Wyze, the brand that built its reputation on squeezing features into bargain prices, has quietly pushed one of the most futuristic entry systems you can buy into the mainstream. The Wyze Palm Lock lets you unlock your door by hovering your open hand over a sensor — no touching, no fumbling, no fingerprint smear — and launches at a price that’s meant to sting a lot less than rivals. It’s also practical enough that, when the weather or Murphy’s Law show up, you won’t be standing in the cold waving your palm and hoping for the best.
How it opens the door (and how it keeps working)
At the heart of the Palm Lock is palm-vein recognition: the lock maps the unique pattern of veins under your skin and uses that as a biometric key. That method is increasingly common in enterprise and some consumer products because vein patterns are under the skin (harder to spoof) and the scanner doesn’t require the fine alignment of a fingerprint reader. Wyze says the lock can hold up to 50 palm IDs and create up to 50 unique access codes, so a household, small office or short-term rental could realistically rely on it without handing out keys. The unit is Wi-Fi connected and works with the Wyze app and voice assistants for remote control.

Battery life is where the Palm Lock designers got clever: Wyze pairs a removable primary battery, rated for up to about six months under normal use, with a smaller secondary backup battery that will keep the lock alive for around one to two weeks if the main cell runs flat. If both give up, you can temporarily power the lock via an integrated USB-C port to punch in an access code and get inside. The system also uses a small millimeter-wave/person-detecting radar to only wake the unit when someone approaches, which trims power drain. In short, Wyze planned for real people forgetting to charge things.

Not just palm: sensible fallbacks
Biometrics are convenient, but every practical product ships with fallbacks — and Wyze’s are the sort you hope for when it’s raining or you’ve got gloves on. You can still unlock the Palm Lock with a physical key, enter a PIN on an illuminated keypad, use the Wyze app, or control it remotely through Google Assistant or Alexa. The keypad also supports anti-peep entry patterns and temporary codes for guests or service people. Those extras turn what could have been a gimmick into a usable daily tool.
Where it sits in the market
At $129.98, the Wyze Palm Lock is aimed squarely at buyers who want biometric convenience without a premium price. For comparison, Philips’ earlier palm-recognition deadbolt was pitched at about $359.99 — a clear reminder that palm scanning is no longer just a luxury feature. Wyze’s strategy here is familiar: take tech that used to be expensive, strip the fluff, and ship it to more people.
If you’re trying to place it among Wyze’s own lineup, the Palm Lock costs more than the company’s budget Wyze Lock Bolt but adds Wi-Fi, the touchless biometric, the dual-battery system and more robust smart-home integrations — features that change how you use the lock every day. (The Lock Bolt remains a solid budget choice if you only want fingerprint + keypad at a lower cost.)
Security and privacy: what to keep in mind
Palm-vein biometrics are generally considered to be a strong authentication method because the pattern is internal and difficult to copy. Wyze says the biometric data is stored locally on the device rather than in the cloud, which reduces the attack surface that comes from storing sensitive identifiers online. Still, smart locks are attractive targets for attackers and misconfiguration, so homeowners should treat this like any security product: keep the firmware current, use strong account credentials on the Wyze account, and review what remote integrations you enable.
Verdict
Wyze’s Palm Lock won’t win any awards for subtlety — it’s a palm scanner, and it’ll advertise the fact — but it does what good product design should: make a futuristic idea actually usable. The headline price is the real story here; at about $130, Wyze has made hands-free entry affordable, and the engineering touches (dual batteries, radar, USB-C emergency power, app and key fallbacks) show the company understands how people live with hardware, not just how it works in ad copy. If you want palm scanning without the sticker shock, this is the one to look at — and if you’re buying for a household or rental, the backup battery and multiple access methods make it a less risky choice than some flashier, pricier options.
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