How to set up your new Amazon Echo or Echo Dot

Amazon Echo 4th Gen
(Image credit: Android Central)

There's a truly incredible number of things you can do with Amazon's connected speakers. Ideally, many of these things will casually become a part of your daily routine over time. Here's everything you need to know about getting started with your Amazon Echo, Echo Dot, or Echo Plus.

Connecting your Echo with the Amazon Alexa app

Amazon's Alexa digital assistant forms the basis for one of the best smart speaker experiences you'll find today, and the service is designed to be something you can rely on for just about every aspect of the connected home. To get the most out of this experience, you want to start by setting it up correctly out of the box. 

While you don't need your phone to do much with your Echo once it is set up, you will need the Alexa app to get there.

Every part of the setup and maintenance process goes through the app, so your first step is to install the Alexa app from the Play Store. While it is installing, connect the power supply to the port on the bottom of the device and wait for it to start speaking to you. When you open the app for the first time, you'll be prompted to sign in to your Amazon account, and then it'll be time to connect to your Echo.

Amazon Echo connects to your Wi-Fi network, but to get there, you need to first connect directly to the speaker from your phone. This process starts with an orange ring around the top of the Echo to let you know it is ready to connect. 

Once you plug in your Echo device and see an orange ring, you can get started with setting it up. Now, let's go through the steps to get your smart speaker up and running just like we did during our review of the Amazon Echo.

1. Open the Amazon Alexa app from the app drawer or home screen.

2. Sign in to your Amazon account.

3. Once you're logged in, select the horizontal bars on the top left corner of the screen to pull up the menu.

(Image credit: Source: Android Central)

4. Tap Add Device.

5. Select Amazon Echo from the list.

6. Choose the Echo device you're setting up.

(Image credit: Source: Android Central)

7. Select the generation of the Echo device.

8. Toggle Bluetooth to allow your phone to find the Echo device.

9. Select the device from the list.

(Image credit: Source: Android Central)

10. Choose the Wi-Fi network that will be used by the Echo device.

11. Select Continue once your Echo device is connected to the Wi-Fi network to customize it.

12. If you're connecting your Echo to an external speaker, you'll be able to select the output here. Otherwise, just select Use Echo Built-in Speaker.

(Image credit: Source: Android Central)

13. Select the room where your Echo device is located (this will come in handy when setting up Routines).

14. Watch the intro video to get a brief rundown of the Echo platform.

15. That's it! Hit Next to complete setting up your Echo.

(Image credit: Source: Android Central)

Giving Echo access to your accounts

Now that your Echo is connected to your home Wi-Fi network, you need to give it some things to do. When you logged in to your Amazon account, you gave Echo access to Amazon music services, which is great if you're a Prime Music user, but there's a good chance you'd like to give Echo access to something else. Opening the side menu will give you access to music services to log in to, with more as you scroll down.

You can also use this side menu to grant Echo access to your Google Calendar and your physical address for work and home. Doing so will make it so Alexa can tell you what is on your agenda for today, as well as weather and traffic information. You get the ability to choose what news sources are used for the Flash Briefing, where Echo reads you the news for the day.

1. In the Alexa app, tap the horizontal bars to pull up the menu.

2. Go to Settings.

3. In the Alexa Preferences section, select the Music tab to add your music accounts.

(Image credit: Source: Android Central)

4. Select the music service you want associated with your Echo device.

5. Select Flash Briefing to add your news sources.

6. Scroll down to the Calendar section if you want to link your Google calendar to your Echo device.

(Image credit: Source: Android Central)

Setting each of these up to your personal preferences goes a long way towards embedding Echo in your day to day life, turning your morning reading and research into a casual conversation.

Connecting Alexa to your connected home

Amazon Alexa Care Hub

(Image credit: Source: Amazon)

If you've started down the path of the connected home, where smart gadgets give you the ability to control your lights, your thermostat, or your coffee maker, you will want to connect those things to your Amazon Echo. 

If you've got a SmartThings, you'll need to log in and connect to the hub so Echo can access everything on your network. From here, you'll be able to speak and have Echo control the things you'd normally use the control apps to access.

If you're connecting Philips Hue bulbs, the Alexa app will scan your network and give you some options for control. You can either speak to control individual bulbs or group those bulbs and control groups all at once. 

Once you've set this up, you can speak group names and have the same functionality as you would with an individual bulb, making whole room control much more enjoyable.

1. In the Alexa app, tap the horizontal bars on the top-left corner to pull up the menu.

2. Select Add Device to link your connected home products to your Echo device.

3. Choose the category from the list to find all the brands that work with the Echo platform. If you're setting up Hue bulbs, select the Hue icon

(Image credit: Source: Android Central)

Alexa works with a vast array of smart home products, so there's a high chance that whatever products you already have will work with your Echo device.

Exploring your Amazon Echo for fun

We've covered the basics for setting up your Amazon Echo, but there are a ton of other things you can do that are just plain fun. For starters, there's a whole section of the Echo side menu labeled Skills & Games for you to check out. 

Skills are basically third-party apps that can be installed on your Echo. Some of them are silly; like having Alexa roll a six-sided die and read you the result, or having a random Shakespearean insult voiced at you. Others give you access to bus schedules and simple science and math facts for kids to use.

Scrolling through Skills is well worth everyone's time, and it's updated with new features regularly. Routines are another great way to get to know your Echo. You can set up groups of activities, like light controls and Flash Briefing reads, to be triggered as a group when you ask for morning or evening routines to be activated. 

This becomes a lot more useful once you've gotten to know how you like your Echo set up and can be edited at any time. Here's how to set up Routines on your Amazon Echo.

Finally, if you are ever unsure about what your Echo can do, the Things to Try tab in the sliding menu will give you a massive list of things you can ask Alexa. Amazon regularly adds new features and seasonal updates to Alexa, so there's never a shortage of things to try out.

Harish Jonnalagadda
Senior Editor - Asia

Harish Jonnalagadda is a Senior Editor overseeing Asia at Android Central. He leads the site's coverage of Chinese phone brands, contributing to reviews, features, and buying guides. He also writes about storage servers, audio products, and the semiconductor industry. Contact him on Twitter at @chunkynerd.

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