What Aliro Means for Your Next Smart Lock Purchase

Quick take: Aliro is the new open standard for phone-based lock access using NFC and UWB -- developed by the same group behind Matter. NFC tap-to-unlock works even when your phone battery dies. Confirmed supporters include Schlage, Yale, Apple HomeKit, and Samsung. First Aliro-compatible locks are expected in retail from late 2025 onward.

I've tested a lot of smart locks over the past three years. Schlage Encode, Yale Assure 2, August WiFi -- you name it. Every single one required its own app, its own account, its own setup headache. That's exactly the problem Aliro was built to solve.

What Is Aliro and Why Does It Exist?

Aliro is an open standard developed by the Connectivity Standards Alliance (the same group behind Zigbee and Matter). It defines how phones, watches, and other personal devices communicate with door locks using NFC (Near Field Communication) and UWB (Ultra-Wideband) radio technologies.

Think of it like this. Before Matter, every smart home device spoke its own language. Aliro does for lock access what Matter did for device control -- it creates one universal protocol that every manufacturer agrees on.

The standard was formally announced in May 2023, with version 1.0 of the specification finalized in early 2024. The CSA's official Aliro page provides the full technical overview and member list. But why did we need yet another standard when Matter already exists? That question deserves a proper answer, and the short version is that Matter and Aliro solve completely different problems at the door.

How Does Aliro Actually Work?

Here's the short version. Your phone stores a digital credential -- basically an encrypted key -- in its secure element. When you tap your phone against an Aliro lock or walk within UWB range, the lock verifies that credential and unlocks.

Two distinct modes make this happen:

NFC tap-to-unlock operates at 13.56 MHz with a range of roughly 4 centimeters. You hold your phone or watch against the lock's reader, and it opens in under half a second. This works even when your phone battery is dead on most modern devices, because NFC can draw power from the reader itself. I've been locked out once because my phone died at my front door -- that feature alone makes Aliro worth paying attention to.

UWB hands-free unlock uses the 6-8 GHz frequency band with centimeter-level spatial awareness. The lock detects your phone from about 3 meters away and can determine your exact direction of approach. No fumbling for your phone. No tapping. You just walk up and grab the handle.

The real magic? Aliro credentials live in your phone's wallet app. Apple Wallet, Google Wallet, Samsung Wallet. You don't need the lock manufacturer's app to add or share keys. Want to give your dog walker temporary access on Tuesday afternoons? Send them a credential through your wallet app. Done.

How Credential Sharing Works

One thing that hasn't been explained well in most coverage is how Aliro handles key sharing between people. The process is straightforward. The lock owner creates a restricted credential with specific permissions -- time windows, expiration dates, or one-time use -- and sends it through the wallet app. The recipient doesn't need to install anything. They just accept the credential, and their phone's secure element stores it.

This is a massive upgrade over current smart lock sharing. Right now, with a Schlage Encode Plus, I have to invite someone to my Schlage Home app, they have to create an account, download the app, and then I can assign them access. With Aliro, it's as simple as sending someone a text message. That difference matters when you've got a house cleaner, a pet sitter, and your in-laws all needing different levels of access.

Which Companies Are Behind Aliro?

The membership list reads like a who's who of smart home and access control. Apple, Google, and Samsung are all founding members -- which means iOS, Android, and Galaxy devices will support Aliro credentials natively.

On the lock side, the major players are already committed. Allegion (parent company of Schlage) demonstrated a working Aliro prototype at CES 2025. ASSA ABLOY (which owns Yale, August, and HID Global) has confirmed Aliro integration across multiple product lines. Qualcomm is building Aliro-ready UWB chipsets, which means even smaller lock manufacturers won't need to engineer their own radio hardware from scratch.

Other confirmed members include NXP Semiconductors, Infineon, and STMicroelectronics -- the companies that actually make the NFC and UWB chips inside phones and locks.

Here's a quick rundown of confirmed Aliro members and their roles:

  • Apple, Google, Samsung -- phone OS and wallet integration
  • Allegion (Schlage) -- residential and commercial lock hardware
  • ASSA ABLOY (Yale, August, HID Global) -- lock hardware and access control systems
  • Qualcomm -- UWB chipsets for lock manufacturers
  • NXP Semiconductors -- NFC and UWB silicon for both phones and locks
  • Infineon, STMicroelectronics -- secure element chips and radio hardware

Is the industry finally getting serious about interoperability? The list suggests yes. But I've been burned by promises before. Remember when Thread was supposed to be everywhere by 2022?

How Does Aliro Compare to Matter: Different Jobs for the Same Lock?

This is where people get confused. Aliro and Matter aren't competitors. They're complementary.

Matter handles the smart home side of your lock. Remote locking and unlocking through your phone when you're away from home. Checking lock status. Automations like "lock all doors at 11 PM." Integration with Alexa, Google Home, Apple Home, and SmartThings.

Aliro handles the physical access side. The moment you're standing at your door and need to get in. The tap. The hands-free approach. The credential sharing.

A well-designed smart lock in 2026 should support both. Matter over Thread or WiFi for remote control and automations. Aliro over NFC and UWB for the actual unlocking experience. Some manufacturers are already building dual-standard locks -- Schlage's CES prototype supported Matter 1.2 and Aliro simultaneously.

What About Existing Locks

Can your current smart lock get an Aliro update? Almost certainly not. The standard requires specific NFC reader hardware and UWB antennas that existing locks don't have. The Schlage Encode Plus does support Apple Home Key through a proprietary NFC implementation, but that's Apple-only and won't be extended to full Aliro compatibility.

This isn't like a firmware update situation. You'll need new hardware. That's frustrating if you just bought a $280 Yale Assure Lock 2, but it's the reality of a standard that requires dedicated radio components.

When Can You Actually Buy an Aliro Lock?

Here's where I'll be honest -- the timeline has been slower than many of us hoped. The specification is finalized, silicon vendors have Aliro-ready chips shipping, and phone operating systems are preparing wallet integration.

The first consumer Aliro locks are expected to hit shelves in late 2026 to early 2027. Schlage and Yale are the most likely first movers based on their public demonstrations and CSA involvement. Pricing hasn't been officially announced, but expect a $30-50 premium over current smart locks -- putting Aliro-ready deadbolts in the $250-350 range based on current Schlage Encode Plus and Yale Assure 2 pricing.

Apple already supports home keys in Apple Wallet for select locks (the Schlage Encode Plus has had this since 2022 at $299), but that's a proprietary implementation. Apple's Home Key support page lists compatible locks and explains how the Express Card feature enables tap-to-unlock even with a dead battery -- the same principle Aliro extends to all platforms. Aliro makes the same experience available across all phone platforms and all participating lock brands.

What to Expect From Your Next Purchase

When Aliro locks finally arrive on store shelves, what should you actually look for before making a purchase? First, confirm the lock supports both NFC and UWB -- some early models might ship with NFC only to keep costs down. Second, check that your phone has the right hardware. Most iPhones from the 11 onward and Samsung Galaxy S21 and newer include UWB chips. Third, verify Matter support alongside Aliro so you're not giving up remote control features.

I'd also watch for the CSA certification mark. Just like Matter has its certification program, Aliro will have formal testing. A lock that says "Aliro compatible" without the official certification could mean anything. Don't trust marketing claims without that stamp.

Should You Wait for Aliro or Buy a Smart Lock Now?

If you're replacing a broken lock today, don't wait. Get a Matter-compatible lock from Schlage or Yale and enjoy the smart home integration now. You'll still need the manufacturer's app for physical access, but that's a minor annoyance.

If you're planning a home renovation for late 2026 or 2027? Absolutely wait. Aliro will eliminate the app fragmentation that's plagued smart locks since day one. One credential standard, every major phone platform, no proprietary lock-ins.

What Is the Bigger Picture for Smart Home Access?

Aliro isn't just about your front door. The standard is explained broadly enough to cover garage doors, gates, office buildings, hotel rooms, and even car doors. Imagine checking into a hotel and getting a room key dropped straight into your Google Wallet -- no front desk visit, no plastic keycard, no app download. That's where this is heading.

Commercial buildings are honestly where Aliro might make the biggest splash first. Office access control is a $12 billion market dominated by proprietary HID card readers. Aliro could blow that open by letting employees use their personal phones instead of company-issued badges.

Here's my honest take, and some people will disagree. Aliro matters more than Matter did for smart locks. Remote lock control is nice, but it's the daily unlock experience -- the thing you do 5-10 times every single day -- that determines whether a smart lock actually feels smart. Getting that right with a universal standard changes everything about how we'll interact with our front doors.