Home lighting automation is the use of KNX actuators, DALI dimmers, occupancy sensors, and scene controllers to automatically manage every light in your home — replacing manual switches with pre-programmed scenes, schedules, and sensor-triggered responses that adjust lighting based on time of day, occupancy, and activity, reducing electricity consumption by 20–35%.

Think about the last time you walked into a dark room and fumbled for a switch. Or the last time you went to bed and spent five minutes wondering whether you switched off the kitchen light. Or the electricity bill that arrived after a month of lights accidentally left on in rooms nobody was using.

Home lighting automation solves all three, not as a novelty, but as a practical, daily-use system that most homeowners in our Delhi NCR and Jaipur projects describe as the single most impactful change in their home.

This guide covers what lighting automation actually is, how it works technically, what to look for before installing, and the honest cost of doing it properly in an Indian home.

What is Home Lighting Automation?

Home lighting automation uses smart switches, DALI dimmers, occupancy sensors, and a KNX controller to manage every light circuit in your home, individually, in groups, or as complete scenes, automatically or from a single app or keypad.

It is not the same as replacing your bulbs with smart bulbs. A smart bulb on a Wi-Fi app is a connected device. A lighting automation system is an integrated platform where every light responds to the same logic, scenes, and schedules, coordinated by a central controller.

The difference matters practically. With smart bulbs, you have 15 different lights and potentially 15 different app entries to manage. With a KNX-DALI lighting system, you press one button marked "Evening" and the entire home transitions, the living room drops to 40% warm white, the kitchen to 60% cool white, the corridor to 10% amber, and the bedroom off. One action, everything configured correctly.

Why Does Home Lighting Automation Matter?

Energy Savings — The Most Measurable Benefit

DALI lighting control system with occupancy sensors reduces electricity consumption by 20–35% in Indian homes. The mechanism is straightforward — lights are only on when the room is occupied, only at the brightness level the activity requires, and automatically off when no longer needed.

In a typical 4BHK villa in Noida, we measured an average of 3.2 hours per day of lights left on in unoccupied rooms before automation. After occupancy-sensor installation, this dropped to under 12 minutes. At Rs. 8 per unit, the annual saving on lighting alone was Rs. 18,000–24,000.

Ambience — Lighting That Matches How You Actually Live

Scene
Lights
Colour Temp
Best For

Morning

60% gradual

5,000K cool white

Wake-up, alertness

Work / Study

80%

4,000K neutral

Focus, screen work

Evening

40%

2,700K warm white

Relaxed family time

Dining

Pendant 100%, ambient 30%

2,700K

Dinner, entertaining

Cinema

5% floor only

2,200K warm amber

Movie watching

Good Night

5% corridor

2,200K

Safe movement at night

Away / Security

Scheduled random

Mixed

Simulate occupancy

Security — Lighting as a Deterrent

Scheduled lighting when you are away — lights turning on and off in different rooms at realistic times — is one of the most effective low-cost security measures available. A home that looks occupied is significantly less attractive to opportunistic thieves. KNX lighting systems can randomise this schedule automatically, making the pattern unpredictable.

How Does an Automated Lighting System Work?

A professional home lighting automation system has three layers:

Layer 1 — The Devices

DALI LED drivers replace standard LED drivers inside your light fittings. Each driver has its own DALI address — meaning it can be individually controlled, dimmed to any level between 0.1% and 100%, and monitored for faults.

KNX switching and dimmer actuators are installed in the electrical panel control circuits that do not use DALI — external lights, feature lighting, and garden circuits.

Occupancy sensors (PIR or radar) detect presence in each room and trigger lighting automatically.

Daylight sensors measure ambient light levels and reduce artificial lighting when natural light is sufficient — a function called daylight harvesting.

Keypads — from brands like Basalte, ABB, or Core — are the physical interface. One keypad button per room activates the relevant scene.

Layer 2 — The Protocol

All devices communicate over the KNX TP bus — a 2-wire cable that runs to every switch position in the home. KNX operates at 29V DC, independent of the internet, WiFi, and mains power fluctuations. When you press a Basalte keypad in a KNX home, the light responds in 10–50 milliseconds — before your finger leaves the button.

Layer 3 — The Programming

All logic — which sensor triggers which light, which button activates which scene, what happens at sunset — is programmed in ETS6, the official KNX Association software. This is where the intelligence lives, and this is where the quality of your integrator is most visible. A well-programmed KNX system anticipates how you live. A poorly programmed one requires constant manual adjustment.

Wired vs Wireless — Which Is Right for Your Home?

KNX Wired (TP)
KNX RF (Wireless)
WiFi Smart Switches

Best for

New construction, full renovation

Retrofit, existing home

Basic apartment, rental

Internet dependency

None

None

Required

Response time

10–50ms

50–200ms

500ms–2 seconds

Reliability

Highest

High

Variable

Lifespan

25–30 years

25–30 years

3–5 years

Scalability

Unlimited

Good

Limited

Installation

During construction

Any time

Any time

Cost

Premium

Mid-premium

Budget

Our recommendation for Indian homes:

New construction or renovation underway — always KNX wired. This is the right time to pull the cable, and the cost is far lower than retrofitting later.

Existing home, walls plastered — KNX RF. Professional-grade performance without cable pulling. Works seamlessly with KNX TP in hybrid installations.

Rental flat or very limited budget — WiFi smart switches for basic control. Understand that they are a short-term solution.

5 Things to Check Before Installing Lighting Automation

1. Is the electrician or company KNX certified?

DALI and KNX installation require certified training. An uncertified electrician can connect the hardware, but cannot program it correctly. Always ask for the KNX Association certificate number and verify at knx.org.

2. Will you receive the ETS6 project file?

This file contains the complete programming of your lighting system. Without it, you cannot make changes, expand the system, or use a different integrator in future. Professional integrators provide it at handover — no exceptions.

3. Is the scope documented before work begins?

A lighting automation proposal should specify — by room — which circuits are automated, which fixtures use DALI drivers, where occupancy sensors are placed, and what scenes are programmed. Vague proposals lead to vague results.

4. What happens during a power cut?

KNX systems should have a UPS on the bus power supply. When power is restored, devices should return to a defined state — not random. This behaviour is configured in ETS6 and is a good indicator of programming quality.

5. Can lighting integrate with the rest of your home?

A lighting system that cannot communicate with your security, AV, or climate system is a missed opportunity. KNX lighting integrates natively with KNX security, climate, and AV — one "Leave Home" button turns off lights, arms the alarm, and switches off the AC simultaneously.

What Does Home Lighting Automation Cost in India?

Scope
What's Included
Investment Range

Basic — 2BHK apartment

WiFi smart switches, 2 scenes, app control

₹35,000–65,000

Mid — 3BHK with DALI

KNX dimmer + DALI drivers + 4 scenes + keypads

₹1.2–2.5 lakh

Complete — 4BHK villa

Full KNX + DALI + occupancy sensors + 8 scenes

₹2.5–6 lakh

Luxury — large villa

Basalte keypads + RGB + landscape + 12+ scenes

₹6–18 lakh

These costs cover supply, installation, ETS6 programming, commissioning, and one year of support. The ETS6 project file is included at handover.

 FAQs

What is home lighting automation in India?

Home lighting automation uses KNX actuators, DALI dimmers, occupancy sensors, and scene controllers to manage every light in your home automatically — reducing electricity consumption by 20–35% and replacing manual switches with pre-programmed scenes that adjust based on time, occupancy, and activity.

What is the difference between smart bulbs and lighting automation?

Smart bulbs are individual connected devices — each managed separately. A lighting automation system is an integrated platform where every light responds to unified scenes, schedules, and sensor triggers from one controller. Smart bulbs are a starting point; lighting automation is a complete system.

How much does home lighting automation cost in India?

Basic lighting automation for a 2BHK apartment starts at Rs. 35,000. A complete KNX-DALI system for a 4BHK villa with occupancy sensors, DALI dimming, and 8 scenes costs Rs. 2.5–6 lakh. Luxury installations with Basalte keypads range from Rs. 6–18 lakh.

Can lighting automation work during power cuts in India?

Yes — with a UPS on the KNX bus power supply. The KNX TP bus operates at 29V DC and continues functioning during power cuts when backed by a UPS. Device state and scene memory are retained, and the system returns to a defined state when power is restored.

Does Techvault install home lighting automation in India?

Yes. Techvault installs complete KNX and DALI lighting automation systems across Delhi NCR, Noida, Gurgaon, Jaipur, and 26+ cities. Every installation includes ETS6 project file handover. Contact our team for a free lighting automation assessment.