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Smart HomeTech

TCL’s new K1 smart lock gives you four unlocking options in a compact knob

The TCL K1 smart lock makes keyless entry simple with four unlocking options, privacy mode, and IP53 dust and water protection.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Sep 22, 2025, 12:14 PM EDT
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TCL K1 smart door knob
Image: TCL
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TCL just turned the humble door knob into a tiny, multitool-y security hub. The K1 is a fingerprint-enabled smart door knob that crams the electronics, batteries, and multiple access methods into a single interior knob — no deadbolt or complicated wiring required. At $79 (available now through TCL and Amazon), it’s pitched as an affordable, low-fuss way to add biometric and app control to bedroom doors, home offices, rentals, or even a backyard shed.

At a glance, the K1’s selling points read like something between a lifestyle gadget and a security product brief: a fingerprint sensor that TCL says unlocks in 0.3 seconds, storage for up to 100 fingerprints, PIN codes (including one-time codes), a physical key backup, and wireless control through a companion app. The company also highlights convenience features such as automatic locking when the door closes, a “privacy mode” that disables external unlocking from the outside, and an interior cavity that holds four AAA batteries, which it claims will last up to a year.

That combination — fingerprint, PIN, key and app — isn’t revolutionary in the smart-lock world, but it’s unusual to see all four built into a single knob rather than a deadbolt module or bulkier lock body. That narrower, knob-first form factor makes the K1 easier to install on interior doors that don’t have a dedicated deadbolt cutout, which is exactly the use case TCL is aiming for.

TCL K1 smart door knob
Image: TCL

The fingerprint reader is the headline feature: TCL markets the K1 as “AI-enhanced,” promising speed (0.3s in its lab numbers) and improving accuracy over time. You can enroll multiple fingers for members of the household — TCL says up to 100 fingerprints — and the app can generate temporary passcodes, set user schedules, and track who used the knob and when. If you want to keep a door locked during sleep or confidential work, the privacy button on the inside blocks external unlocks until you turn it off.

A practical detail that matters: the whole electronics stack and the four AAA cells sit inside the interior knob. TCL claims that the arrangement yields up to 12 months of run time under normal usage, and the app + lock will alert you to a low battery. That design makes battery swaps straightforward — no ladder or electrician needed.

TCL K1 smart door knob
Image: TCL

TCL is explicit that biometric templates are stored on the device rather than in some remote cloud: the product pages emphasize “100% local storage,” which is a selling point if you’re concerned about fingerprints being uploaded to third-party servers. That said, the product manual and some support pages reference third-party IoT tooling (Tuya) for device services and the companion app, so if you’re particularly privacy-conscious it’s worth inspecting the app’s permissions and the vendor’s privacy policy before you buy. In short: the lock advertises local biometric storage, but the app ecosystem may involve cloud services for features like remote logs or app control — read the fine print.

There are also the usual smart-lock caveats. Biometric convenience comes with tradeoffs: wet, dirty, or injured fingers can frustrate sensors; shared access must be managed thoughtfully; and physical robustness (how well the hardware resists prying or forced entry) remains a factor that marketing blurbs don’t always quantify.

If you were hoping for a full smart-home tie-in, note the omission: the K1 currently lacks broader voice-assistant or smart-home integrations (no Alexa or Google voice unlock, for example), and TCL positions the product as an entry-level, self-contained door solution rather than a hub for automations. The mobile app handles schedules and logs, but you won’t be waving a voice command to unlock the knob or linking it into complex routines out of the box. If you want that ecosystem connectivity, you’ll need to check other models or expect to use TCL’s app stack — and again, pay attention to whether that uses cloud services you’re comfortable with.

Where it might fit in your home

Because the K1 is a knob (not a deadbolt) and easy to install, it’s an appealing choice for:

  • Bedrooms and home offices where privacy matters, but exterior security risks are lower.
  • Rental units or temporary living situations where you don’t want to modify the door permanently.
  • Sheds, garages, and other outbuildings: the K1’s IP53 rating makes it resistant to dust and light splashes, so outdoor-adjacent use is feasible (but don’t expect weatherproofing for heavy rain or prolonged exposure).

It’s less suitable as a front-door, primary security device in homes where forced-entry resistance and full smart-home integrations are priorities.

TCL has listed the K1 at about $79 (TCL’s store and Amazon have it available at or near that price), which puts it in a noticeably lower price band than many full deadbolt smart locks. That makes it a tempting, low-risk experiment if you want keyless convenience for interior doors without dropping hundreds on a dedicated deadbolt system.

The TCL K1 doesn’t reinvent authentication — fingerprint, PIN, key and app access are all familiar — but it packages those niceties into a compact, affordable knob that’s simple to install and battery-powered for a year at a stretch. For anyone who’s wanted biometric lock convenience on an interior door (or a shed) without a costly deadbolt swap, the K1 is an interesting value play. If you care about cloud connections, voice assistants, or heavy-duty weatherproofing, take a close look at the app, the manual, and independent reviews before pulling the trigger.


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