How does it work?

To get this working, you first need to enable HDMI CEC on your TV followed by your PS4. As you might have guessed, this feature only works if your TV supports CEC or Consumer Electronics Control. For the unknown, HDMI – CEC is a feature where you can control connected devices (via HDMI cable) with just one remote. As there is no standard defined in the industry, manufacturers can name it differently but the functioning is similar. These are some of the companies trade names for CEC:

LG (SimpLink), Samsung (Anynet+) Sony (Bravia Sync) Philips (EasyLink) AOC (E-link) Panasonic (EZ-Sync) Toshiba (CE-Link)

In general, most TVs whether smart or regular, support HDMI – CEC. To find if your TV supports HDMI CEC simply do a Google search or look up the manual that came with the TV. Also Read:  How to put a password on a PS4 Account

Turn Your TV on Using Your PS4 Controller

Step 1: Turn on HDMI-CEC on TV

To get this feature working, first, enable HDMI CEC on your smart TV. You can find this in the settings on your TV using its remote. The option is generally under General Settings and should look something like one below. Once the feature is enabled, we’ll move to enable the feature on PS4. Read: How to Record Gameplay on PS4

Step 2: Turn on HDMI-CEC on PS4

Once you have enable HDMI CEC on your smart TV, next you need to enable it on your PS4 as well. Power on your PS4 and log in to your account. Go to Settings using your controller.

Scroll down to the bottom and select ‘System’ from the list of options.

In System Settings, scroll down to ‘Enable HDMI Device Link‘ and check the box next to it.

Now if you activated HDMI CEC  on both the devices then you should be able to power on your TV just by powering on the PS4. Cool isn’t it.

Turn Your TV on Using Your PS4 Controller

This was a quick way to enable CEC on your TV and PS4. CEC has a few other tricks under the sleeve which work for other devices like using the TV remote to navigate through menus of connected devices like Firestick and Roku. However, PS4 doesn’t work with the TV’s remote as of yet but I haven’t tested this feature with many devices so I can’t confidently say that. CEC also powers your TV off when you shut down a connected device but that feature didn’t work on the TVs I tried on. Most modern TVs have an auto sleep mode anyway so it shouldn’t be a problem. Drop a comment below if you can’t get your TV to turn on with your PS4.