GHome Smart Plug Outlet Extender with USB Ports vs Amazon Basics Smart Plug with Night Light & Motion Sensor: A Real Comparison
Amazon Basics
Price Comparison
| Platform | Price | |
|---|---|---|
| AmazonBest Price | $22.99 | Buy on Amazon → |
GHome Smart
Price Comparison
| Platform | Price | |
|---|---|---|
| AmazonBest Price | $22.98 | Buy on Amazon → |
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Read our latest reviews→The GHome gives you nine outlets and runs through its own app; the Amazon Basics gives you two outlets plus a motion night light and only works with Alexa. That second part is the dealbreaker for a lot of people.
Quick specs
| GHome Outlet Extender | Amazon Basics Smart Plug | |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $22.98 | $22.99 |
| Rating | 4.4/5 | 4.1/5 |
| Outlets | 6 (3 smart, 3 always-on) | 2 (both smart) |
| USB ports | 3 (group control) | None |
| Night light | No | Yes, motion-activated |
| App/ecosystem | GHome app + Alexa + Google | Alexa only |
Where the GHome wins
I put this one behind the TV stand, which is where cable boxes and a soundbar and a couple of phone chargers all fight over two wall sockets. The three always-on outlets handle the stuff I never want cut (router-adjacent gear), the three smart outlets handle the lamps and the fan, and the USB ports charge controllers without me digging for a brick. That's the real use case here — it's a power strip that happens to be smart, not a single plug. The schedules work fine through the GHome app, and I set the living room lamp to come on at dusk and shut off at midnight. It also speaks both Alexa and Google, so when my brother came over with his Google-everything setup, he could actually yell at it. The surge protection matters too if you're stacking real electronics on it. For a desk, an entertainment center, or any spot where you've got more devices than outlets, this is the obvious pick.
Where the Amazon Basics wins
The motion night light is the whole reason to buy this, and it's better than I expected. I have one in the hallway outside the bathroom, and at 3 a.m. it kicks on a soft glow when I walk past, then fades out a little after I'm gone. No fumbling for a switch, no blinding overhead light. The plug itself sits flush against the wall and only covers one socket, so the second outlet stays usable — I've got a phone charger in the bottom and the smart plug controlling a lamp up top. Setup was genuinely the easiest of any smart device I've touched. Because I bought it linked to my Amazon account, it showed up in the Alexa app already named and ready. No scanning QR codes, no creating yet another account. If you're already deep in Alexa and you want a plug that disappears into the wall and gives you a nightlight for free, this does exactly that.
The honest differences
- The GHome covers six outlets and three USB ports; the Amazon Basics covers two. If you need more than a single device controlled, the GHome isn't even a competition — it's a different category of product.
- The Amazon Basics night light is the thing I actually use most, and the GHome has nothing like it. I expected to shrug at a motion light. I don't.
- GHome works with Alexa and Google Home; the Amazon Basics is Alexa-only, full stop. If anyone in your house runs Google, the Amazon plug is dead weight for them.
- The GHome needs its own app for the good scheduling stuff (random mode, countdowns, cycles), which is one more login. The Amazon Basics lives entirely inside the Alexa app you probably already have, and that simplicity is worth something.
- That 4.4 vs 4.1 rating gap tracks with what I felt — the GHome just does more and fails less, while the Amazon plug's motion sensitivity occasionally needs a tweak in the app before it stops triggering on nothing.
Which one I'd buy
I'd take the GHome. It solved an actual problem — not enough outlets behind the TV — and the dual Alexa/Google support means it'll still work if I ever switch ecosystems or hand it to someone who runs the other one. For the same $23, getting six outlets and three USB ports instead of two plugs feels like the smarter spend almost every time.
But I get why you'd disagree. If you're locked into Alexa anyway, you don't need extra outlets, and you want a hallway or bedroom night light that turns itself on, the Amazon Basics does one specific job well and vanishes into the wall while doing it. That motion light is genuinely nice, and the setup is as close to zero effort as smart home gear gets. Buy that one if you want simple and small. Buy the GHome if you want capacity.
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