NéoDom Guide
Program your smart heating simply
Programming smart heating means matching temperature settings to real moments of presence: morning, daytime, evening, night and away periods.
Key takeaway: good programming should stay simple. It can help avoid unnecessary heating, but savings are not guaranteed: results depend on the home, heating system, habits and settings.
Useful modes
Comfort
For moments when the room is occupied. Keep it for time slots that are actually used.
Night
To avoid keeping the same setting all night, depending on the comfort you want.
Away
To reduce heating when nobody is home, without creating settings that are too extreme.
NéoDom tip: start with only three modes. A schedule that is too complex is often abandoned.
Example of a simple schedule
Morning: short comfort period. Daytime: away mode if the home is empty. Evening: comfort in the rooms you use. Night: a sleep-friendly setting. Adjust this model to your home and routine.
Short warm-up before leaving.
Comfort in the rooms you use.
A setting adapted to sleep.
Program room by room
With compatible smart radiator valves, some rooms can follow a different rhythm: bedroom, office, living room or guest room. This avoids treating the whole home the same way.
Comfort only when useful.
Adapted to work-from-home days.
Priority for evenings and weekends.
Common mistakes
The more complex the schedule, the harder it is to maintain.
The schedule should evolve when your hours change.
Extreme changes can reduce comfort.
Each room does not always have the same usage pattern.
Summary table
| Mode | Use | Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Comfort | Presence in the room. | Leaving it on all day without real need. |
| Night | Sleep and quiet periods. | Choosing an uncomfortable setting. |
| Away | Empty home. | Forgetting to activate or adapt it. |
NéoDom products to discover
Frequently asked questions
How many time slots should I create?
As few as possible: morning, evening, night and away are often enough.
Should every room be programmed?
Not necessarily. Start with the rooms you use most.
Does programming reduce consumption?
It can help avoid some unnecessary heating, without a guarantee.
Can I change it remotely?
It depends on the model, the app and the connection.
Conclusion
A good smart heating schedule should be simple, realistic and easy to adjust when habits change.



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