Anyone using Hexnode to power off devices? How are you doing it?Solved

Participant
Discussion
3 weeks ago Feb 13, 2026

We’re on Hexnode UEM, and management asked if we could shut down devices without user intervention. 

Before I say yes or no, how are people actually doing this in Hexnode? 

Replies (6)

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Participant
3 weeks ago Feb 13, 2026
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Hexnode does have a Power off device remote action, and it works as expected. 

You can: 

  • Power off a single device. 

  • Or do it in bulk. 

Once the device checks in, it shuts down. No user prompt, no delays beyond check-in. 

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Participant
3 weeks ago Feb 14, 2026
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We mostly use it when we want to make a device unusable as quickly as possible.

If something looks off or a device goes missing, we trigger power off action remotely. It helps reduce exposure until we decide what to do next.

Just remember:

  • Hexnode can’t power devices back on.
  • Once it’s off, someone has to physically turn it on.

So, it’s a one-way action.

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Participant
3 weeks ago Feb 14, 2026
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Oh, and just to add, you can automate this using Hexnode’s Automate feature. 

You can create automations with triggers based on time, device status, or other conditions and assign Power off device as the action. So, things like “Shut down at 10 PM” are possible. 

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Participant
3 weeks ago Feb 14, 2026
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The power off device action works well for shared or kiosk devices. 

We use it mostly to keep devices from being left running unnecessarilyIt helps with battery health and avoids devices sitting powered on idle. 

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Participant
2 weeks ago Feb 16, 2026
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Hey folks! I’m new to Hexnode and this thread is actually helpful 😅. 

didn’t even know there was a power-off action until now. Out of curiositywhat situations are you all actually using this for? Is it mainly security, or more for device management in general? 

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Participant
2 weeks ago Feb 16, 2026
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For us, it’s a mix . 
 
Security is one part, especially when a device is lost or flagged. We also use it during maintenance windowsfor example, powering devices down before physical servicing or planned downtime. 
 
It’s less about enforcement and more about keeping things predictable. 

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