
Rental-friendly home gadgets tend to fall into two categories.
The first group promises easy installation but still somehow leaves you staring at a wall full of anchors, cables, and instruction manuals.
The second group is genuinely simple—and those are surprisingly rare.
Poplight belongs firmly in the second category.

The company first gained attention with a stick-on wall sconce designed specifically for renters who want the look of built-in lighting without drilling holes or calling an electrician. After a successful Kickstarter campaign, a Shark Tank appearance, and thousands of units shipped, Poplight is now returning to crowdfunding with what appears to be its next-generation lighting system.
While the company is keeping many details under wraps ahead of launch, the campaign already looks like more than a simple product refresh. Based on information shared through the prelaunch page, this new version has been shaped by feedback from hundreds of existing customers, suggesting Poplight is focusing on refining an already proven concept rather than reinventing it.
Why Poplight Stands Out in the Smart Lighting Market
The smart lighting category isn’t exactly short on options.
Brands like Philips Hue, Govee, and Nanoleaf have spent years turning lighting into a connected home experience.
What they haven’t solved particularly well is the renter problem.
Most wall-mounted lighting products still assume users can drill into drywall, run power cables through walls, or make permanent modifications to a space.
Poplight approaches the challenge differently.
Its system combines an adhesive mounting plate with a rechargeable light module, allowing users to install a wall sconce in minutes without tools, wiring, or wall damage. That combination remains one of the product’s strongest selling points because it addresses a genuine limitation faced by apartment dwellers and frequent movers.

A Design That Prioritizes Flexibility
One of the most interesting aspects of Poplight’s design is its modular architecture.
The mounting base and light unit function independently. Users install the adhesive base once, while the light itself can be removed for charging or potentially upgraded in the future. This separation sounds simple, but it creates flexibility that traditional wall sconces don’t offer.
It’s also what makes the upcoming Kickstarter campaign particularly interesting.
Because Poplight already has an established hardware ecosystem, the company has room to expand beyond a single product. New lighting styles, finishes, brightness options, or form factors could theoretically work with the same mounting approach, creating a broader platform rather than a one-off gadget.
What We Know About the New Kickstarter Campaign
At the time of writing, Poplight hasn’t revealed every upgrade coming to the new version.
However, the company has confirmed that feedback from approximately 500 customers influenced the redesign. The prelaunch messaging continues to emphasize tool-free installation, damage-free removal, space-saving design, and flexible placement—the same pillars that helped make the original product successful.
That approach feels smart.
Instead of chasing flashy features, Poplight appears focused on improving the experience people already liked. For a second-generation product, that’s usually a stronger strategy than adding complexity for the sake of novelty.
Is Poplight Worth Watching?
I think so.
Not because adhesive wall lights are a revolutionary concept, but because Poplight has already demonstrated something many Kickstarter campaigns never do: product-market fit.
The original campaign funded quickly, the company successfully delivered to customers, and it has continued building the brand beyond crowdfunding. That’s a far stronger foundation than the typical “great idea, unproven execution” story that dominates Kickstarter.
For renters, apartment owners, dorm residents, and anyone who wants better lighting without permanent installation, Poplight continues to occupy a surprisingly unique position in the market.
Final Thoughts
The new Poplight Kickstarter campaign feels less like a startup testing an idea and more like a company refining a product category it helped create.
While we’ll need to see the final specifications before making a definitive judgment, the early signs are promising. Poplight’s combination of renter-friendly installation, modular design, and customer-driven development gives this campaign something many crowdfunding launches lack: a proven track record.
For Gadget Flow readers who love practical smart home products, this is definitely one to keep on the watchlist.
Madhurima Nag is the Head of Content at Gadget Flow. She side-hustles as a parenting and STEM influencer and loves to voice her opinion on product marketing, innovation and gadgets (of course!) in general.

