Ubiquiti Device Bridge Switch
The Device Bridge Switch
is one of those products that solves a problem you assumed was too niche for anyone to build a dedicated device for: bridging a small cluster of ethernet devices to a wireless network. It’s a managed desktop switch with a built-in wireless client—plug in your devices, and they talk to each other locally via ethernet while connecting wirelessly to the rest of your network. Adoption into the UniFi controller is the same single-click experience as any other UniFi device, and the switch ports are fully managed with per-port VLAN support, all configured seamlessly over the wireless link. If you need ethernet connectivity where you can’t run cable and you’re already in the UniFi ecosystem, this is the clean, purpose-built solution.
Ubiquiti Switch Flex Mini 2.5G
The Ubiquiti Switch Flex Mini 2.5G
is a five-port managed 2.5GbE desktop switch that costs fifty dollars and draws power over PoE—or USB-C if you prefer. At this price point, managed 2.5GbE switching is impulse-buy territory, and the value proposition is hard to argue with. I replaced a collection of 1GbE Flex Mini switches scattered around the house with these 2.5GbE models; the upgrade was painless and immediately noticeable for local file transfers. There’s not much more to say because there’s not much more to the product: it’s a small, quiet, PoE-powered switch that integrates perfectly with the UniFi ecosystem, does one thing, and does it well. Buy several.
Ubiquiti Switch Pro XG 10 PoE
The Switch Pro XG 10 PoE delivers 10GbE switching with PoE on all ports—exactly what you’d want for high-bandwidth aggregation, storage traffic, or between-switch uplinks. It also delivers noise and heat in quantities that make me wish I’d bought something else. The fans run hard enough to be audible from across the room, a jarring change from the near-silent operation of smaller UniFi switches, and the thermal output is significant. In practice, most devices connecting at 10GbE speeds don’t need PoE—they’re servers, NAS units, or other switches with their own power supplies—so the PoE adds thermal load and fan noise for a capability I’d happily trade away. If you need 10GbE aggregation in a location far from where you spend time, it performs well; otherwise, consider the non-PoE alternatives.
Ubiquiti UNAS Pro
The UNAS Pro
was Ubiquiti’s first attempt at a NAS appliance, and it shows. If your requirements are SMB shares, NFS exports, RAID, and snapshots, it handles those reliably—the 10GbE connectivity is a genuine strength, and once a share is configured it works like any other file server. But the software shipped before it was fully baked and arguably still isn’t: no iSCSI, no built-in rsync or scp in the UI, sparse feature additions over time, and an admin interface tied to UniFi Identity that adds friction to what should be straightforward. If you’re coming from Synology or TrueNAS expecting a rich ecosystem of packages and services, recalibrate your expectations. The UNAS Pro is best understood as a UniFi-native file server that does the basics well, and the newer UNAS Pro 8
is a better buy if you don’t already own the original.
Ubiquiti Switch Pro HD PoE
I cannot say enough good things about the Switch Pro HD PoE
. This is the switch the Pro 24 PoE
wishes it could be: every port runs at 2.5GbE minimum, every port supports PoE, and you get two 10GbE ports plus four SFP ports for high-speed uplinks. The all-port PoE alone is transformative—no more checking port numbers, consulting diagrams, or rerouting cables when you add a camera or access point. Plug in your PoE device, it works. Then there’s Etherlighting, which makes your switch ports glow with customizable color-coded activity through translucent cable connectors. It is objectively unnecessary, obviously an excuse to charge more, and I love it. This switch is expensive, and the premium cables make it more so, but it made my network feel complete.
Ubiquiti SmartPower RPS
The Ubiquiti SmartPower RPS is not a UPS, and that single fact made it a purchasing disaster for me. The product description is frustratingly vague about what it actually does, which led to an expensive misunderstanding. The RPS is a redundant power supply—it keeps your UniFi equipment running if the internal power supply module fails, not if the electricity goes out. If you lose power, everything still goes dark. For most home lab users, this solves a failure mode that’s relatively rare and usually fixable by swapping hardware. What you almost certainly want instead is Ubiquiti’s actual UPS line, the UniFi SmartPower USP
, or the Mission Critical Switch
which integrates battery backup directly into a PoE switch.
Ubiquiti G4 Dome Camera
The Ubiquiti G4 Dome
is a simple, reliable camera that integrates cleanly with UniFi Protect—plug it in, adopt it, watch your footage. The image quality is good, the dome form factor is unobtrusive, and the Protect interface handles everything consistently across all your cameras. It also gets genuine credit for full Linux compatibility, something that set it apart from the proprietary-plugin nightmare I dealt with on a previous camera system. Of my eight units, seven continue working years later without issues. The eighth failed, likely from sustained direct exposure to the Texas afternoon sun—a reminder that camera placement matters, especially in hot climates.
Ubiquiti G4 Doorbell
The Ubiquiti G4 Doorbell
is a mixed experience. It integrates seamlessly into UniFi Protect with good picture quality, handles existing doorbell wiring better than the Ring and Skybell it replaced, and—critically—requires no monthly subscription for cloud storage since recordings go to your local Protect storage. But persistent software limitations undermine the hardware. Protect treats it like a camera rather than a dedicated doorbell, so you must stay actively signed into the app to receive notifications—and the app will sign you out. Cold weather kills reliability below freezing, WiFi signal through exterior walls is a constant struggle, and the optional chimes are disappointingly quiet. My advice: treat it as a camera that happens to be mounted at your front door, not as a reliable communication device.
Ubiquiti Mini Rack
The Ubiquiti Mini Rack is a 6U open-frame rolling rack designed for UniFi equipment. The build quality is excellent—smooth-rolling wheels, sturdy frame, toolless mounting for UniFi gear—and it’s genuinely useful for staging and organizing equipment before deployment. But 6U is an awkward size that gets cramped fast once you account for a switch, gateway, and power distribution, and the open mobile design creates an aesthetic problem: cables running to a rack on wheels look perpetually temporary. My gear ultimately ended up in a wall-mounted rack that looked intentional rather than improvised. The Mini Rack remains a good workbench on wheels for assembly and configuration, just not where I wanted my network infrastructure to live long-term.
Ubiquiti Switch Pro 24 PoE
The Ubiquiti USW-Pro-24-PoE
is a managed Layer 2/3 switch with PoE on every port that slots neatly into the UniFi ecosystem. Coming from unmanaged Netgear PoE switches, the visibility it provides into network topology transformed how I diagnose problems—the controller’s topology view shows exactly which devices connect to which ports, turning what used to require physical investigation into a glance at the dashboard. I bought it because every port has PoE, eliminating the guesswork of which wall port maps to a powered switch port. I kept it because of that topology view. Twenty-four ports sounds like plenty until you start counting cameras, wall jacks, access points, and infrastructure devices, so plan your deployment carefully.