I have been running AcuRite weather stations on my property for the better part of a decade, and they have proven to be the best value in residential weather hardware. The brand makes everything from simple indoor-outdoor thermometers to full 5-in-1 stations with lightning detection. Here are the five wireless AcuRite weather stations I would actually buy in 2026.

StationSensor TypeSmart ConnectBest For
AcuRite Atlas7-in-1Yes, My AcuRitePremium home weather
AcuRite Iris 5-in-15-in-1Yes, My AcuRiteAll-around favorite
AcuRite 5-in-1 020645-in-1NoDisplay-only standalone
AcuRite 3-in-1 015123-in-1NoMid-range
AcuRite 00611A2Temp and humidityNoIndoor-outdoor basic

AcuRite Atlas - Best Premium

The Atlas is the flagship and the only AcuRite station with built-in lightning detection. The 7-in-1 sensor measures temperature, humidity, wind speed and direction, rainfall, UV index, and light intensity. The high-definition color display is the clearest I have seen, and the My AcuRite app delivers reliable cloud history and alerts. Pricier than the rest, but for serious home weather it is the one.

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AcuRite Iris 5-in-1 - Best All-Around

The Iris is the AcuRite station I recommend to most people. The 5-in-1 sensor covers temperature, humidity, wind speed and direction, and rainfall, which is everything most homeowners need. The color display is sharp, the included Wi-Fi connector enables Weather Underground reporting, and the price is hundreds below the Atlas. Mine has been running flawlessly for over four years.

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AcuRite 5-in-1 02064 - Best Standalone

If you do not want cloud connectivity, the 02064 5-in-1 is the standalone option. Same 5-in-1 sensor as the Iris but with a non-Wi-Fi color display. Battery life on the display is excellent, the sensor uses an integrated solar panel to power its fan, and the data refreshes every 18 seconds. A good pick for tech-skeptic households.

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AcuRite 3-in-1 01512 - Best Mid-Range

The 3-in-1 covers temperature, humidity, and wind speed. It is the right pick if you do not need rainfall data, because the rain collector is the part that adds the most cost and the most maintenance. The display is the same color unit as the 5-in-1 line, just with fewer fields. Solid for hobbyist use without the rain-gauge complexity.

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AcuRite 00611A2 - Best Basic

The 00611A2 is just an indoor-outdoor thermometer with humidity. No wind, no rain, no fancy features. The remote sensor is the size of a deck of cards and the display is small and battery-powered. For a porch reading or a greenhouse monitor, this is plenty. I keep one in my chicken coop and one on my deck.

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What Matters Most

Sensor placement matters more than sensor count. A 5-in-1 mounted next to a brick wall will report wildly inaccurate temperatures because the wall radiates heat. Mount sensors at least 5 feet above ground, away from buildings, and in open exposure. After placement, look at battery life. AcuRiteโ€™s solar-fan sensors run for years on a single set of batteries. After batteries, smart connectivity. The My AcuRite app adds genuine value if you check weather from your phone.

My Setup

I have an AcuRite Iris 5-in-1 mounted on a 12-foot pole in my backyard, with the display sitting on my kitchen counter and the Wi-Fi connector forwarding data to Weather Underground. The historical data has been useful for planning garden timing and tracking rainfall against my drip irrigation. I check the app maybe three times a day on average.

Common Mistakes

The biggest mistake is mounting the sensor too close to the house. Heat radiating from walls, roofs, and pavement throws off temperature readings by 5 to 10 degrees. The second mistake is forgetting to clean the rain collector. Pollen, leaves, and bird droppings clog the funnel and silently break the rainfall data. The third is using rechargeable batteries in the sensor. Use lithium primaries for cold-weather reliability.

Final Recommendation

For most homeowners, the AcuRite Iris 5-in-1 is the right pick. It covers every metric you actually need, the smart connectivity is reliable, and the price is reasonable. Premium buyers should step up to the Atlas for lightning detection and UV monitoring. Skeptics should grab the standalone 02064. For a deck thermometer, the 00611A2 is plenty. Mount it correctly and it will run for a decade.

Frequently asked questions

How accurate are AcuRite wireless weather stations?+

Temperature is accurate to within 1 degree Fahrenheit, humidity within 2 percent, and rainfall within 5 percent when calibrated. The wind sensors on the 5-in-1 and 3-in-1 models are accurate within 5 percent of true wind speed.

How far can the sensor be from the display?+

Most AcuRite sensors transmit at 433 MHz with a line-of-sight range of 330 feet. Walls and metal reduce this significantly. Plan for 100 to 150 feet through typical home construction.

Do AcuRite stations work with smart home systems?+

The newer Atlas and Iris models connect to AcuRite's My AcuRite cloud, which integrates with Weather Underground, IFTTT, and Alexa. Older standalone models are display-only with no smart features.

Independent video for additional perspective on 5 Best Acurite Weather Station Wirelesses of 2026.

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Author

Tom Reeves

Senior Electronics & TV Editor

Tom Reeves has reviewed consumer electronics for over a decade, with a focus on televisions, monitors, laptops, and smart home devices. He worked as a professional display calibrator before moving into editorial, and he brings that hands-on technical background to every TV and monitor review. At TheTestedHub, Tom covers display calibration, computer monitors, laptops and 2-in-1s, smart home platforms, home theater setups, and HDR performance.