Set a program on a Miele oven

Use this action to set and start a program on a Miele oven, optionally with a target temperature and a duration.

The oven must be in a state where it accepts a new program. Most ovens must be turned on, and many appliances must be set to mobile start or remote control mode first. If the oven does not accept the program, an error is shown.

Using this action from the user interface

If you prefer building automations and scripts visually, Home Assistant walks you through this action step by step. You pick what to target, tweak a few options, and save. No YAML knowledge required.

To set an oven program from an automation or a script:

  1. Go to Settings > Automations & scenes.
  2. Open an existing automation or script, or select Create automation > Create new automation.
  3. If you’re setting up a new automation, add a trigger in the When section. Scripts don’t need a trigger. They run when something else calls them.
  4. In the Then do section, select Add action.
  5. Search for the action Miele: Set program on oven and select it.
  6. Select the oven in the Device field and enter the Program ID. Optionally, set a Temperature and a Duration.
  7. Select Save.

Options in the UI

Device

The Miele oven to set the program on.

Program ID

The ID of the program to set. To find the ID, use the Get programs action, or fetch a diagnostics download while the program runs and read the value of state.programId.value_raw.

Temperature (Optional)

The target temperature for the oven program, in degrees Celsius.

Duration (Optional)

The duration for the oven program.

Using this action in YAML

If you work directly in YAML, or you want to know exactly what Home Assistant does under the hood, this section has the technical reference. It lists the field names you use in YAML, their types, and which ones are required.

In YAML, refer to this action as miele.set_program_oven. A basic example looks like this:

ActionActions are used in several places in Home Assistant. As part of a script or automation, actions define what is going to happen once a trigger is activated. In scripts, an action is called *sequence*. [Learn more]
action: miele.set_program_oven
data:
  device_id: abcde1234567890abcde1234567890ab
  program_id: 1
  temperature: 180
  duration: "01:15:00"

Options in YAML

device_id string Required

The ID of the Miele oven to set the program on.

program_id integer Required

The ID of the program to set. To find the ID, use the miele.get_programs action, or fetch a diagnostics download while the program runs and read the value of state.programId.value_raw.

temperature integer

The target temperature for the oven program, in degrees Celsius. Between 30 and 300.

duration string

The duration for the oven program, in HH:MM:SS format. Between 1 minute and 12 hours.

This action does not support targets. Select the oven through the Device field.

Try it yourself

Ready to test this? Open Developer tools > Actions, search for this action, fill in the fields, and select Perform action. You see what happens on your actual entitiesAn entity represents a sensor, actor, or function in Home Assistant. Entities are used to monitor physical properties or to control other entities. An entity is usually part of a device or a service. [Learn more] without writing a line of YAML.

More examples

Real scenarios where this action shows up in automations and scripts. Copy any example and adapt it to your setup.

Tip

You don’t need to edit YAML to use these examples. Copy a YAML snippet from this page, open the automation editor in Home Assistant, and press Ctrl+V (or Cmd+V on Mac). Home Assistant automatically converts the pasted YAML into the visual editor format, whether it’s a full automation, a single trigger, a condition, or an action.

Still stuck?

The Home Assistant community is quick to help: join Discord for real-time chat, post on the community forum with the action you’re calling and what you expected to happen, or share on our subreddit /r/homeassistant.

Tip

AI assistants like ChatGPT or Claude can also explain actions or suggest the right one when you describe what you want in plain language.

Related actions

These actions work well alongside this one: