Thread 1.4 - One Network to Connect Them All
Thread 1.4 became the only certified standard on January 1, 2026. Credential sharing finally delivers a single mesh network across all manufacturers.

Thread 1.4 - One Network to Connect Them All
If you've been running Thread devices at home, you've probably noticed something frustrating: your Apple HomePod, Google Nest Hub and Amazon Echo each created their own separate Thread network. Three border routers, three isolated meshes. Not exactly the seamless experience Thread was supposed to deliver.
As of January 1, 2026, the Thread Group only certifies Thread 1.4, and with it comes the fix everyone's been waiting for: credential sharing.> Important note: Thread 1.4 being the certified standard doesn't mean every device auto-updates. Firmware rollouts vary by manufacturer.
What Was Wrong With Older Thread?
| Scenario | Thread 1.3 and earlier | Thread 1.4 |
|---|---|---|
| Multiple border routers | Each creates its own network | Joins the existing network |
| Device coverage | Only same-network routers help | All border routers strengthen the mesh |
| Network stability | Parallel networks interfere | Single, robust mesh |
| Credential sharing | None | Automatic, secure sharing |
How Credential Sharing Works
When a new Thread 1.4 border router connects to your home network - whether it's a HomePod, Nest Hub, or Echo - it doesn't spin up a new mesh. Instead, it securely requests the credentials of the existing Thread network and joins it.
The result:Who Supports It?
| Platform / Manufacturer | Thread 1.4 Status |
|---|---|
| Apple | Thread 1.4 support coming in tvOS 26 |
| Samsung SmartThings | Supports shared Thread networks |
| Testing phase | |
| Amazon | Testing phase |
| IKEA | 20+ new Thread products in 2025-2026 |
| Aqara | New Thread devices shipping |
| Philips Hue | Thread 1.4 compatible products |
Why Should You Care?
Better Coverage
With 2-3 border routers in a typical home, the Thread mesh reaches every room. Devices communicate through the nearest border router, meaning faster, more reliable connections for sensors, locks and lights.
Lower Power Consumption
Thread devices - especially sensors and battery-powered locks - are extremely energy efficient. Thread 1.4 improves this further by reducing how often sleeping devices need to check in, extending battery life even more.
Works Without Internet
Thread is a local protocol. If your internet goes down, smart locks, sensors and lights continue to work through local automations. No cloud dependency for critical functions.
What Should You Do?
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1. Update your border routers | Ensure HomePod, Nest Hub, Echo are on latest firmware |
| 2. Wait for firmware updates | Manufacturers are gradually rolling out Thread 1.4 |
| 3. When buying new devices | Look for Thread 1.4 certification |
| 4. Be patient | Full rollout expected throughout 2026 |
Bottom Line
Thread 1.4 isn't a revolutionary new technology - it's the essential fix that makes Thread what it was always supposed to be: a single, reliable, low-power mesh network for your entire home. If you're building or expanding a smart home in 2026, Thread 1.4 compatibility should be near the top of your checklist.
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