As more Americans embrace smart home devices, cyber risks are emerging right inside our living rooms.
From security systems and voice assistants to smart thermostats, TVs and baby monitors, smart home devices have become part of everyday life in most American households.
Over 43% of US families own smart homes in 2025 and on average, each American household owns 21 connected devices.
While these devices bring convenience, energy efficiency and control, they also expose your home to cyber threats that are growing in scale and sophistication.
Your smart home devices could be exposed to thousands of cyberattacks per week.
“With every device you connect to the internet, you’re opening a digital doorway that cybercriminals can exploit,” says Neal Jardine, BOXX Insurance’s Chief Cyber Intelligence and Claims Officer. “Whether it’s ID theft, extortion, fraud, data breaches, AI-driven voice-cloning scams or deepfakes, your home and family have never been more at risk from cyber threats.”
The smart home market in America is projected to grow to $55 billion in 2028.
Over 77% of Americans installed smart devices to improve their quality of life and 43% did so to enhance the safety and security of their homes in 2023. Ironically, these are the very devices that bring unseen intrusions to your home.
“Our homes are getting smarter, but so are cybercriminals,” says Jack Brooks, Head of BOXX Hackbusters® and vCISO. “Every new device you plug in adds a new layer of risk, especially when it connects to your Wi-Fi, your personal data and your family’s digital routines.”
According to Norton’s global cyber safety study, of the top three cyber threats people ever experienced in the world, 21% say malicious software was detected on their smart home or other connected devices, including computers, Wi-Fi networks, smartphones and tablets.
It’s no wonder 62% of smart home device users in the US are concerned over these devices’ security.
“It’s not just about your personal data that can be stolen, these devices pose a physical threat. Hackers can gain access to a smart home device that’s connected to smart alarms and door locks and they could disable them to get into your home,” says Brooks.
For affluent Americans who invest heavily in smart security systems, this can mean more exposure to cybercriminals, not less. Already, three in 10 wealthy Americans have smart home technology in their homes and an additional four in 10 plan to install such devices in the coming year, making them more vulnerable to cybercriminal.
Today’s cybercriminals are exploiting smart home vulnerabilities in increasingly creative and invasive ways.
Security researchers at Black Hat recently showed how a simple poisoned calendar invite can manipulate Google’s Gemini AI assistant into opening a home’s smart shutters and triggering it’s smart appliances. Malware that cybercriminals hid in pre-installed Google apps earlier this year compromised over 10 million smart TVs and streaming boxes globally, converting them into silent botnet operators to conduct large-scale ad fraud and other digital crimes.
Even more concerning, hackers exploited smart vacuums, watching owners live through its cameras, with one device reportedly shouting racial slurs through its speaker. It’s an unsettling reminder of how easily these seemingly harmless connected devices can be turned against us in our own homes.
Even security flaws in Apple’s AirPlay allowed hackers to breach shared home Wi-Fi networks and hijack millions of smart TVs and speakers to gain audio and visual data.
These aren’t anomalies, they’re warnings, says Jardine. “It’s a glimpse into the future of cybercrime at home. If you have connected devices, they can be exploited. We’ve seen entire households compromised by one overlooked device.”
So why are smart homes still so easy to compromise, even for tech-savvy users?
The problem is trust, Jardine explains. “Because these devices live inside our homes, we treat them as safe by default. That sense of familiarity leads to complacency. Factory settings are often left unchanged, passwords are reused and critical updates are ignored. Many people assume they won’t be targeted, but cybercriminals don’t care who you are, only how easy it is to gain access to your digital life and home. We don’t leave our front doors unlocked, yet many Canadians leave their digital doors wide open.”
Brooks, whose team of BOXX Hackbusters® breach response experts help families defend against cyber threats 24/7, recommends the following best practices for any smart home:
“Strong passwords and smart habits go a long way, but they’re just the start,” Brooks says. “Investing in a cyber insurance policy that does more than react is your household’s best defence.”
Traditional home insurance doesn’t cover all cybercrime, nor does it offer you the tools, services and support you need to fend off today’s cyber threats.
“It’s why we designed our personal cyber insurance solutions so families aren’t left figuring it out alone when digital threats hit home,” Jardine says.
Every Cyberboxx Home® policy is embedded with Cyberboxx® Assist tools and resources, to combine broad coverage with all-in-one protection, 24/7 Hackbusters support and real-time monitoring to help people predict, prevent, respond to and recover from cyber threats and protect their digital lives.
Cyberboxx Home® offers:
“At BOXX, we’ve always believed that prevention is better than loss,” says Jardine. “Over 80% of the incidents we help mitigate never become claims because we stop them early.”
Prevention is especially important for affluent households who are attractive targets for cybercriminals looking to exploit their smart homes. Nearly 30% of ultra-high net-worth families have already been targeted by cybercrime, yet few have a cybersecurity plan in place
“Whether you have one or many connected devices, we give clients the protection, insights, tools and backup they need to stay one step ahead,” Brooks adds.
As American families grow more digitally interconnected and invest in smart homes, cybercrime is becoming more invasive and personal.
Cyberboxx Home® offers your family more than just coverage. It offers peace of mind, expert human support when you need it most and a smarter way to stay safe in your smart home.
“Protecting your digital life at home doesn’t start with technology, it starts with awareness,” says Jardine. “The more proactive and informed you are, the harder it becomes for hackers to find a way in.”
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