Tapo P110 or EIGHTREE 5GHz: which smart plug is the smarter buy?

If you’re trying to cut standby waste, track appliance costs, or automate heaters, dehumidifiers and other high-use devices, these two smart plugs are both strong contenders. The choice here isn’t about whether either one works — both are well-rated energy-monitoring plugs — it’s about which gives you the better mix of reliability, app experience, and value. For UK homes, that matters because even small loads add up fast at current electricity prices, and a good smart plug can help you spot the biggest energy drains. Here’s the straight answer on which one to buy.

Our PickTapo P110 (4-Pack) Smart Plug, WiFi Plug, Energy Monitoring, Electricity Usage Monitor, App Remote Control, Alexa,Voice Control with Alexa & Google, Away Mode, Scheduling & Timer, Device Sharing

Tapo P110 (4-Pack) Smart Plug, WiFi Plug, Energy Monitoring, Electricity Usage Monitor, App Remote Control, Alexa,Voice Control with Alexa & Google, Away Mode, Scheduling & Timer, Device Sharing

£30.994.6 (3,061)
EIGHTREE 5GHz Smart Plug with Energy Monitoring, Smart Plugs that Work with Alexa Works with Alexa & Google Assistant & Smart Life APP, Wireless Remote Control Timer Plug Smart Home, 13A, 2990W

EIGHTREE 5GHz Smart Plug with Energy Monitoring, Smart Plugs that Work with Alexa Works with Alexa & Google Assistant & Smart Life APP, Wireless Remote Control Timer Plug Smart Home, 13A, 2990W

£34.974.6 (1,536)

Our Recommendation

Buy the Tapo P110 4-Pack. It’s cheaper by £3.98, gives you four plugs instead of a single plug listing, and has the stronger review count at 3,061 ratings while matching the 4.6/5 score of EIGHTREE. For UK homes, that combination of lower cost, broader practicality, and more proven app ecosystem makes it the better purchase. Unless you specifically need the EIGHTREE’s 5GHz talking point, Tapo is the smarter buy.

Detailed Comparison

Display

Neither product has a display or screen, so this category really comes down to app visibility and how clearly each plug presents energy data. Product A, the Tapo P110 4-pack, has a major practical advantage because Tapo’s app is widely regarded as straightforward for viewing live power draw, daily usage, and historical trends. Product B also offers energy monitoring through the Smart Life ecosystem, but the listing gives less confidence about the polish and consistency of the experience. Winner: Product A, because its app ecosystem is typically easier to navigate and better suited to quick energy checks.

Performance

For smart plugs, performance means connection stability, response speed, scheduling reliability, and how well the energy monitoring works. Product B’s headline feature is 5GHz support, but that can be a mixed blessing: many smart home devices still rely on 2.4GHz for broader compatibility and better range through walls. In real-world UK homes, especially with brick walls and older construction, 2.4GHz often proves more dependable for plugs placed in kitchens, garages, and utility rooms. Product A’s Tapo platform is known for dependable day-to-day automation and broad Alexa/Google compatibility. Winner: Product A, because it’s the safer bet for consistent, low-fuss performance.

Build quality and design

Both are compact smart plugs designed to fit into standard UK sockets and control appliances up to 13A/2990W on Product B, with Product A intended for similar everyday household loads. Product A benefits from being a 4-pack from a major smart-home brand with a large installed user base, which usually translates into better firmware support and fewer surprises over time. Product B’s design is functional and the 5GHz support is appealing on paper, but the listing is more marketing-heavy and less reassuring on long-term ecosystem maturity. Winner: Product A, for the stronger sense of refinement and trust.

Battery life

Neither product has a battery, so this is not applicable in the usual sense. The more relevant factor is power efficiency and whether the plug itself adds meaningful standby consumption. In practice, both smart plugs will use a very small amount of power, so the key savings come from controlling the appliances they’re attached to rather than from the plug’s own consumption. Winner: tie.

Price and value for money

This is where Product A pulls ahead clearly. The Tapo P110 4-pack costs £30.99, while the EIGHTREE option is £34.97, making Product A £3.98 cheaper despite giving you four plugs and a very strong 4.6/5 rating from 3,061 reviews. Product B also has a 4.6/5 rating, but from 1,536 reviews, so it has less social proof at a higher price. On a per-plug basis, Product A is dramatically better value, which matters if you want to monitor several appliances like a fridge freezer, dehumidifier, immersion-adjacent load, or office equipment. Winner: Product A, by a wide margin.

Game library/features

These are smart plugs, not gaming products, so the relevant comparison is features rather than a game library. Product A includes energy monitoring, app remote control, Alexa and Google voice control, Away Mode, scheduling, timer functions, and device sharing. Product B also offers energy monitoring, Alexa and Google Assistant support, Smart Life app control, wireless remote control, and timer functionality, plus the selling point of 5GHz connectivity. The issue is that Product A’s feature set feels more rounded for real household use, especially Away Mode and the stronger Tapo app reputation. Winner: Product A, because its feature stack is more practical and better integrated.

Overall user experience

For most UK buyers, the best smart plug is the one that disappears into the background and just works. Product A is the better all-round experience: it is cheaper, comes in a 4-pack, has more reviews, and offers the kind of app and automation setup that tends to suit everyday energy monitoring. Product B may appeal if you specifically want to experiment with 5GHz support, but smart plugs usually benefit more from reliability and broad compatibility than from chasing a faster Wi-Fi band. If you’re using these to reduce bills, automate heating accessories, or identify wasteful standby loads, the Tapo P110 is the more confidence-inspiring choice.

Overall summary: Product A wins decisively. It gives you more plugs for less money, stronger market validation, and a more proven smart-home experience. Product B is not bad, but it costs more and doesn’t offer enough extra value to justify the premium for most households.

Buy the Tapo P110 (4-Pack) if...

Buy Product A if you want the best value per plug and plan to monitor multiple appliances around the house. It’s the better choice if you care about a well-established app, easier scheduling, and a more trustworthy long-term smart home setup. It’s also the obvious pick if you’re trying to reduce electricity waste across several rooms without spending more than necessary.

Buy the EIGHTREE 5GHz Smart if...

Buy Product B only if you specifically want to try a 5GHz smart plug and that feature matters more to you than value. It may suit a setup where your router and smart-home environment are already tuned around Smart Life and you prefer that ecosystem. If you only need one plug and are comfortable paying a little extra for the EIGHTREE branding, it remains a workable option.

Curated by The Electric Home on All The Top Picks

As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.