Samsung’s SmartThings just took a big swing at fixing the mess that the smart home has been for years: the company announced on December 19, 2025, that SmartThings now officially supports Matter 1.5 — and, crucially, will be the first platform to let Matter-compatible cameras join the fold. It’s the sort of update that doesn’t feel flashy in the “new toy” way, but could quietly change how people buy and combine smart devices over the next few years.
If you’ve been following Matter’s slow creep into real products, the camera piece is the missing puzzle. Matter 1.5 is the Connectivity Standards Alliance’s latest spec and it finally defines how cameras — everything from doorbells to PTZ outdoor units — should stream, signal motion, and integrate with automations. That means live view, two-way audio, event timelines, privacy zones and pan/tilt/zoom controls are now part of the common vocabulary devices can use to talk to hubs and apps. The spec also leans on web standards like WebRTC for streaming, which matters for latency and privacy options.
What Samsung is doing is less about inventing a new camera platform and more about making SmartThings the place where those cameras can actually play nicely with the rest of your house. The company says this rollout starts later this month and that native Matter camera support will expand SmartThings’ existing Matter device roster — lights, locks, switches and sensors — to include cameras as first-class citizens. Samsung is explicitly pitching SmartThings as the universal controller you’ll reach for when you don’t want to fight multiple apps, accounts, or vendor lock-ins.
For users, the upside is obvious: more choice and fewer headaches. Camera makers can now build once to the Matter standard and expect their devices to show up with the same baseline feature set across Matter-enabled ecosystems — so the live view you get in SmartThings should look and behave roughly like the live view you’d see in another Matter app. That’s a practical win if you want to mix brands — say, a doorbell from one maker, an indoor cam from another, and still have them trigger the same routines without a bespoke integration for each.
There are also automation wins. Cameras can feed motion events into SmartThings routines directly: lights that come on when someone is at the door, locks that auto-engage after a doorbell event, or security scenes that pull together sensors, cameras, and lights with a single tap. Samsung frames this as both a convenience and a security play — giving cameras the same “native” status as switches and locks so they’re not shoehorned into the ecosystem via brittle workarounds or cloud-only bridges.
But don’t assume this fixes every annoyance overnight. Matter defines capabilities, but manufacturers still have to ship Matter-compliant firmware and go through certification. Some vendors will upgrade existing models, but others will only add Matter to future hardware; the standard is capable of local-first operation, but each maker chooses how much to rely on cloud services, subscriptions, or local storage. In short, your path to a truly unified, app-free experience still depends on choices that happen at the factory and in corporate roadmaps.
Samsung isn’t going it alone. The company says it’s working with partners including Aqara, Eve and Ulticam on the first wave of Matter-native cameras, with some devices expected to hit the market in March 2026. Those cameras will live alongside SmartThings’ existing camera integrations (Arlo, Ring, Philips Hue, etc.), so Matter won’t replace existing options immediately — it will add a cleaner, standards-based path for new devices and future upgrades. For Samsung, the calculation is strategic: the company’s “Works With SmartThings” program already covers thousands of models across hundreds of brands, and Matter support is a way to lower friction for both device makers and consumers.
The broader implication is this: whoever makes it easiest for third-party devices to behave like first-party ones has a real shot at becoming the default home screen for connected life. SmartThings pushing to be “the connective tissue” is a direct bet on openness — if SmartThings truly offers the broadest Matter support and sensible automations around cameras, it becomes a sensible hub even for households that only own one Samsung product. That’s the strategic gamble: encourage choice and interoperability, and users may choose the Samsung app as their primary smart-home control layer regardless of the device logos on the wall.
For anyone building or buying a smart home right now, the practical takeaway is simple: Matter 1.5 changes the calculus for camera purchases. If you care about mixing brands or keeping your smart setup flexible, favor cameras that commit to Matter certification (or at least to an upgrade path). If you’re already deep into a particular vendor’s cloud and don’t mind its ecosystem, the new standard won’t instantly force a migration — but it does make future switching less painful. Samsung’s move accelerates that choice architecture, and at the very least, makes the promise of a truly interoperable smart home feel a little more real.
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