New smart ceiling option, Philips Hue Centris spots aim at flexible living rooms
16.06.2026 - 04:15:20 | ad-hoc-news.deEdited by ad hoc news New Releases & Launches Desk. Reviewed before publication on 06/15/2026 at 10:14 PM ET. Details in the imprint.
The Philips Hue Centris family gives Signify a smart ceiling light that mixes indirect ambient light with pivoting spotlights in a single, app-controlled fixture aimed at modern living and dining rooms. The Centris range sits in the mid-to-upper price tier of the Philips Hue ecosystem and targets households that want full-color smart lighting without installing separate downlights and ceiling lamps.
What the Philips Hue Centris ceiling spots offer
Centris is a line of hardwired smart ceiling lights available in 2-spot, 3-spot and 4-spot bar configurations, typically with an additional integrated light panel in the bar that provides diffuse ambient light while the spots can be individually aimed. The fixtures are sold in black or white finishes and are designed for standard ceiling junction boxes in European markets; in many cases, US buyers import the product or install it via specialty retailers rather than finding it in every big-box store. According to the official Philips Hue product information, Centris supports full white and color ambiance with up to 16 million colors and tunable white from warm to cool, all controllable via the Hue app, Bluetooth or compatible smart home systems. The manufacturer product page lists Centris as part of the White and Color Ambiance series with integrated Zigbee and Bluetooth radios.
Each Centris model combines its central light bar with individually rotatable and tiltable spots, letting users aim light at artwork, dining tables or shelves while still bathing the room in softer ambient light from the bar. Output and power figures vary by configuration, but a typical 4-spot Centris bar is specified at a combined brightness of roughly 4,000 lumens at 4,000 K, which is sufficient for many medium-size living rooms without additional fixtures when paired with light-colored walls. Installation requires a neutral wire and permanent mains connection; once wired, users can control Centris via Philips Hue Bridge for advanced automations or directly over Bluetooth for basic on/off, dimming and color changes without a hub. The line supports common voice assistants such as Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant and Apple Home via the Hue ecosystem and works with Matter when a compatible Hue Bridge is present, aligning it with Signify’s broader smart home roadmap.
In terms of control features, Centris inherits Philips Hue’s established software platform, including scenes, dynamic effects and entertainment sync with TVs and music when paired with accessories like the Hue Play HDMI Sync Box. Through the Hue app, users can assign each individual spot and the bar as separate zones, making it possible to recall favorite scenes that, for example, dim the bar to warm white while turning the inner spots to focused cool white for reading or working at the dining table in the evening. Unlike generic non-connected ceiling spots, Centris can also join geofencing routines and schedules, automatically turning on when someone arrives home and off at bedtime, which can improve convenience and perceived security. Independent testing by smart home reviewers has generally highlighted the quality of Hue’s color rendering and app reliability, while also noting that Centris, like other Hue products, is priced at a premium compared with non-connected fixtures in similar sizes. A recent review by tech outlet TechRadar described Centris as a flexible but expensive option for users heavily invested in the Hue ecosystem, pointing to the installation simplicity for an electrician and the convenience of combining accent and ambient lighting in one hardware unit. The TechRadar review underscores that the product is primarily aimed at design-conscious smart home buyers rather than bargain seekers.
Retail availability for Philips Hue Centris varies by region, with broad online distribution through Philips Hue’s own store and major e-commerce platforms in Europe and parts of Asia, while US presence is more limited and often focused on specialty lighting retailers and online marketplaces. List prices differ by configuration and market; for example, in many European Union countries, the 2-spot Centris version typically carries a suggested retail price in the neighborhood of EUR 259.99, with the 4-spot models climbing well above EUR 350, though street prices during sales can dip below these figures. Because the fixtures are hardwired, Centris is often purchased in connection with renovations or new builds, and Signify positions it as part of its broader move from bulb-only solutions into full smart luminaires. That push is evident in Signify’s investor materials, where the company highlights connected lighting and systems, including Philips Hue, as a structural growth area within its Digital Consumer and Digital Solutions segments, supported by rising adoption of smart lighting in both residential and professional environments. In its latest annual report, Signify emphasized that connected products made up more than 80 percent of its sales, underscoring the strategic role of lines like Philips Hue Centris in driving higher-margin, service-ready hardware. The company’s investor presentation frames Hue and other connected offerings as central to its long-term growth strategy.
Within Signify’s portfolio, Philips Hue serves as the flagship consumer smart lighting brand, and Centris sits alongside products like Hue light strips, Play light bars and Gradient fixtures as a more permanent, design-forward option that can anchor a room’s lighting scheme. For households already using Hue bulbs in table and floor lamps, adding a Centris ceiling light can consolidate control and increase maximum brightness without mixing ecosystems or apps. Given its premium price, Centris is unlikely to become a mass-market volume product on par with entry-level Hue bulbs, but it helps Signify defend the high end of the smart home lighting category against challengers and supports cross-selling of accessories like dimmer switches, motion sensors and bridges. Shares of Signify N.V. (NL0011821392) most recently closed on Euronext Amsterdam at EUR 21.76 on 06/13/2026, reflecting investor attention on the company’s ability to grow its connected lighting business amid a competitive and cyclical global construction market.
Philips Hue Centris in brief: core facts
- Product: Philips Hue Centris (smart ceiling spot range)
- Manufacturer: Signify N.V.
- Category: New Release / Smart ceiling light
- Launch date: Initially introduced around 2020 in European markets
- MSRP / Price: Approx. EUR 259.99 for 2-spot versions in EU; higher for 3- and 4-spot models
- Availability: Primarily Europe and select other regions via Philips Hue online store, specialty lighting retailers and major e-commerce platforms
- Target audience: Design-conscious smart home users seeking combined ambient and accent lighting with app and voice control
- Key differentiator / USP: Combines color-capable ambient bar light and individually adjustable smart spots in a single hardwired ceiling fixture integrated into the Philips Hue ecosystem
More on Signify and Philips Hue
Background information on Signify and its Philips Hue brand, including financial figures and portfolio updates, is available via the company’s investor materials and further ad-hoc-news coverage.
More Signify coverage Investor RelationsThis article was a.i.-assisted and editorially reviewed. Product information without warranty; prices and availability may change at short notice. Not investment advice and not a buy or sell recommendation. Trading involves risk up to and including the total loss of invested capital.
