Skip to main content

Amazon will give you $5K in free smart home tech and more when you buy a house

You can now get up to $5,000 in Amazon credit if you buy a house through Amazon’s new TurnKey real estate partnership. 

The $5,000 incentive was announced Tuesday and includes smart home and home theater equipment along with services like unpacking and cleaning.

Recommended Videos

The deal is part of Amazon’s partnership with Realogy, a real estate service company. If you purchase a home from one of Realogy’s partners, you’ll get an Amazon credit based on the sale price of your new house.

Please enable Javascript to view this content

First, Realogy matches you with one of its real estate agents. Once you close on your home, Amazon steps in to offers its products and services, essentially making your new home into an Alexa-filled smart home. Realogy’s partners include Coldwell Banker, Century 21, Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate, ERA, and Sotheby’s International Realty.

There are three different tiers of “packages,” so the more money you spend on your house, the more you get in Amazon goods like Kasa Lightbulbs, Ring Doorbells, Fire TV cubes and more. You will also get an Amazon gift card to use towards Amazon Home Services like carpet cleaning, unpacking, handyman services, etc. 

The top-tier $5,000 package, available to homes worth $700,000 or more, will net you 4 Echo Spots, 2 Echo Shows, a Ring Doorbell Pro, a Z-Wave Connect Camelot Deadbolt, 2 Fire TV Cubes, 2 Sonos Beams, 12 Kasa smartbulbs, an eero WiFi system, and a Smart Things hub.

Right now, the program is only available in 15 metro areas, which include Chicago, Los Angeles, Seattle, Washington D.C., Dallas, and Denver, among others. We asked Amazon if and when the program would expand to other cities, but a spokesperson wouldn’t comment on future plans.

“Realogy’s great affiliated agents serve their clients during one of the most important moments in their lives, and Amazon’s services and products can transform that moment to make it rewarding in a way no one ever has before,” Realogy president and CEO Ryan M. Schneider said in a statement.

According to a press release, TurnKey is meant to be a “beginning-to-end home-buying program that seeks to raise consumers’ expectations of what it means to buy a house and make it a home.” 

“Customers can be overwhelmed when moving, and we’re excited to be working with Realogy to offer homebuyers a simplified way to settle into a new home,” said Pat Bigatel, Director Amazon Home Services, in the release. 

The move is a smart one for Amazon — not only does it give people an incentive to use the new program when they buy a house, it also fills that house with Amazon products — which in turn will keep users in the Amazon ecosystem.

Update 7/23: Clarified that this is a Realogy program fulfilled by Amazon.

Allison Matyus
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Allison Matyus is a general news reporter at Digital Trends. She covers any and all tech news, including issues around social…
Amazon Astro: everything you need to know about this home robot
Amazon Astro following a person through a door.

Amazon Astro came as a surprise when it was revealed in September 2021. The quirky device does a little bit of everything, serving as a robot companion that boasts facial recognition, impressive navigation skills, and tons of useful home security features.

But a lot has changed with Astro since it was first announced, and it's gotten some new competition in the form of EBO X. Here’s a look at everything we know about Astro, including how you can get your hands on it and add it to your home.
Designed to rove around the home

Read more
Fluid One gives you point-and-click control of your smart home, from your smartphone
Fluid One app showing the AR room map and devices.

Ever wished you could use your smartphone to control your smart home, beyond just pulling up an app to turn something on or off? We're now starting to see companies create actual functionality around the Matter initiative. Fluid, a relative newcomer to the smart home field, is building a service on top of Matter to allow you to control smart devices around your home simply by pointing your phone at the device.

Fluid calls this new service Fluid One. You can point your phone at a device, and it will automatically and immediately show you options to control said device. The service also allows for location-based automation and gesture controls. For example, imagine walking around your home and having lights automatically turning on or off depending on how close you are to them.

Read more
Smart home tech for your office
The Ember Mug on a counter.

If you’re like most of us, you’ve increasingly spent time in your home office over the last few years and could benefit from adding more smart home tech to your space. Smart tech makes life a little easier and allows you to remove some steps and inconveniences from your routine. Not only that, but being able to issue voice commands or have lights and fans set up to activate when needed can improve your comfort and mood and even put a little change back in your wallet.

Add ambient lighting
Just because the downtown office has harsh fluorescents and bright white lighting doesn’t mean your awesome home office needs to be the same. It’s time to make your lighting funkier and less eye-strain-inducing.

Read more