UK consumers seek greater security assurances for smart home and health devices – UL Solutions

Eight out of 10 (81%) people participating in a recent study of consumers in the UK said how a manufacturer protects against cyber-attacks and privacy invasions is important when purchasing a smart home, fitness or medical device. Commissioned by UL Solutions, the study of consumer IoT buying habits suggests consumers are increasingly concerned about the security of their connected smart devices. Security is now of the same importance as other factors, like brand value or word-of-mouth recommendations, when making a purchase.

The study found that more than one in two (58%) UK consumers intend to buy a smart home device like a connected light bulb or camera. In comparison, slightly less than half (45%) expect to purchase a personal smart device such as a fitness or medical monitor. One in 10 (12%) intend to buy large, connected appliances in the next two years.

Cybersecurity and data privacy concerns appear to be becoming more influential in smart home and personal IoT device purchasing, based on three sets of findings:

The top smart device cybersecurity concerns:

These concerns were ahead of health fears from electromagnetic waves emitted by devices (36%).

UK consumers appear to be broadly confident in their use of IoT devices, with two-thirds (66%) of customers saying they installed their smart home device themselves. 

While most (69%) said the installation was easy, close to one in three consumers (31%) said it was difficult. After cost, the main areas for improvement with smart devices ranked as: being easier to install and configure (second), greater guarantees of privacy (third), and against failure or malfunction (fourth).  

“While the UK is a mature market for smart home and personal devices, consumers are looking for greater clarity and reassurance on product safety, cybersecurity and data privacy management,” said Maan Ghanma, Director of Smart Solutions at UL Solutions. “This will likely increase as the UK government educates citizens about raising minimum device cybersecurity standards. We know that our customers take product safety seriously and are responding with initiatives to help ensure cybersecurity is integral to a variety of smart home and health devices.”

The study was conducted by the independent market research agency Doxa and surveyed a representative sample of 1,000 U.K. consumers aged 18-64 in February 2023.

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