Schlage makes three smart locks worth considering in 2026: the Encode Plus (Apple Home Key), the Encode (WiFi, no hub), and the Connect (Z-Wave for alarm systems). All three earn ANSI Grade 1 — the highest residential security rating. The difference comes down to smart home integration and price.
Here is the full comparison with current 2026 pricing, compatibility details, and clear recommendations by use case.
2026 Lineup at a Glance
| Model | Price | Apple Home Key | Z-Wave | WiFi Built-In | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Encode Plus | $300–$330 | Yes | No | Yes | Apple households, tap-to-unlock |
| Encode | $240–$270 | No | No | Yes | Alexa/Google users who want simple WiFi setup |
| Connect | $240–$260 | No | Yes | No | Alarm system integration (Abode, Ring, Vivint) |
Schlage Encode Plus — The Apple Home Key Lock
Price: $300–$330 | Connectivity: WiFi + Bluetooth + HomeKit + Home Key
The Encode Plus is the only residential smart lock with Apple Home Key. Tap your iPhone or Apple Watch to the lock and it opens — no app, no code, no fumbling. It works even when your phone battery dies (power reserve mode keeps NFC active for up to 5 hours after shutdown).
Beyond Home Key, it connects to WiFi directly — no hub or bridge required. You get remote lock/unlock, activity logs, up to 100 access codes, and auto-lock. It also works with Alexa and Google Home, so it is not Apple-only.
The hardware is tank-like. ANSI Grade 1 deadbolt, built-in alarm sensor that detects forced entry, and a fingerprint-resistant touchscreen. Battery life runs 6–12 months on 4 AA batteries.
Drawback: No Z-Wave, so it won’t integrate natively with Z-Wave alarm panels. If you run Abode or another Z-Wave hub, you’ll need the Connect model instead (or use HomeKit automations to bridge them).
Schlage Encode — WiFi Without Apple Tax
Price: $240–$270 | Connectivity: WiFi + Bluetooth
Same build quality as the Encode Plus, minus Apple Home Key and HomeKit. If you are an Android user or don’t care about tap-to-unlock, this saves $60–$70 for effectively the same lock.
WiFi built-in means remote access through the Schlage Home app. Works with Alexa and Google Home for voice commands. The touchscreen, auto-lock, 100 access codes, and ANSI Grade 1 rating are identical to the Plus.
Best for: Android households that want Schlage quality without paying for Apple features they won’t use.
Schlage Connect — Z-Wave for Alarm Systems
Price: $240–$260 | Connectivity: Z-Wave + Bluetooth
The Connect model uses Z-Wave instead of WiFi. That means it needs a Z-Wave hub to work remotely — but it integrates directly with alarm systems like Abode, Ring Alarm, and SmartThings.
For security system users, this is the right choice. Lock/unlock events show up in your alarm panel’s activity log. You can create automations like “lock all doors when alarm is armed” or “unlock front door when alarm disarms.” That level of integration is not possible with WiFi-only locks.
Max 30 access codes (vs 100 on Encode models). Otherwise same hardware quality, same Grade 1 rating, same forced entry detection.
Best for: Anyone running a Z-Wave alarm system who wants the lock tied into their security automation.
Schlage vs the Competition
| Lock | Price | Home Key | Z-Wave | Grade | Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Schlage Encode Plus | $300–$330 | Yes | No | 1 | Best Apple lock |
| Yale Assure Lock 2 | $220–$280 | Yes (with module) | Optional | 2 | Modular — swap radios |
| August WiFi Smart Lock | $230 | No | No | N/A (retrofit) | Keeps existing deadbolt |
| Kwikset Halo | $180–$220 | No | No | 2 | Budget WiFi option |
| Level Lock+ | $329 | Yes | No | N/A (invisible) | Hidden inside deadbolt |
Schlage’s Grade 1 rating is a real differentiator. Most competitors are Grade 2 or don’t have ANSI ratings at all. In physical security terms, Grade 1 means the lock withstands 800,000 cycles and 10 75-lb strikes. Grade 2 is 400,000 cycles and 5 strikes.
Which Schlage Lock Should You Buy?
- Apple household with HomeKit: Encode Plus. Home Key alone is worth the premium. Tap-to-unlock changes how you use your front door.
- Android / Google / Alexa household: Encode. Same lock, save $60+.
- Running a Z-Wave alarm system: Connect. Direct integration beats WiFi bridging.
- On a budget: Look at Kwikset Halo ($180) or wait for sales — Schlage Encode drops to $200–$220 during Prime Day and Black Friday.
Pairing With a Security System
Smart locks work best as part of a complete security setup. If you are building a system from scratch:
- Apple users: Schlage Encode Plus + HomeKit-compatible alarm system (Abode is the top choice here)
- Z-Wave users: Schlage Connect + Abode or Ring Alarm for direct Z-Wave lock control
- Budget builds: Schlage Encode + no-subscription cameras for a low-cost setup
Bottom Line
Schlage smart locks cost more than Kwikset or August — but ANSI Grade 1, lifetime mechanical warranty, and 100-year brand reputation back up the price. The Encode Plus is the best Apple Home Key lock you can buy. The Connect is the best Z-Wave lock for alarm system integration. And the standard Encode is the sweet spot for everyone else.
2026 update: picking a smart lock for security-first homes
- Prioritize lock reliability, battery behavior, and alert consistency before app extras.
- If your system includes an alarm hub, test lock-to-alarm automation paths before committing.
- Compare total ownership cost, including replacement batteries and optional cloud features.
Related reads: Best HomeKit Security Systems and Yale vs Schlage lock comparison.
2026 internal link map for Schlage smart-lock buyers
- Best smart locks for home security — compare lock reliability, keypad fit, and automation support before choosing a model.
- Best smart locks for renters 2026 — no-drill and lease-safe options for renters who cannot replace exterior hardware.
- Yale vs Schlage 2026 — direct comparison for Apple Home Key, Z-Wave, and alarm-platform fit.
- HomeKit security automations — lock-triggered workflows for arming, notifications, and entry routines.
2026 HomeKit, Matter, and local-control compatibility checklist
Smart-home security buyers should separate alarm reliability from smart-home convenience. HomeKit, Matter, Thread, Zigbee, Z-Wave, Alexa, and Google support can make a system easier to live with, but emergency response still depends on sensors, backup power, sirens, and monitoring rules.
- Apple Home fit: confirm whether cameras, locks, sensors, and automations appear in Apple Home or only in the security brand’s app.
- Matter/Thread limits: check whether Matter support covers the device type you need; cameras and alarm panels may still have limited support.
- Local control: verify which routines keep working if internet service drops, the app is down, or cloud video is unavailable.
- Automation safety: avoid routines that unlock doors, disable alarms, or expose privacy without a second confirmation.
- Monitoring separation: compare smart-home alerts separately from professional monitoring, cellular backup, permits, and dispatch.
Related reads: best HomeKit security systems, smart-home security automation playbook, top Z-Wave home security devices, and home security buying guide.