Exotic pets — reptiles, sugar gliders, hedgehogs, ferrets, tarantulas — need more precise care than cats or dogs. These five Amazon US gadgets make day-to-day husbandry safer and easier, whatever species you keep.
1. Govee WiFi Hygrometer Thermometer H5100
Typical price range: $15 – $30
A tiny Wi-Fi sensor that tracks temperature and humidity 24/7 with app alerts. Essential for hedgehogs, tarantulas, sugar gliders and any species with tight environmental windows.
- Smartphone alerts
- 2-year data history
- Multiple units on one app
- Needs 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi
- Batteries not included
2. Exo Terra Monsoon Solo Misting System
Typical price range: $70 – $100
Programmable misting system for humidity-loving animals like crested geckos, dart frogs, and tarantulas. Keeps enclosures at the right humidity without daily hand-misting.
- Set and forget
- Adjustable nozzle
- 2L reservoir
- Tubing can clog if water is hard
- Setup takes 20 minutes
3. Zoo Med ReptiTemp Digital Infrared Thermometer
Typical price range: $20 – $30
A point-and-shoot IR thermometer — the fastest way to check basking spot, cool side, and surface temperatures without disturbing your animal.
- Instant readings
- Safer than stick-on thermometers
- Works on any surface
- Only measures surface temp
- Requires AAA battery
4. Kasa Smart Plug Power Strip by TP-Link
Typical price range: $30 – $45
A 6-outlet smart strip lets you schedule heat lamps, UVB bulbs, and misters independently from your phone. Huge upgrade over mechanical timers.
- Individual outlet control
- Alexa/Google Home
- Energy monitoring
- Wi-Fi dependent
- Not waterproof
5. Wyze Cam v3 Indoor/Outdoor Camera
Typical price range: $35 – $45
A cheap, rugged camera for 24/7 enclosure monitoring. Color night vision is perfect for watching nocturnal exotics like sugar gliders and hedgehogs.
- Color night vision
- Motion alerts
- Free local recording
- Requires Wi-Fi
- Cloud features paywalled
Final verdict
If you buy just one gadget, make it the Govee WiFi Hygrometer. Most exotic-pet health problems trace back to wrong temperature or humidity — and you can’t fix what you can’t measure.
