Home Assistant and other home lab management apps for Android

Most home lab dashboards run in the browser. Heimdall, Homepage, Dashy, and Glances all expect a tab. The Android side of a home lab is different work: an SSH session to fix a stuck container, a Tailscale tunnel to reach a Pi without port forwarding, a one-button Wake On LAN to bring up the server, a quick ping check when something looks slow. The seven apps below are the ones we actually pin to the home screen for that running-the-rack-from-the-couch workflow.

What to look for in a home lab app on Android

The apps fall into five jobs you keep coming back to:

Polish points to test:

Quick comparison

AppBest forConnectionFree planAptoide
Home AssistantSmart home dashboards and triggersLocal or Nabu CasaYesYes
JuiceSSHSSH from a phone, friendly UISSHYesYes
TermiusCross-device SSH with syncSSH, SFTP, MoshYes (Pro upgrade)Yes
TailscaleZero-config mesh VPN to all serversWireGuard meshYes (Free tier)Yes
PingToolsNetwork probing toolkitLAN and WANYes (Pro upgrade)Yes
Wake On LANOne-tap wake of headless serversLANYes (paid)Yes
Synology DS finderSynology NAS admin shortcutsSynology DSMYesYes

The 7 best home lab management apps for Android

1. Home Assistant — best smart home dashboard

Home Assistant is the open-source home automation hub. The Android app exposes the same Lovelace dashboards you build in the browser, with location triggers, sensor reporting from the phone, push notifications from automations, and Wear OS support. It is the only true “home” dashboard pick on this list because the others stay in the rack rather than reach into the living room.

Where it falls short: Requires a running Home Assistant server. External access needs either Nabu Casa, a port forward, or a Tailscale-style tunnel.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, web, Wear OS

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Home Assistant is the dashboard pick. The other six handle the gear that runs the dashboards.

2. JuiceSSH — best free SSH client

JuiceSSH has been the Android SSH client for years and still earns the top spot. Tabbed sessions, port forwarding, identity import, key-pair generation, and a snippet system for common commands. The free tier covers what most home labbers need, and the paid Pro adds team features and Mosh.

Where it falls short: UI shows its age. Some advanced features (cloud sync, agents) sit behind Pro.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: JuiceSSH is the no-frills default. Start here and only switch if you outgrow it.

3. Termius — best for cross-device SSH

Termius is the cross-device option. The free tier handles a single device with no host limit, but the paid Pro plan syncs hosts, identities, and snippets between Android, iOS, macOS, Windows, and Linux. Mosh support keeps sessions alive across network drops, and the SFTP browser is the most useful on the platform.

Where it falls short: The most useful features sit behind a subscription. The personal Pro plan is monthly.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, Linux, web

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Termius is the pick when you run SSH from a phone and a laptop and want one source of truth.

4. Tailscale — best for zero-config remote access

Tailscale is the WireGuard-based mesh VPN that has effectively replaced port forwarding for home lab use. Install the Android app, sign in, and your phone joins the tailnet. Every machine reaches every machine by name. Subnet routers and exit nodes mean a single Pi can expose the whole LAN to your phone.

Where it falls short: Free tier is generous but caps on user count and feature gates apply at scale. Sign-in needs an OIDC provider like Google, Microsoft, or GitHub.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, Linux, FreeBSD

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Install Tailscale before you install anything else. The rest of the list works better with the tailnet underneath it.

5. PingTools — best network toolbox

PingTools packs ping, traceroute, port scan, port lookup, IP calculator, DNS lookup, WHOIS, Wake On LAN, and an LAN scanner into one app. The free tier covers everything you need at home, and the Pro upgrade unlocks UDP scan, IP camera discovery, and ad removal.

Where it falls short: No clean export to a desktop tool. Some Pro features overlap with other apps.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: PingTools is the everything-network app. Keep it on the home screen.

6. Wake On LAN — best WoL utility

Wake On LAN from Ralischer is the cleanest WoL app on the platform. Manage multiple hosts, send packets over the LAN or via a configured server, and trigger a wake from a home-screen shortcut. The interface is plain and that is the appeal.

Where it falls short: WoL only. No remote management beyond the wake.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android

Download: AptoideGoogle Play

Bottom line: One-tap wake for any server. Pair with Tailscale for off-LAN triggers.

7. Synology DS finder — best for Synology owners

Synology DS finder is the lightweight admin companion for a Synology NAS. Discovery on the LAN, basic health checks, reboot and shutdown, and a fast jump into DSM Web. Most home labs include a Synology, and DS finder is the one Synology app that earns a permanent spot on the home screen.

Where it falls short: Synology only. No QNAP, no TrueNAS, no Unraid support.

Pricing:

Platforms: Android, iOS

Download: AptoideGoogle PlayApp Store

Bottom line: Synology owners only, but a one-tap shortcut to NAS admin is worth the install.

How to pick the right one

The home lab pattern that actually scales:

That stack covers a single-rack home lab without any web tab open. The web dashboards (Heimdall, Homepage, Dashy, Glances) live in the browser; the apps here run the gear underneath them.

FAQ

What is the best SSH client for Android?

JuiceSSH for free use. Termius for cross-device sync. Both handle keys, Mosh, port forwarding, and SFTP.

How do I access my home server from my phone remotely?

Install Tailscale on the home server and the phone, sign in with the same account, and the phone reaches the server by hostname. Alternatives are a port forward with dynamic DNS or a Cloudflare Tunnel.

Is there an Android app for Home Assistant?

Yes. The Home Assistant Companion app is free, supports push notifications, presence sensors, dashboards, and Wear OS.

Can I wake my server from Android?

Yes. Install Wake On LAN or PingTools, configure the server’s MAC address and broadcast IP, and trigger a wake from a shortcut. Combine with Tailscale to wake from outside the LAN.

Is Tailscale free for home use?

The personal plan is free and covers up to one hundred devices, which is more than enough for a typical home lab.