I’m not a huge fan of the usual Home Assistant dashboards. I don’t see the benefit in being able to control your smart home from a wall-mounted panel if you have to walk over to it before you can use it. There are plenty of ways you can use Home Assistant dashboards to do other things.
See the news that you want in one place
You might not think of Home Assistant as the place to get your news, but that’s exactly what it can become. You can create a dashboard to display news stories that you can easily access on your phone, tablet, or computer. The beauty is that you can decide exactly what news sources to include, so that you only see the news that you’re interested in.
A simple option is to use RSS feeds. There are several ways to pull RSS feeds into Home Assistant, including the native Feedreader integration. Feedreader polls RSS feeds every hour by default and fires events into the event bus, so automations can be triggered when a new article appears.
One issue with Feedreader is that it only exposes a single entry at a time, so you can’t add a card to your dashboard that contains multiple stories. There are plenty of custom components available in HACS, such as Feedparser, that can expose multiple entries at a time, which can be more useful.
You can then use custom cards such as the RSS Accordion card to display the stories from your RSS feeds on your dashboard. Once set up, you have one place to access all of the news and information that you want without any of the content you don’t care about. With the right cards, you can scroll through stories from each source until you find something that looks interesting and then open the story to read it.
- Dimensions (exterior)
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4.41″L x 4.41″W x 1.26″H
- Weight
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12 Ounces
Home Assistant Green is a pre-built hub directly from the Home Assistant team. It’s a plug-and-play solution that comes with everything you need to set up Home Assistant in your home without needing to install the software yourself.
Track your location history
Build a Google Maps-style day view
If you use the Home Assistant Companion app, it can track your location. In the default Map view in Home Assistant, you can then see the locations of yourself and other family members. However, this view only displays the current location of tracked devices; it doesn’t show where you’ve been.
It’s possible to create a dashboard that gives you an alternative version of the Google Maps Timeline feature. This feature in Google Maps shows you the history of where you’ve been based on your device’s location history. It works well, but it can be a little unnerving knowing that this kind of detailed location history exists at all.
With Home Assistant, you can get a similar outcome without having to spend so much time worrying about what Google is doing with all that information. There’s a Location Timeline Card that builds a timeline-style view of where you’ve been, based on your Home Assistant location history. Your travels are displayed on a map along with details of your movements throughout the day.
Of course, you need to have location tracking enabled in the Home Assistant Companion app for this to work. You can change location settings in the Home Assistant Companion app, and you may also need to grant permissions in your phone’s settings. Once your location is being shared, you should be able to add a Location Timeline card that shows a history of your location over the course of the day.
Build a simple guest dashboard
Let guests control your home without a manual
You can spend years getting your smart home set up exactly how you and your family like it. The trouble is that when you live in your smart home, you know all its quirks. If someone else comes to visit, they don’t have the same knowledge of how everything works.
There are two main options. You can give your guests a huge instruction manual for your smart home that covers everything they’ll need to know. Or you can set up a guest mode that disables most of the more complex automations and just leaves the important ones in place.
This still doesn’t give your guests the ability to control your smart home, however. They might want to turn on the lights, turn up the heating, or just watch Netflix. That’s where a dedicated guest dashboard can help.
You can display your guest dashboard on a wall-mounted display or give them a tablet that opens directly to the guest dashboard. They can then use the dashboard to control the things that they need to control, without breaking any of your beautiful automations or having to wander around in the dark.
You can include things such as a QR code for connecting to the guest Wi-Fi network, a limited set of controls for lights, heating, and other essentials, and even a remote for operating the TV so they don’t have to spend hours trying to find the right inputs or button presses. If you make your guest dashboard good enough, they might even come back again.
Dedicated dashboards can be more useful than universal ones
A dashboard that tries to show too much can end up being hard to use or understand. Sometimes a dashboard that does one thing well can be far more useful. The beauty of Home Assistant is that you can create as many dedicated dashboards as you want.


