3.0 USB Dongle Plus (P version) ($25) — the community favourite. Wide range, cheap, well-supported by ZHA and Zigbee2MQTT.
  • Aeotec Z-Stick 7 ($50) — if you have any Z-Wave devices (older thermostats, some door locks).

Rule of thumb: use a USB extension cable (2-6 feet) between your host and the dongle. USB 3.0 ports emit 2.4 GHz noise that destroys Zigbee range. This is the #1 cause of “why do my Zigbee devices drop” support threads on the HA forum.

What NOT to buy for Home Assistant

  1. Raspberry Pi 4. Underpowered for anything past 30 devices in 2026. Get the Pi 5 or better.
  2. Random no-name mini PCs from Wish or AliExpress. Firmware is often outdated, and the Realtek NICs on cheap N100 boards drop under load. Stick to Beelink, GMKtec, or Minisforum.
  3. Old Intel NUCs from eBay. Underrated for other jobs but generally over-priced now compared to a new Beelink at the same or lower price.
  4. USB WiFi dongles for the host. Home Assistant should live on wired Ethernet. Wi-Fi drops are the second-most-common cause of “HA suddenly stops responding.”

Backups: do this on day one

Every path above will fail at some point — SD card wear, storage failure, botched update. The 30 seconds you spend enabling HA Backups on day one saves you a weekend of reconstruction later.

The Home Assistant Google Drive Backup add-on takes 60 seconds to set up and automatically snapshots your entire config to Google Drive nightly. Free. Do it before you install a single integration.

See our broader home lab backup guidance:

Related HomeNode guides

Bottom line

Never touched Linux and just want automations working today: Home Assistant Green + Sonoff Zigbee dongle. $130 all-in, done in 20 minutes.

Want to grow into a real home automation setup: Home Assistant Yellow with CM5 8GB + 500GB NVMe. $300 all-in, done in 45 minutes, will last you 5+ years.

Already running Proxmox or want to: Beelink EQ13 N100 mini PC running Proxmox with HAOS as a VM. $220 all-in for the box, plus a $25 Sonoff dongle. Overkill for HA today, exactly right for HA + AdGuard + Node-RED + Frigate + whatever comes next.

Whatever you pick: get the Zigbee dongle on a USB extension cable, boot from real storage instead of an SD card, and enable Google Drive backups on day one.


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