Test greater than or equal: ge

The ge test checks whether a value is greater than or equal to another value. It is also available under the alias >=. When used with is, it reads naturally: value is ge(other).

While you can always use >= directly in conditions, the ge test is essential when working with selectattr, select, and similar filters that require a test name as a string. This lets you filter collections by comparing attribute values to a minimum threshold without writing explicit loops.

Usage

Here’s how to use this template function. Copy any example and adjust it to your setup.

As a test
{% if 5 is ge(5) %}
  Greater or equal
{% endif %}
Result (stringA piece of text, like a name, message, or entity ID. In templates, wrap strings in quotes, like "living_room" or "lights are on".)
Greater or equal

Function signature

The signature is a technical summary of this template function. It shows the name of the function, the values (called parameters) it accepts, and what type of data each parameter expects (for example, a piece of text or a number).

Function parameters that have a = with a value after them are optional. If you leave them out, the default value shown is used automatically. Function parameters without a default are required.

ge(
    value: Any,
    other: Any,
) -> bool

Function parameters

The following parameters can be provided to this function.

value any Required

The value to test. This is the left-hand side of the comparison.

other any Required

The value to compare against.

Aliases

This test can also be used as:

  • >= - value is >=(other)

Using with selectattr

Filter entities whose attributes meet or exceed a minimum value.

TemplateA template is an automation definition that can include variables for the action or data from the trigger values. This allows automations to generate dynamic actions. [Learn more]: Devices with at least 50% battery
{{
  states.sensor
  | selectattr("attributes.battery_level", "ge", 50)
  | map(attribute="name") | list
}}
Result (listAn ordered collection of values, like a list of entity IDs or a list of numbers. Written with square brackets in templates, for example [1, 2, 3].)
['Phone', 'Tablet']

Good to know

  • When comparing entity state strings with numbers, convert first or wrap the threshold in quotes. String comparison puts "9" above "10".
  • Comparisons between incompatible types (a number and a string, for instance) raise an error.

Try it yourself

Ready to test this? Open Developer tools > Template, paste the example into the Template editor, and watch the result update on the right. Edit the values to see how the function adapts to your own 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].

More examples

Real scenarios where this function comes up in automations and templates. Copy any example and adapt it to your setup.

Find values at or above a minimum

Use select to find all numbers at or above a threshold.

TemplateA template is an automation definition that can include variables for the action or data from the trigger values. This allows automations to generate dynamic actions. [Learn more]
{{ [10, 25, 30, 15, 40] | select("ge", 25) | list }}
Result (listAn ordered collection of values, like a list of entity IDs or a list of numbers. Written with square brackets in templates, for example [1, 2, 3].)
[25, 30, 40]

Still stuck?

The Home Assistant community is quick to help: join Discord for real-time chat, post on the community forum with your template and expected result, or share on our subreddit /r/homeassistant.

Tip

AI assistants like ChatGPT or Claude can also explain or fix templates when you describe what you want in plain language.

Related template functions

These functions work well alongside this one: