SUBTEL compliance for Zigbee smart home devices under Resolution 737 in Chile
10 devices in catalog
There are 10 Zigbee devices with Resolution 737 SUBTEL compliance information in our public catalog. Devices span 9 distinct technical categories; the most represented are Wireless Laser Optical System (Alineador láser de ejes) (2 devices, 20%), Sensor Zigbee de fuga de agua (1 devices, 10%), Sensor Zigbee de movimiento PIR (1 devices, 10%). The 3 brands with the strongest presence are Betterlife (6 devices), Fluke (3 devices), Amazon (1 devices). All 10 products are direct verifications in our compliance database.
Literal j.1 of Resolution 1985
Zigbee devices operate on the 2.4 GHz ISM band using the IEEE 802.15.4 standard and fall under literal j.1 of Resolution 1985 — the same literal as WiFi and Bluetooth. The O-QPSK modulation with DSSS (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum) of 802.15.4 explicitly meets the spread-spectrum requirement of literal j.1. For SUBTEL, what matters is the radio, not the application protocol.
Zigbee 3.0 (2016) unified all previous profiles (Home Automation, Light Link, etc.) into a single stack on top of IEEE 802.15.4. It operates exclusively on 2.4 GHz with mesh topology: mains-powered devices (routers) relay messages, and battery-powered devices (sensors, door contacts) can sleep for hours to save energy. The most relevant brands in Chile include Philips Hue (bulbs and sensors), IKEA DIRIGERA/TRÅDFRI (full ecosystem), Aqara (sensors and hubs), Sonoff (switches and sensors), and Tuya white-label devices sold under dozens of brands on MercadoLibre. All these devices require a SUBTEL QR code under Track 2 of Resolution 737.
Zigbee shares the IEEE 802.15.4 physical layer with Thread, but they are distinct and NOT interoperable network protocols. A Zigbee sensor cannot join a Thread mesh and vice versa, even if they use the same radio chip. Matter, on the other hand, is an application-layer protocol that can work over Thread or WiFi — not directly over Zigbee. Existing Zigbee devices can integrate into Matter ecosystems through bridges (like the Philips Hue Bridge). For more on these related protocols, see our dedicated Thread and Matter pages.
| Band | Range | Maximum power | Typical use |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2.4 GHz ISM (IEEE 802.15.4) | 2.4 – 2.484 GHz | 1 W (30 dBm) | Smart home hubs (Philips Hue Bridge, IKEA DIRIGERA, SmartThings), motion/door/temperature sensors, smart bulbs, smart plugs, digital locks, thermostats, Zigbee/Thread/Matter switches |
Source: SUBTEL Resolution 1985 EXENTA — official text on BCN. View Resolution 1985 on BCN
Track 2 — Compliance QR + self-declaration
Since February 22, 2026, Zigbee devices no longer require prior formal certification before SUBTEL. They do require a public compliance page accessible via a QR code on the packaging, declaring bands, power, RF modules, importer with legal address in Chile, and a reference to the test report.
Devices with Zigbee: Betterlife Sensor Zigbee de fuga de agua SmartHome, Betterlife Sensor Zigbee de movimiento PIR SmartHome, Betterlife Gateway Zigbee SmartHome, Betterlife Sensor Zigbee de Temperatura y Humedad SmartHome, Betterlife Sensor Zigbee de humo SmartHome, Amazon Echo Show 8 (3ra Gen), Betterlife Sensor Zigbee Puertas y Ventanas SmartHome, Fluke 500 Series Battery Analyzer (BT521), Fluke ROTALIGN ELITE LOCKED REST OF WORLD STARTER KIT, Fluke ROTALIGN CORE LOCKED REST OF WORLD STARTER KIT.
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