# GE Cync Keypad Dimmer Smart Switch (CSWDMBLK5T1/MSWF)

GE Cync Keypad Dimmer is a useful Matter wall switch when two physical scene buttons are worth the extra cost and the wall box has neutral, ground, and traveler wiring. Buy it for Cync scene control plus cross-platform dimming, not because Matter guarantees those extra buttons will become portable automation triggers.

Canonical page: https://matterhome.io/devices/ge-cync-keypad-dimmer
Markdown page: https://matterhome.io/devices/ge-cync-keypad-dimmer.md
Author: Matterhome Editorial Team
Author profile: https://matterhome.io/authors/matterhome-editorial-team
Editorial lead: JC Martinez
Editor profile: https://matterhome.io/authors/jc-martinez

## Device Facts

- Brand: GE Cync
- Model: Keypad Dimmer Smart Switch (CSWDMBLK5T1/MSWF)
- Product type: Matter Wi-Fi Keypad Dimmer Switch
- Category: Switches
- Connection: Matter over Wi-Fi
- Matter status: GE Cync Keypad Dimmer family CSWDMBLK5T1/MSWF is a Matter 1.3 dimmer certified for Wi-Fi and Bluetooth commissioning; Cync sells it as a hub-free Matter switch.
- Launch date: 2025-08-21
- Thread border router required: No
- Brand hub required: No
- Typical price range: $44.99 MSRP
- Markets: North America
- Review status: Compatibility guide
- Product image: https://matterhome.io/content-assets/devices/ge-cync-keypad-dimmer/product.webp
- Product image alt text: GE Cync Keypad Dimmer Smart Switch on a white wall plate
- Product image source: https://shop.gelighting.com/cdn/shop/files/keypad_dimmer_3D_1.png?v=1781023846

## Ecosystem Support

- Apple Home: Supported
- Google Home: Supported
- Alexa: Supported
- SmartThings: Supported
- Home Assistant: Limited

## Best For

- Living rooms and bedrooms where a wall control should recall two Cync scenes
- North American 3-way or 4-way lighting circuits that already have suitable traveler wiring
- Buyers who want Matter dimming over Wi-Fi without adding a brand hub

## Skip If

- The wall box has no neutral or ground wire
- You need the scene buttons to trigger arbitrary automations in every Matter ecosystem
- The circuit is outside the switch's 120 V and load ratings
- You are trying to add a powered Thread router to the room

## Setup Notes

- Confirm line, load, neutral, ground, and traveler wiring before removing the existing switch; use an electrician if the circuit cannot be identified safely.
- Allow enough wall-box depth for the switch body and five conductors; the official specification lists a 10.5 cubic-inch switch housing.
- Join a 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi network, keep the Cync app for scene-button setup and maintenance, then add the switch to the chosen Matter ecosystem.

## Known Limitations

- The two programmable scene buttons activate scenes configured in the Cync app; official sources do not say they appear as independent buttons in other Matter apps.
- The exact model is CSWDMBLK5T1/MSWF; GE Lighting's general product page currently mixes some Paddle Dimmer wording into the Keypad Dimmer listing, so check the model before ordering.
- Cync lists Apple Home, Google Home, Alexa, and SmartThings, but not Home Assistant, for this exact switch.
- The switch is rated for dry indoor locations and requires both a neutral and a ground conductor.

## Pros

- Direct Matter control over 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi without a Cync hub
- Two scene buttons plus separate on, off, dim-up, and dim-down controls
- Supports single-pole, 3-way, and 4-way circuits with the included traveler wire
- Controls dimmable LED loads up to 150 W or incandescent and halogen loads up to 450 W

## Cons

- Requires neutral and ground wires
- Fits North American 120 V wiring rather than European or United Kingdom wall boxes
- Scene buttons are configured in the Cync app and are not promised as generic Matter button events
- Uses Wi-Fi and does not strengthen a Thread mesh

## Sources

- https://www.gelighting.com/pressroom/new-matter-compatible-smart-switches
- https://shop.gelighting.com/products/ge-cync-keypad-dimmer-switch-neutral-traveler-wire-1-pack
- https://www.gelighting.com/sites/default/files/products/kxtaljyogvcwb6qp2qio.pdf
- https://csa-iot.org/csa_product/cync-keypad-dimmer-2/
- https://www.home-assistant.io/integrations/matter
- https://shop.gelighting.com/cdn/shop/files/keypad_dimmer_3D_1.png?v=1781023846

The extra buttons are the reason to consider this switch. GE Cync's Keypad Dimmer puts two programmable scene controls above dedicated on, off, dim-up, and dim-down buttons, so one wall position can handle the connected light and recall a pair of Cync scenes. Matter adds the cross-platform control path, while 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi keeps a Thread border router out of the shopping list.

That combination is useful in a living room where one button can set reading lights and another can settle the room for television. It is less compelling when a normal dimmer already covers the job. Matterhome has not tested the switch, and the most important limitation is visible in Cync's own specification: the scene buttons call scenes configured in the Cync app.

## The keypad does more inside Cync

GE Lighting says the switch works with Apple Home, Google Home, Alexa, and SmartThings through Matter without a Cync hub. The certified product family uses Wi-Fi for its network connection and Bluetooth for commissioning. Basic control does not require Thread hardware.

The two scene buttons need a narrower expectation. Cync documents them as controls for customized Cync scenes, not as generic Matter buttons that every ecosystem can assign freely. Use Matter for shared light control and the Cync app for the keypad's special job. If the purchase depends on a scene button starting an Apple Home, SmartThings, or Home Assistant automation, wait until that exact behavior is confirmed.

## Check the wall box, not only the faceplate

This is a North American 120 V switch for dry indoor locations. It needs hot, load, neutral, ground, and traveler conductors, and it supports single-pole, 3-way, and 4-way installations. Cync rates the load at 150 W for LED lighting or 450 W for incandescent and halogen lighting.

The neutral requirement rules out many older switch boxes. Multi-way wiring can also differ from the neat diagram in an installation guide. Confirm the circuit and box space before ordering, and use an electrician when the conductors or load cannot be identified safely. A Matter logo does not make line-voltage installation more forgiving.

The included traveler wire is a practical advantage. GE Lighting says one Cync switch can make a 3-way or 4-way circuit smart while conventional companion switches remain in place. That can cost less than replacing every wall control with a connected device, and the wired traveler path does not depend on Wi-Fi for the other switch positions.

Wi-Fi still matters for the Cync and Matter control paths. Place the switch where 2.4 GHz coverage is stable, then test physical dimming, app control, power recovery, and both scene buttons before closing out the installation. Keep the Cync app for scene assignments and maintenance even if Apple Home, Google Home, Alexa, SmartThings, or Home Assistant becomes the daily control surface.

## Buy it for two scenes you can name

Buy the Keypad Dimmer when two wall-accessible Cync scenes will replace repeated app taps and the required wiring is already present. The $44.99 price is easier to justify in a room with several Cync lights or a multi-way circuit than on a single lamp that only needs dimming.

Skip it if the extra buttons must be brand-neutral Matter triggers, if the box lacks neutral or ground, or if the goal is to extend a Thread network. Tapo S505D and Kasa KS225 are simpler Matter-over-Wi-Fi dimmers. Aqara Dimmer Switch H2 US is the closer comparison when Matter over Thread is a requirement.
