back to top
More
    HomeNewsSamsung and HSB Launch Smart Home Savings to Lower Insurance Premiums Nationwide

    Samsung and HSB Launch Smart Home Savings to Lower Insurance Premiums Nationwide

    Published on

    Australia’s First Cisco Secure AI Factory: What 1,024 NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs Mean for Enterprise AI

    Enterprises across Asia-Pacific now have access to sovereign, high-performance AI infrastructure that keeps sensitive data entirely onshore. Australia’s first Cisco Secure AI Factory, built with Sharon AI and NVIDIA, combines cutting-edge GPU

    Samsung Electronics has partnered with Hartford Steam Boiler (HSB), a Munich Re subsidiary, to launch Smart Home Savings a program that reduces home insurance premiums for U.S. homeowners using Samsung appliances connected to the SmartThings app. The service, announced January 6, 2026, allows participating insurers to recognize the protective features of connected appliances like water leak detectors and apply premium-reducing policy credits at no additional cost to consumers. After a successful 2025 pilot in Florida, Samsung and HSB are expanding the program to more U.S. states and plan to extend availability to Europe and other global regions throughout 2026.

    How Smart Home Savings Works

    Homeowners opt into Smart Home Savings directly through the SmartThings app, which shares information about their connected Samsung appliances with participating insurance carriers. Insurers recognize that homes equipped with appliances capable of detecting early risk indicators such as small water leaks have a stronger safety profile. The system identifies which smart appliances are connected to SmartThings and allows insurers to apply discounts based on the household’s risk-reduction capabilities.

    The process requires no separate hardware purchase or installation fees. Homeowners who already own compatible Samsung appliances simply enable the feature in their SmartThings app. The program is aligned with the Home Connectivity Alliance (HCA) Insurance Interface Specification, making it scalable and open to multiple insurers and smart-home brands.

    Pilot Results and Expansion Plans

    Samsung and HSB tested Smart Home Savings with major U.S. home-insurance carriers in Florida throughout 2025. While actual savings vary by home, state, and insurance company, early results showed meaningful premium reductions for participating households. The program is now publicly available for U.S. insurance companies to join.

    The expansion roadmap includes:

    • Additional U.S. states in early 2026
    • European markets later in 2026
    • Other global regions throughout the year

    Industry Context and Competition

    Smart home insurance discounts have become increasingly common across the industry. USAA offers savings through its Connected Home program with water leak detectors, while Hippo provides complimentary smart home monitoring systems as part of insurance policies. Samsung’s approach differs by integrating the discount mechanism directly into the SmartThings ecosystem rather than requiring third-party monitoring services.

    HSB has previously partnered with other IoT companies like Flume for water leak detection services across its insurance provider network. The Samsung collaboration marks HSB’s largest smart-appliance integration to date.

    Technology and Risk Assessment

    Connected Samsung appliances use IoT sensors and AI to detect potential problems before they escalate into insurance claims. Water leak detection is the primary risk-reduction feature highlighted in the initial rollout, as non-weather water claims represent a significant cost for insurers. SmartThings-connected devices can alert homeowners immediately when abnormal conditions are detected, enabling faster response times.

    “A connected home is a safer home,” said Greg M. Barats, President and CEO of HSB Group Inc. Samsung Executive Vice President Hyesoon Yang noted that the company aims to deliver “practical, everyday benefits through connected-home innovation”.

    What’s Next

    Samsung has not disclosed which specific insurance carriers are participating in the expanded rollout or provided specific premium reduction percentages. The company confirmed the program will remain free for SmartThings users and requires only a wireless network connection. Details on participating insurers and state-by-state availability are expected as the rollout progresses through 2026.

    The open, pro-competitive model means additional smart-home brands beyond Samsung could eventually participate through the HCA Insurance Interface Specification framework.

    Featured Snippet Boxes

    How does Smart Home Savings reduce my insurance premium?

    The program shares information about your SmartThings-connected Samsung appliances with participating insurers. Carriers recognize that appliances with early risk detection like water leak sensors make your home safer, and they apply premium-reducing credits that lower your insurance costs.

    Which Samsung appliances qualify for insurance discounts?

    Any Samsung home appliance connected to the SmartThings app can contribute to your Smart Home Savings profile. Appliances with water leak detection and other protective monitoring features provide the strongest risk-reduction signals to insurers.

    Is Smart Home Savings available in my state?

    The program launched in Florida in 2025 and is expanding to additional U.S. states in early 2026. Availability depends on participating insurance carriers in your region. Check the SmartThings app for current availability or contact your insurance provider.

    Do I pay extra to use Smart Home Savings?

    No. Smart Home Savings is included at no additional cost for SmartThings users. You only need existing Samsung appliances connected to the SmartThings app and a wireless network. No separate hardware purchase or subscription is required.

    Mohammad Kashif
    Mohammad Kashif
    Senior Technology Analyst and Writer at AdwaitX, specializing in the convergence of Mobile Silicon, Generative AI, and Consumer Hardware. Moving beyond spec sheets, his reviews rigorously test "real-world" metrics analyzing sustained battery efficiency, camera sensor behavior, and long-term software support lifecycles. Kashif’s data-driven approach helps enthusiasts and professionals distinguish between genuine innovation and marketing hype, ensuring they invest in devices that offer lasting value.

    Latest articles

    Australia’s First Cisco Secure AI Factory: What 1,024 NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs Mean for Enterprise AI

    Enterprises across Asia-Pacific now have access to sovereign, high-performance AI infrastructure that keeps sensitive data entirely onshore. Australia’s first Cisco Secure AI Factory, built with Sharon AI and NVIDIA, combines cutting-edge GPU

    OpenClaw + Ollama: The Local AI Agent Setup That Keeps Your Data Off the Cloud

    Your AI agent does not need to live in a server farm 3,000 miles away. OpenClaw, paired with Ollama, puts a fully autonomous, multi-step AI agent directly on your own hardware, with no subscription, no telemetry, and no data leaving your

    NVIDIA Cosmos on Jetson: World Foundation Models Now Run on Edge Hardware

    NVIDIA just demonstrated that physical AI inference no longer requires a data center. Cosmos world foundation models now run directly on Jetson edge hardware, from the AGX Thor down to the compact Orin Nano Super.

    Manus AI Email Agent: Build One That Actually Runs Your Inbox

    Manus AI reverses that dynamic entirely, placing an autonomous agent between you and the flood of incoming messages. This tutorial shows you exactly how to build,

    More like this

    Australia’s First Cisco Secure AI Factory: What 1,024 NVIDIA Blackwell Ultra GPUs Mean for Enterprise AI

    Enterprises across Asia-Pacific now have access to sovereign, high-performance AI infrastructure that keeps sensitive data entirely onshore. Australia’s first Cisco Secure AI Factory, built with Sharon AI and NVIDIA, combines cutting-edge GPU

    OpenClaw + Ollama: The Local AI Agent Setup That Keeps Your Data Off the Cloud

    Your AI agent does not need to live in a server farm 3,000 miles away. OpenClaw, paired with Ollama, puts a fully autonomous, multi-step AI agent directly on your own hardware, with no subscription, no telemetry, and no data leaving your

    NVIDIA Cosmos on Jetson: World Foundation Models Now Run on Edge Hardware

    NVIDIA just demonstrated that physical AI inference no longer requires a data center. Cosmos world foundation models now run directly on Jetson edge hardware, from the AGX Thor down to the compact Orin Nano Super.
    Skip to main content