--- layout: page title: "Installing Hass.io" description: "Instructions on how-to install Hass.io." date: 2017-04-30 13:28 sidebar: true comments: false sharing: true footer: true --- Hass.io images are available for all available Raspberry Pi and Intel NUC platforms. - Download the appropriate image for your Raspberry Pi / Intel NUC: - [Raspberry Pi / Zero][pi1] - [Raspberry Pi 2][pi2] - [Raspberry Pi 3][pi3] - [Intel NUC][nuc] - Unpack the .bz2 File - Flash the downloaded image to an SD card using [Etcher]. - Optional - Setup the WiFi or static IP: On the SD-card, edit the `system-connections/resin-sample` file and follow the [ResinOS howto][resinos-network]. - Insert SD card to Raspberry Pi and turn it on. On first boot, it downloads the latest version of Home Assistant which takes ~20 minutes (slower/faster depending on the platform).

Please remember to ensure you're using an [appropriate power supply](https://www.raspberrypi.org/help/faqs/#powerReqs) with your Pi. Mobile chargers may not be suitable since some are designed to only provide the full power with that manufacturer's handsets.

- You will be able to reach your installation at [http://hassio.local:8123][local]. - Enable either the [Samba add-on][samba] or the [SSH add-on][ssh] to manage your configuration in `/config/` (From the UI choose **Hass.io** which is located in the sidebar).

If you copy over your existing Home Assistant configuration, make sure to enable the Hass.io panel by adding either `discovery:` or `hassio:` to your configuration.

## {% linkable_title Alternative: install on generic Linux server %} For advanced users, it is also possible to try Hass.io on your [Linux server or inside a virtual machine][linux]. To do so, run the following command as root: ```bash curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/home-assistant/hassio-build/master/install/hassio_install | bash -s ```

When you use this installation method, some add-ons will not be available, and the documentation might not work for your installation.

A detailed guide about running Hass.io as a virtual machine is available in the [blog](/blog/2017/11/29/hassio-virtual-machine/). [Etcher]: https://etcher.io/ [resinos-network]: https://docs.resin.io/deployment/network/2.0.0/ [pi1]: https://github.com/home-assistant/hassio-build/releases/download/1.1/resinos-hassio-1.1-raspberrypi.img.bz2 [pi2]: https://github.com/home-assistant/hassio-build/releases/download/1.1/resinos-hassio-1.1-raspberrypi2.img.bz2 [pi3]: https://github.com/home-assistant/hassio-build/releases/download/1.1/resinos-hassio-1.1-raspberrypi3.img.bz2 [nuc]: https://github.com/home-assistant/hassio-build/releases/download/1.1/resinos-hassio-1.1-intel-nuc.img.bz2 [linux]: https://github.com/home-assistant/hassio-build/tree/master/install#install-hassio [local]: http://hassio.local:8123 [samba]: /addons/samba/ [ssh]: /addons/ssh/