For years, the smart home world has been fragmented — a frustrating patchwork of incompatible platforms, proprietary apps, and devices that simply refuse to talk to each other. Apple Home users stayed on one island, Google Home users on another, and Samsung SmartThings loyalists somewhere in between. The Matter standard, first introduced in 2022 by the Connectivity Standards Alliance (CSA), was supposed to fix all of that. And for the most part, it has — across smart plugs, lights, locks, thermostats, and dozens of other device categories. But cameras, arguably the most critical piece of any home security setup, were conspicuously absent. Until now.
Aqara, the smart home brand under Chinese tech firm Lumi United Technology, has officially launched the Camera Hub G350 — the world’s first Matter-certified camera — and it’s a product that is as much a historical footnote in the smart home timeline as it is a practical piece of hardware. Announced at CES 2026 earlier this year and receiving its official Matter v1.5 certification on February 10, 2026, the G350 went on sale on March 17, 2026, priced at $139 on Amazon. The launch marks the first time a consumer camera has shipped with full, certified compliance to the Matter 1.5 specification — a specification that the CSA only published in November 2025.
To understand why this is a big deal, a little context helps. Matter’s camera support was arguably the most requested addition to the standard since its inception. For years, camera integration meant manufacturers had to build and maintain custom APIs for each ecosystem — an expensive, fragile approach that often led to spotty support, broken updates, and cameras that worked with Apple Home but not Google Home, or vice versa. With Matter 1.5, that changes. The new specification defines how cameras deliver live video and audio streaming using the widely-adopted WebRTC technology — the same standard that powers Zoom, Google Meet, and Microsoft Teams — combined with STUN and TURN protocols that enable both local and remote access. The spec also adds support for multi-stream configurations, pan-tilt-zoom controls, privacy zones, and flexible recording to local or cloud destinations. In short, it’s a comprehensive, platform-agnostic foundation that camera makers can now build on, without reinventing the wheel for each smart home platform they want to support.
The G350 itself is no stripped-down reference design. Aqara has packed it with genuinely impressive hardware. At the heart of the camera is a dual-lens system — a wide-angle lens shooting at full 4K (3840 x 2160) resolution alongside a telephoto lens that records at 2.5K (2560 x 1440). Together, these two lenses deliver a 9x hybrid zoom that Aqara says provides “pixel-perfect” clarity whether you’re watching a wide room view or zeroing in on a face across the space. The rabbit-eared design, which gives the camera a distinctly approachable, almost toy-like look, has a functional purpose too — those ears subtly house internal components while making the device feel less surveillance-like for homes where aesthetics matter.
The camera supports full 360-degree pan and tilt, meaning there are effectively no blind spots in whatever room you place it. Aqara has engineered what it calls “self-adaptive pan/tilt speed,” which automatically slows the camera’s movement when the user zooms in — solving the annoying overshoot problem that plagues lesser PTZ cameras that swing past targets at full speed regardless of zoom level. When it comes to tracking, the G350 uses on-device AI to follow people and pets, adjusting its framing in real time in a way that Aqara likens to a camera operator’s technique rather than simple motion following.
The AI detection capabilities go well beyond basic motion alerts. The G350 can detect specific subjects — people, pets, faces, and even hand gestures — locally on the device, without needing to upload anything to the cloud for processing. A smile-detection feature can trigger an automatic photo capture. Sound detection covers six distinct audio events, including crying, coughing, and barking, which Aqara positions as a family wellness tool for monitoring children, elderly family members, or pets. Two-way audio supports full-duplex conversations — meaning both sides can talk simultaneously without that walkie-talkie awkwardness — with clear pickup up to eight meters in quiet indoor environments.
Storage is handled flexibly. The G350 includes a microSD card slot supporting up to 512GB, which can handle continuous 24/7 recording. Users can also back up footage to a NAS system via the SD card, or opt for Aqara’s encrypted cloud storage through its HomeGuardian subscription plan. Apple HomeKit Secure Video is supported too, provided users have an iCloud+ subscription — though Apple Home limits the camera’s streaming resolution to 1080p, a constraint on Apple’s end rather than the hardware’s. Once Apple adds full Matter 1.5 camera support to its platforms, that limitation could be lifted, opening up higher-resolution streaming, zoom control, and pan-tilt functionality natively within the Home app.
That’s actually the most interesting tension surrounding the G350’s launch. Despite the milestone it represents, its Matter-specific benefits are currently limited by ecosystem readiness. As of now, Samsung SmartThings is the only major smart home platform to have fully implemented Matter 1.5 camera support. Apple Home, Google Home, and Amazon Alexa all still need to catch up. This means that for the majority of users — particularly Apple Home users — the G350’s Matter camera certification is more a promise of future value than an immediately tangible upgrade. The camera works with Apple Home today through its direct HomeKit integration, not through Matter’s camera device type, which means the resolution cap and limited controls remain in effect for now.
Still, being first to market matters. Aqara has essentially planted a flag, demonstrating that Matter camera certification is achievable and commercially viable. The pressure is now on Apple, Google, and Amazon to get their platforms updated. And when they do, the G350 will be ready — its Matter 1.5 certification is baked into the hardware and firmware from day one.
Beyond its role as a camera, the G350 is also a formidable smart home hub in its own right. The device serves triple duty as a Zigbee hub, a Thread Border Router, and a Matter Controller and Bridge. In practice, this means the G350 can bring Aqara’s Zigbee accessories — sensors, switches, locks, and more — into any major smart home ecosystem. It can simultaneously pull third-party Matter devices into the Aqara Home app for unified control. It also supports Thread, allowing it to automatically join an existing Apple Thread network if one is present in the home. Connectivity specs are equally modern: the camera supports dual-band Wi-Fi 6 on both 2.4GHz and 5GHz, secured with WPA3 encryption — the latest Wi-Fi security standard.
Aqara has designed the G350 with privacy as a stated priority. The camera features a physical privacy mode that extends a mechanical shutter over the lens, guaranteeing that the camera cannot see anything even if software-level privacy settings were somehow bypassed. Automation support through Aqara Home lets users tie privacy mode to other home events — automatically covering the lens when the front door is unlocked and someone arrives, for example, or switching to night vision mode when a “goodnight” scene is triggered.
The G350 launched alongside the company’s new G400 wired video doorbell, which brings a 2K head-to-toe 1536 x 2048 resolution and supports both standard low-voltage doorbell wires and Power over Ethernet. At $99, the G400 is aimed at users who want a full Aqara security ecosystem at the door and inside the home. Unlike the G350, the G400 does not hold Matter camera certification, though it supports all major smart home platforms through direct integration.
For smart home enthusiasts who have been waiting for cameras to join the Matter fold, the G350’s arrival is genuinely significant. It represents the closing of a long-standing gap in the standard — one that the CSA and its member companies have been working toward for years. And while the broader ecosystem still needs to catch up, the hardware to take full advantage of Matter cameras is now sitting on shelves and shipping from Amazon. At $139, the G350 is a competitive offering on its own merits: strong hardware, versatile hub functionality, local AI processing, and excellent multi-platform compatibility. The Matter certification on top of all that is, right now, a bonus that will likely grow in value as the year progresses and platform updates roll in. The first Matter camera has arrived — and it came from a company that clearly understood that getting there first was worth the effort.
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