Read on to learn more about using your Google Home Hub and Echo Dot together in your home.

Can I Connect My Google Home Hub

to My Echo Dot?

Each device has its own benefits and uses, so it can be great to use them together or specify one device for a certain purpose.

Connecting Your Google Home and

Echo Dot via Bluetooth

You can connect these two devices via Bluetooth if you prefer one’s sound quality over the other. This allows you to output each of the device’s audio into one of the pair.

After you connect your two smart speakers via Bluetooth, the music playback will come from the device that is being used as the default Bluetooth speaker. Follow these steps to make your Alexa audio play over your Google Home Hub:

Now, you can tell Alexa a voice command, like asking how the weather is, and it will play through the Google Home speaker’s audio.

Making Google Home and Echo Dot

Work Together

If you cannot decide which smart speaker is the best for you, you don’t have to settle for just one. Check out some tips for deciding on how to make these two devices work together harmoniously in your smart home:

Choose the Best Location for Each

Device

When you have two different smart speakers in your home, you want to make sure they each have their own location. That way, they can each serve a different purpose and avoid competing with each other in the same area of your home.

For instance, if you prefer using your Google Home Hub to ask for recipes and daily reminders, it may be more useful to keep this device in your kitchen. Google Home Hubs often have a more powerful speaker that can project to large areas. On the other hand, a smaller Echo Dot might be more suited for small areas like an office or bedroom.

Organize Your Automations

For the best success with two smart speakers, it’s best to keep your schedules, routines, and automations organized so nothing is duplicated. Manage your smart home devices with your Google Home and Echo Dot by using third-party apps like IFTTT to set up triggers and automation. Avoid setting up too many automations for the same actions by specifying one device for its own purpose.

Google Home Hub Capabilities

Here are some things the Google Home Hub can do but Alexa can’t:

  • Give you the most options for your assistant’s voice: Google gives you over ten options for how your virtual assistant will
  • sound. Options include a British accent, comedian and actress Issa Rae, and
  • EGOT winner John Legend. Wake up when you call it Boo Boo: Alexa has
  • limited wake words and phrases until you go into your settings and adjust them.
  • Google Home will wake when you say “Hey Google,” “Ok, Google,” and adorably,
  • “Hey Boo Boo.”Complete up to three voice commands at a time: Google responds efficiently when you tell it three commands in a row,
  • where other smart devices will buffer and have a hard time keeping up. Say, “Ok
  • Google, turn on the heat, turn the volume to four, and play my Goodnight
  • Playlist.”

Don’t Limit Yourself to One Smart

Device

There are many brands out there that manufacture smart home devices that each serve great purposes in their users’ lives. Your options are truly endless when it comes to how you connect with and to your home.

Continue reading our helpful smart home guides to keep learning more. You have so many opportunities to improve the technology in your home, and we’re here to help you find it.