What to Check Before Buying a Wi-Fi Energy Monitor
There are two very different products sold as "Wi-Fi energy monitors" and they measure completely different things. A smart plug monitors one appliance. A clamp-style whole-home monitor measures everything flowing in through your switchboard. Buying the wrong type wastes money and gives you data that doesn't answer your actual question.
- Smart plug monitors ($20–$90): plug into a wall socket, measure one appliance at a time. Good for finding what a specific device costs to run.
- Clamp-style whole-home monitors ($150–$400): clamp around the mains cables at the switchboard, measure total home consumption. Essential for solar pre-purchase, tariff comparison and always-on baseline discovery.
- App quality matters as much as hardware — check recent reviews for app stability before buying any Wi-Fi monitor.
- Clamp installation near the switchboard is manageable for a competent homeowner but involves proximity to live electrical equipment. Read the product documentation before proceeding; if in doubt, use a licensed electrician.
Check 1: Which type do you actually need?
| Your question | Right monitor type | Product examples |
|---|---|---|
| What does my old second fridge cost to run? | Smart plug monitor | Tapo P110M |
| When does my household use the most power? | Whole-home clamp monitor | Emporia Vue 2, Sense |
| Should I run the dishwasher now or at 11pm? | Smart plug or smart power board | Tapo P110M, meross strip |
| How much of my solar am I self-consuming? | Whole-home monitor with solar CT | Emporia Vue 2 with solar module |
| What's my home's overnight standby draw? | Whole-home clamp monitor | Emporia Vue 2 |
| Is my garage fridge worth keeping? | Smart plug monitor | Tapo P110M, FreshLink 10A |
If you want data on a single appliance, a smart plug is cheaper and easier. If you want whole-home patterns — especially before a solar decision — a clamp monitor is the right tool.
Check 2: App reliability
The hardware in these products is commodity. The differentiator is the app and cloud service behind it. A monitor with an unreliable app becomes useless within weeks. Check for:
- Recent one-star reviews mentioning app crashes, disconnections or login failures — not the overall rating, which is often inflated by early positive reviews before software degrades
- Active developer responses to issues — indicates ongoing support
- Whether the monitor works offline — some monitors lose functionality if the cloud service goes down; Matter-protocol devices generally retain local control
Check 3: Installation requirements
Smart plug monitors: plug into any wall socket. No tools, no expertise required. As simple as it gets.
Clamp-style whole-home monitors: the current transformer (CT) clamps around the mains cables at the switchboard. The switchboard remains live during installation — the clamp does not require isolating the power. The device then communicates via Wi-Fi. This is manageable for a competent homeowner who is comfortable working near an open switchboard panel; it is not a task that requires cutting or connecting to live wires.
If your switchboard is crowded, unlabelled, or if you are not comfortable opening the panel, have a licensed electrician install it.
Check 4: What it actually monitors
Not all whole-home monitors do the same thing:
Basic whole-home: total import from the grid and total export (if solar). Good for tariff comparison and daily usage patterns.
Circuit-level monitoring: individual clamps on specific circuits (hot water, HVAC, kitchen). Shows which circuits are driving the bill. Requires more clamps and a more complex installation.
Solar integration: a separate CT clamp on the solar inverter output. Shows actual self-consumption vs export in real time.
Appliance-level detection (machine learning): monitors the electrical signature of each appliance as it switches on and off, then learns to identify individual devices without per-appliance clamps. Takes several weeks of learning; accuracy varies by appliance type.
Products worth considering
Tapo P110M — $24.00, 4.8 ★ (287 ratings). Best smart plug monitor. Single appliance, real-time wattage, monthly cost estimate, scheduling. Start here if you have one suspicious appliance.
meross Matter 4-pack smart plugs — $89.99, 4.4 ★ (127 ratings). Monitor four appliances simultaneously. Matter protocol means no brand lock-in across Apple, Google, Alexa and Samsung platforms.
Emporia Vue 2 — clamp-style whole-home monitor with optional circuit-level add-ons. Popular pre-solar purchase. Measures total home consumption with real-time and historical data. App has a strong track record for stability compared to many competitors.
Identify the type first: smart plug for one appliance, clamp monitor for whole-home patterns. Then check app reviews from the last 6 months — not the overall rating. The hardware lasts years; the app is what you're actually relying on.
See our Smart Home picks for smart plug monitors and energy monitoring options.

