Thermostat is heating

The Thermostat is heating condition passes when a thermostat entityAn 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] is actively heating. A thermostat set to heat mode does not necessarily run continuously. It cycles on and off to maintain the target temperature. Use Thermostat is heating to confirm the system is in an active heating cycle, rather than just set to heat mode and idle.

Labs

Requires the Purpose-specific triggers and conditions Labs preview feature. Enable it at Settings > System > Labs.

Using this condition from the user interface

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

To use Thermostat is heating in an automation:

  1. Go to Settings > Automations & scenes.
  2. Open an existing automation, or select Create automation > Create new automation.
  3. In the And if section, select Add condition.
  4. Select what you want to check. Under By target (see Targets), pick the area your thermostat is in (like your living room or bedroom). You can also select a device, a specific entity, or a label.
  5. From the conditions shown for that target, select Thermostat is heating.
  6. Under Condition passes if (see Behavior), pick Any or All to control how the check behaves when multiple thermostats are targeted.
  7. Under For at least, set how long the thermostat must have been actively heating before the condition passes. Leave it at zero to pass immediately.
  8. Select Save.

Options in the UI

Condition passes if

When multiple thermostats are targeted, controls how results combine. Pick Any to pass if at least one targeted thermostat is actively heating, or All to pass only when every targeted thermostat is actively heating. Default is Any.

For at least

How long the thermostat must have been continuously heating before the condition passes. Default is zero (passes immediately).

Using this condition 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, Thermostat is heating is referred to as climate.is_heating. A basic example looks like this:

ConditionConditions are an optional part of an automation that will prevent an action from firing if they are not met. [Learn more]
condition: climate.is_heating
target:
  entity_id: climate.bedroom

This passes when the bedroom thermostat is actively running the heater to warm the space.

Options in YAML

behavior string

When multiple thermostats are targeted, controls how results combine. Accepts all or any.

for string

How long the thermostat must have been continuously heating before the condition passes. Accepts a duration string in HH:MM:SS format.

Targets of the condition

This condition requires a target. The target is the object that Home Assistant will check. You can point the condition at a single entityAn 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], a device, an area, a floor, or a label, and Home Assistant will evaluate every matching climate entity behind that target.

  • Entity: one specific climate entity, such as climate.living_room.
  • Device: every climate entity that belongs to a device.
  • Area: every climate entity in a room or area.
  • Floor: every climate entity on a floor.
  • Label: every climate entity that shares a label.

You can also select different target types in one condition. For example, you can add a specific entity and an area as targets in the same condition to check both of them at once.

Behavior with multiple targets

When you target more than one entity (or select an area, floor, or label that contains several), the Condition passes if option controls how the results combine:

  • Any (default): the condition passes if at least one of the targeted entities matches. For example, if you check three smoke sensors and only one of them detects smoke, the condition still passes. This is useful for questions like “is there smoke anywhere in the house?”
  • All: the condition passes only when every targeted entity matches. For example, if you check the same three smoke sensors, the condition passes only once all three report cleared. This is useful for “is the entire house safe now?” checks, so your automation does not send an all-clear while one room still has a reading.

Good to know

  • A thermostat can be set to heat mode but not actively heating if it has already reached its target temperature and is idling. Use Thermostat is in HVAC mode if you only care about the mode setting.
  • Thermostats that are unavailable (unavailable) or have an unknown state (unknown) do not count as actively heating. With Any behavior, they are skipped. With All behavior, the condition fails if every targeted thermostat is unavailable.
  • This condition checks the current action of the thermostat, not its mode. To check if a thermostat is simply on (any active mode) or off, use Thermostat is on or Thermostat is off.

Try it yourself

Ready to test this? Go to Settings > Automations & scenes, open an automation, and add this condition. Trigger the automation with and without the condition met, and watch whether it continues or stops.

More examples

Real scenarios where this condition gates an automation. 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.

Automation: adjust ceiling fan when heating is active

When the bedroom thermostat is actively heating, slow down the ceiling fan to help push warm air down from the ceiling without creating a chill. This optimizes heat distribution only during active heating cycles.

  • Trigger: State: Bedroom thermostat started heating
  • Condition: Thermostat is heating
    • Target: Bedroom thermostat
  • Action: Set fan speed to 30%
YAML example for adjusting fan during heating
AutomationAutomations in Home Assistant allow you to automatically respond to things that happen in and around your home. [Learn more]
alias: "Adjust fan when heating"
triggers:
  - trigger: state
    entity_id: climate.bedroom
    attribute: hvac_action
    to: "heating"
conditions:
  - condition: climate.is_heating
    target:
      entity_id: climate.bedroom
actions:
  - action: fan.set_percentage
    target:
      entity_id: fan.bedroom_ceiling
    data:
      percentage: 30

Still stuck?

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

Tip

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

Related conditions

These conditions work well alongside this one: