Elite Collective
Design & Value

Smart Home Automation for LA Luxury: Crestron, Control4, Savant, Lutron

Walk into a well-executed luxury home in the Pacific Palisades or Bel Air and the automation is invisible. One touch dims the lights, closes the motorized shades, cues the media system, and settles the HVAC to the evening setpoint. Walk into a poorly executed one and you find three remote controls on the coffee table, an app that requires a firmware update, a thermostat that lives on a separate network, and a housekeeper who has been told not to touch anything. The difference is not budget. The difference is architecture, integrator selection, and whether the system was specified at the design phase or bolted on after drywall.

Buyers in the $3 million to $20 million-plus tier have come to expect integrated control of lighting, shading, climate, audio, video, security, and pool and spa systems. The question is no longer whether a home will be automated. The question is which platform, how deeply, and who owns the intellectual property when the home changes hands. This guide walks through what a 2026 specification actually looks like, how the four major platforms differ in practice, and what sellers and buyers should verify before a system becomes either an asset or a liability.

The Four Platforms in Plain English

Four integration platforms account for the overwhelming majority of serious luxury installations in Los Angeles County. Each has a different philosophy, a different dealer network, and a different long-term service model.

In practice, a typical $5 million to $15 million LA home runs Control4 or Savant at the integration layer, Lutron at the lighting and shading layer, and a separate audio distribution platform such as Sonos or a custom Crestron matrix for music. An estate above $15 million may run Crestron end-to-end.

What a 2026 Specification Actually Includes

A serious automation package in a new or fully renovated luxury home in 2026 typically includes:

Budget Tiers and What They Actually Buy

For an LA County home in the $3 million to $15 million band, a realistic automation budget in 2026 falls in three tiers:

The Resale Conversation

Automation is rarely a line-item driver of resale price the way a view or a pool is, but it is consistently a dealbreaker when absent or broken. Buyers at this tier expect it. What matters at resale is not only that the system exists but that it is documented, current, and transferable.

Before a listing goes live, a seller with a serious automation package should commission the original integrator to produce a system documentation packet: current firmware status, a list of installed modules, the user credentials that will transfer, the service history, and a quoted cost for any pending updates. This packet is circulated to qualified buyer agents during the tour and it closes the gap between “there is a Crestron system” and “there is a supported, documented, currently patched Crestron system with the programming files on file and a named integrator who will accept a transfer of service.” Those are very different assets.

What Buyers Should Verify

During the inspection period, a buyer purchasing a heavily automated home should require:

A system that cannot survive this checklist is not a feature. It is a future remediation project that belongs in the negotiation, not in the marketing photos.

The Takeaway

Automation at the luxury tier in Los Angeles is now infrastructure, not amenity. The platforms are mature, the integrators are specialized, and the gap between a home that delivers on its promise and one that does not is almost always documentation, network engineering, and integrator continuity. Whether you are specifying a new build, renovating for resale, or purchasing an existing estate, the same three questions separate an asset from a liability. Who programmed it, who will support it, and where is the documentation. Every other conversation is downstream of those three answers.

Evaluating a Smart-Home Property in Los Angeles?

Elite Collective provides a structured integrator and network review as part of buyer-side due diligence on technology-heavy estates.

Schedule a Private Consultation