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Looking for a privacy-friendly Google Home alternative?

Meet Gladys Assistant, the local, open-source smart home platform that keeps your data at home instead of in Google's cloud.

Google Home is convenient, but everything you say is processed in Google's cloud, tied to your Google account, and feeds the same advertising machine that powers the rest of the company. For a lot of people, that's a deal-breaker.

Gladys Assistant takes the opposite approach. It's a free, open-source, self-hosted smart home platform that runs at home, on your own machine. Your devices and automations stay on your local network, with no mandatory cloud, no recordings on someone else's servers, no ads and no data resale.

The Gladys Assistant dashboard
A clean, local interface where your data stays at home, with no mandatory cloud.

Why look for an alternative to Google Home?

Google Home is a polished voice assistant, but its cloud-first, ad-driven model comes with real trade-offs. The most common reasons people start looking for an alternative:

  • Everything you say is sent to Google's cloud, and voice recordings can be stored and reviewed.
  • Your usage is tied to your Google account and the advertising profile behind it.
  • It needs a Google account and a constant internet connection; very little works offline.
  • Google has a long track record of discontinuing products and reshaping its assistant (now moving to Gemini).
  • It's a voice front-end, not a real automation engine: genuinely local, complex automations are limited.

None of this makes Google Home a bad product, it's great at understanding voice. It's simply a question of priorities, and if privacy and local control matter to you, there's a better foundation for your smart home.

Why Gladys is a great privacy-friendly Google Home alternative

Your data stays at home

Gladys runs on your own machine, so your smart home data stays on your local network. No mandatory cloud, no recordings on Google's servers, no tracking.

Works without the cloud

Because it runs locally, your home keeps working even if your internet drops or a cloud service is shut down. Your automations don't depend on Google staying online.

Real automation, not just commands

Gladys has a full scenes engine with triggers, conditions and actions. You build a home that reacts on its own, not just one that waits for voice commands.

A voice assistant you control

Gladys has its own voice assistant, so you keep hands-free control without handing every sentence you say to a big tech company.

Built on open standards

Zigbee, Matter and MQTT are first-class citizens, so you're never locked into one brand's ecosystem or forced to buy compatible accessories.

Open-source, no ads, no resale

Gladys is 100% free and open-source at its core. There are no ads, no data resale, and an optional Gladys Plus subscription funds the project transparently.

Being fair: where Google Home has the edge

Let me be transparent. Google Home is excellent at what it does: best-in-class voice recognition, natural conversation, deep answers from Google Search, very cheap speakers, and multi-room audio that just works. Gladys is a home automation platform first, and its voice assistant is newer and something you set up yourself, so Google Home is hard to beat as a pure consumer voice speaker.

The good news is that it doesn't have to be all or nothing. Gladys can integrate with Google Home, so you can keep voice control on your existing Nest speakers while your automations run locally in Gladys. And if privacy is your priority, you can go fully local and drop the cloud assistant entirely. Either way, you stay in control.

Other privacy-friendly alternatives to Google Home

Gladys isn't the only option. To be fair, here are the main alternatives if you want more privacy and local control than Google Home offers:

Home Assistant

A powerful open-source platform with a local voice option (Assist). Very capable, but with a steep learning curve and some YAML.

Apple HomeKit / Siri

More privacy-conscious than Google Home, but still tied to Apple's ecosystem and cloud, and limited to Apple hardware.

OpenVoiceOS / Mycroft

Open-source voice assistants focused on privacy. Promising, but more of a tinkerer's project than a polished consumer product.

Rhasspy

A fully offline voice toolkit that pairs with other platforms. Very private, but technical to set up and maintain.

Among these, Gladys stands out by combining a clean, modern interface, a real local automation engine, and open standards, without the steep learning curve.

Frequently asked questions

Is there a privacy-friendly alternative to Google Home?

Yes. Gladys Assistant is a local, open-source, self-hosted smart home platform that runs on your own machine, so your data stays on your local network instead of in Google's cloud. There are no recordings on someone else's servers, no ads and no data resale.

Does Google Home record everything you say?

Google Home processes your voice requests in Google's cloud, and voice recordings can be stored and reviewed to improve its services. Gladys takes the opposite approach: it runs locally, so your smart home data stays at home.

Can I replace Google Home with a local, self-hosted system?

Yes. Gladys Assistant is fully self-hosted and runs at home. It has its own voice assistant and a real automation engine, so you can move away from a cloud assistant while keeping hands-free control and powerful local automations.

Does Gladys work without the cloud or internet?

Yes. Gladys' core runs entirely on your local network, so your home keeps working even if your internet drops or a cloud service is shut down. An optional Gladys Plus subscription adds remote access and AI, but the self-hosted core stays local.

Does Gladys have a voice assistant like Google Home?

Yes, Gladys has its own voice assistant for hands-free control. It's newer than Google Assistant and you set it up yourself, but it lets you keep voice control without sending every sentence you say to a big tech company.

Can I keep using Google Home with Gladys?

Yes. Gladys can integrate with Google Home, so you can keep voice control on your Nest speakers while your automations run locally in Gladys. If privacy is your priority, you can also go fully local and drop the cloud assistant entirely.

Try the privacy-friendly Google Home alternative

Gladys is free, open-source, and installs in a single Docker command. Local-first, self-hosted, no cloud required, no recordings on someone else's servers.