Description











Price: $35.99 - $33.98
(as of Feb 04, 2026 19:43:05 UTC – Details)

Experience the future of smart home convenience and sustainability with the Tapo P110M Smart Wi-Fi Plug, Matter-certified with energy monitoring. This innovative device empowers you to control your connected devices with ease, using simple voice commands through your favorite assistants like Alexa, Siri, Google Home, or Samsung SmartThings. The Tapo P110M goes beyond just control. It’s also an energy efficiency champion. Gain valuable insights into your energy consumption with detailed statistics, and leverage those insights to estimate your bills and potentially save money. Safety is paramount, and the Tapo P110M prioritizes it with customizable power thresholds and a smart charge guard feature, preventing overcharging and ensuring the security of your connected devices. Plus, the P110M boasts a compact design—it fits seamlessly into your existing setup without blocking neighboring outlets. Upgrade your home with the Tapo P110M, and experience the power of smart control, energy efficiency, and ultimate convenience.
【Matter-Certified】Matter-certified devices, regardless of brand, can work together and are compatible with most major smart home platforms like Amazon Alexa, Apple HomeKit, Google Home, and Samsung SmartThings. Enjoy more flexible and unified control.
【Insightful Energy Tracking】 Monitor your energy consumption with in-depth statistics and clear visuals, helping you optimize power usage.
【Estimate Your Energy Bill】 Enhance energy management by integrating with billing systems for clear cost visualization (both single and periodic readings). Additionally, programmable scheduling allows automatic operation of high-consumption devices during off-peak hours with lower electricity rates, resulting in cost savings.
【Overcharge Prevention & Power Management】 Automatically cuts off power based on user-set thresholds and durations to prevent overcharging, conserve energy, and protect connected devices from overcurrents by shutting off when power exceeds set limits.
【Voice & Remote Control】 With built-in support for both Alexa and Google Assistant, issue simple voice commands to adjust settings, turn devices on or off, or even access specific functions without lifting a finger. Manage Tapo P110M and its connected devices from anywhere with the user-friendly Tapo app.






Brandon D. –
Reliable Smart Plugs with Great Usability and Energy Monitoring!
5 stars. These Tapo smart plugs are excellent quality and work flawlessly with Alexa, Google Home, and SmartThings. Setup was quick and easy, showing great usability and compatibility. The compact design offers strong portability and doesn’t block adjacent outlets, which adds practicality.I love the functionality—energy monitoring is a great feature for tracking usage, and the Matter support ensures long-term interoperability. The build feels solid, giving confidence in durability and reliability, and the UL certification adds extra peace of mind.Overall, these plugs combine quality, efficiency, and versatility perfectly. Highly recommend for anyone looking to upgrade their smart home setup!
TJRock –
Quality product, easy setup
Works great! Hooks into Home Assistant with power metering, easy control!
Amazon Customer –
Power monitoring _and_ control, Matter and HomeAssistant compatible
I was looking to identify the power consumption and on-off duty cycle of a few appliances in the home, all of which plug in to a 120V outlet. Side note: I’d like to find something similar for 240V, but there are so many 240V outlet configurations…Why these -I thought briefly about buying one of the self-contained power monitors (plugs into an outlet, provides an outlet, has its own display, etc.), but what I really wanted was to monitor the power over time, and for some use-cases compare that with other activity in the house. For this I needed to integrate the data (logging) into Home Assistant (HA) – an open-source smart home application I use. This combination brought me to choose theTP-Link Tapo Smart Plug Mini.Out of the boxing -The pair were well protected in the box on arrival, and easy to install. I did install the Tapo app. And connectivity was easy – joining them to the home network, where I next tested out the Tapo features. Control of them was easy, and I could name each one to clearly know what I’m looking at and controlling. Combined with the Tapo app, there is quite a bit of functionality in these things that I need to explore further.Because of their physical size, it is possible to put plug two of them over/under each other (in a typical duplex outlet). I didn’t have the need to, but they are too wide to plug them in side-by-side (e.g., in a quad outlet).Home AssistantI next found it was easy to integrate them into Home Assistant, which was easily done using the provided QR codes, my phone, and the HA app on my phone.From HA, I could also turn them on and off, set schedules and so forth. Some of this capability overlaps with the TP-Link app, but that was not my specific interest. I wanted them always on, so I could monitor the behavior of the thing plugged in. In HA, it wasn’t long before I had interesting data to look at.The pictures show 3 of the screens from the Tapo application, and you can see from one that it matches that from the time-history graph in Home Assistant, except in HA I could overlay other outlets into a single graph for time-history comparison (which wasn’t relevant in this specific case). With these outlets, I learned within about a day that the whole-house dehumidifier draws a lot of power _and_ runs at a nearly 50% duty cycle. The power consumption was in the specifications for the dehumidifier, but the high run-time was more unexpected. The overlaid graph shows power of the network center – multiple PoE switches, Pd end-points, two servers, one of which only comes on to support a backup operation. If you do want to check the power of something like a network or computer system, I’d recommend having the equipment on a UPS, and the UPS plugs into the TP-Link outlet (just to avoid an unplanned shutdown).Control of these outlets was easy (by both the TP-Link app and HA), but again, that was not my objective – so I named the devices with a “DO NOT TURN OFF” label as a reminder.SummaryThe main functionality of interest was the power monitoring and data logging, and these were a great solution at a reasonable price point. I’m likely to buy a few more.Because of the convenience of using these for power monitoring, I do wish there was a convenient way to “lock out” the ability to turn them off.
S. Howard –
Recommended with a few quirks. Long term reliability unknown.
I have only had these for a few days, so can’t comment on reliability but I wanted to share my experience with setting them up and their capabilities.I bought 12 of these Tapo P110M (3×4-Packs) to replace my smart plugs from Etekcity (aka Vesync) that were 7-8 years old. The Etekcity ones had been fine but had started losing connectivity more frequently and were limited by the technology of the time. The biggest shortcoming of the old ones was the inability to control them if internet went down.Doing the research there was a lot of conflicting information about “Matter†smart devices, and I was concerned that the P110M would not meet my needs. Here are some of my concerns in Q/A form:Q: Can they actually be controlled when the ISP is down?A: Answer: Yes! But only through the Tapo app (not Alexa) and only when connected to the home network. This is a minor concern, but when the internet goes down your smart phone will try to automatically disconnect and use cellular data. This means that if you want to control a plug you have to reconnect to Wi-Fi first.Q: Is IPv6 required?A: No! There was a lot of conflicting information on this one. Many YouTube reviews indicated that all Matter devices require IPv6. I do not have IPv6 configured and didn’t really want to bother as my ISP does not support it yet in my area.Q: What order should I set them up?A: Based on my experience, I think the best approach is to add the Tapo app first, configure it and update firmware, then add to the desired ecosystem.Q: If I add to the Tapo app first do I need to generate a new Matter ID to add to my first ecosystem?A: No. The Tapo app does not use up an ID.I did find a quirk when setting them up. My target “ecosystem†is Alexa, so my plan (based on what I saw in the literature) was to:1. Add a P110M to the Tapo app, configure it and update firmware.2. Add the device to the Alexa App.When I did this, step 1 was fine, but in step 2 Alexa would add 2 devices for each plug: A new plug (e.g., First Plug) and a ghost device (e.g. First Device). I did loads of research and could not find anything definitive about this. Chap GPT called this a “known first device bug†and offered solutions but turned out to be hallucinating. When pushed for sources all the linked discussions Chat GPT provided had nothing to do with this apparent issue.I thought maybe the problem was adding to the Tapo app first was “using up†the matter ID and so Alexa was confused, reversed the order and added the device to the Alexa app first. When I did this, sure enough there was no ghost device initially, only the one I intended to app (e.g., My Plug 1). But when I added another device to the Alexa app the previously added device (My Plug 1) would split into 2 devices. My Plug 1 would lose its “pluggyness†in the Alexa app (i.e., lose its on/off button) and a new device with a default name (second plug) would appear, with an on/off button.I ultimately gave in and just added all the devices in my original planned order (Tapo then Alexa) and everything worked fine. I still don’t know the reason for the ghost devices, but they don’t seem to affect performance. I put them all in their own Alexa group to keep them out of the way. See pics.By the way, adding a plug to the Tapo app does not “use up†the matter ID. You can add it to Tapo and then scan the QR to add it the target ecosystem.So far very happy with the P110M.
Bill –
Super easy to set up and work great!
These are fantastic! Easy to set up works great with Apple. Easy to schedule on/off times. We use them for candles in the windows. Perfect
FormulaZone –
Solid Switches, work with Apple HomeKit
These Tapo switches appear to be solid. They connect well, the Material connectivity works smoothly with Apple HomeKit, and they are easy to configure.
Leo S. –
Works great, added them to the Tapo app, updated firmware, then added them seamlessly over matter to my homeassistant network. 100% stable so far and energy monitoring works great in Matter.