What we liked
- Nine touch-sensitive hexagon panels link in any pattern
- Thread and Matter support for forward compatibility
- Rhythm and screen mirror modules add reactive scenes
- Works with HomeKit, Alexa, Google Home, and SmartThings
What we didn't like
- Expansion packs run high per added panel
- Adhesive mounts can damage paint when repositioned
- Color rendering is slightly less saturated than Govee Glide
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedColor quality: bright, uniform, with a small edge dipTouch controls: the feature you keep usingSmart home integration: where Nanoleaf leadsMounting, expansion, and the adhesive questionWho should buy the Nanoleaf Hexagons Kit?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQsQuick verdict
The Nanoleaf Shapes Hexagons Smarter Kit is the modular wall light I would buy again. Nine hexagon panels link in any pattern, the panels are touch sensitive so you can trigger scenes by tapping the wall, and Thread plus Matter keep it future proof. Expansion gets pricey per panel and the adhesive does not love repositioning, but the flexibility and integration are the best in the category.
Why you should trust this review
I bought the Nanoleaf Shapes Hexagons Smarter Kit at retail and mounted all nine panels on a home office wall. Nanoleaf did not provide a sample and had no part in this review. The kit has been in daily use for 10 months, on during most working hours, so what follows reflects long term behavior rather than an unboxing high.
I review smart home lighting, so I have lived with a range of wall panels and strips and know where they tend to fail, color drift, dead zones, flaky pairing, and adhesive that wrecks paint. Those are the things I went looking for here, because the hexagons sell on flexibility and smart home polish, and both only prove themselves over months of real use.
How we evaluated
I ran the kit through our standardized modular wall light protocol. For color quality I measured uniformity across all nine panels to check for brightness or saturation falloff between the center and the edges. For the touch controls I verified tap, double tap, and swipe gestures across the whole array to confirm they stayed responsive rather than degrading.
For the smart home side I tested cross platform pairing over Thread and Matter, then lived with the kit through HomeKit, Alexa, Google Home, and SmartThings over 10 months to judge whether scenes and automations held. I also worked through mounting and the question every buyer asks, whether the adhesive will damage the wall when the panels come down.
Color quality: bright, uniform, with a small edge dip
Color across the nine panels is bright and consistent, which is the first thing that separates a premium kit from a generic one. In my uniformity check the panels matched closely across the array, with only a small dip in saturation right at the panel edges that you have to look for to notice. From a normal viewing distance the wall reads as one cohesive piece of light rather than nine separately tinted tiles.
The honest comparison point is the Govee Glide Hexa, which renders color slightly more saturated and costs less per panel on its 10 pack. If pure visual punch on a budget is the only thing you care about, Govee has an edge there. What the Nanoleaf gives up in raw saturation it makes back in the white range from 1200K to 6500K and the overall refinement of the light, and across 10 months the color stayed accurate with no channel drift.
Touch controls: the feature you keep using
The touch sensitivity is the feature that turned out to matter most in daily use. Each hexagon responds to a tap, and you can map gestures to trigger scenes directly from the wall. Walking into the office and tapping a panel to cycle to a work scene became automatic, faster than reaching for a phone or waiting on a voice assistant. It is the kind of small convenience that sounds minor and then becomes the thing you miss on any panel that lacks it.
Durability of the touch surface was my concern going in, since capacitive controls can get flaky over time. After 10 months the panels are as responsive as day one. Taps register reliably, double taps and swipes work, and I have not had to recalibrate anything. Govee’s panels do not offer this at all, so if interacting with the wall directly appeals to you, the touch controls are a genuine reason to pay the Nanoleaf premium.
Smart home integration: where Nanoleaf leads
This is the strongest part of the kit. Thread and Matter support means the same hardware works across HomeKit, Alexa, Google Home, and SmartThings without separate setup flows for each. Pairing over Thread was quick, and once paired the panels responded promptly to voice commands and automations without the lag WiFi only lighting suffers. Thread also frees you from depending on Nanoleaf’s app, and Matter keeps the kit relevant as the standard matures.
Over 10 months I drove the panels mostly through HomeKit scenes, voice, and the occasional wall tap, rarely opening the Nanoleaf app, and the kit held up. Schedules fired on time and scenes recalled correctly. The rhythm and screen mirror modules add reactive scenes that respond to sound or your display, which are fun extras, but the core value is that this kit slots cleanly into an existing smart home rather than living as an isolated gadget.
Mounting, expansion, and the adhesive question
Mounting uses adhesive pads, and the question every buyer has is whether they will ruin the wall. On a first install over fully cured paint they hold well and come down cleanly. The risk is real after a year, and on freshly painted walls, where removing the pads can pull paint with them. If you expect to reposition the panels, use the optional screw mounts instead and save yourself the patching. Plan the layout before you stick anything down.
Expansion is the cost caveat. The base nine panels link into any pattern you like, and one controller can technically run up to 500 panels, but the included power supply comfortably runs the base nine plus one expansion pack before you need a second supply. More to the point, expansion packs run high per added panel, so growing a large installation adds up fast. Budget for the wall you want from the start rather than assuming cheap incremental growth.
Who should buy the Nanoleaf Hexagons Kit?
Buy it if you want modular wall art you can shape into any pattern with real smart home control, if you value HomeKit, Thread, and Matter support so the light joins your existing setup, and if touch interaction on the wall itself appeals to you.
Skip it if you want the cheapest possible RGB panels, where a Govee Glide kit costs less per panel and renders slightly more saturated color, or if you plan to reposition the panels often, since the adhesive is not made for it.
The verdict
After 10 months on my office wall, the Nanoleaf Shapes Hexagons Smarter Kit earned its modular pick label. The panels are bright and uniform, the touch controls stayed responsive and genuinely useful, and the Thread and Matter integration is the cleanest in the category, slotting straight into HomeKit. The tradeoffs are honest: Govee renders slightly richer color for less money, and expansion plus the adhesive demand some planning. For a HomeKit household that wants flexible, interactive wall art that holds up, this is the kit I would buy again.
Versus the alternatives
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nanoleaf Hexagons 9-Pack | Best Modular Wall Light | 4.5 | Check price |
| Govee Glide Hexa 10-Pack | Best Budget Modular | 4.4 | Check price |
| Nanoleaf Shapes Triangles | Best Triangle Shape | 4.4 | Check price |
| Generic RGB Panel Kit | Skip | 3.4 | Check price |
Specs at a glance
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Nanoleaf Shapes Hexagons Smarter Kit FAQs
Nanoleaf has touch controls, Thread, Matter, and HomeKit which Govee lacks. Govee has slightly richer color saturation and lower per-panel cost on the 10-pack. For a HomeKit household, Nanoleaf. For pure visual impact on a budget, Govee.
Probably not on the first install if your paint is fully cured. Removing them after a year can pull paint, especially on freshly painted walls. If you plan to reposition, use the optional screw mounts instead.
Up to 500 in theory, though practical limits depend on the power supply. The included supply comfortably runs the base 9 plus another expansion pack. Past that, add a second power supply.
Update log
- Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


