Look, I'm not an electrician. I'm a procurement manager who's spent the last six years tracking every dollar spent on our facility's electrical upgrades. And I've learned the hard way that the cheapest quote on a Leviton switch installation isn't always the cheapest path.
This checklist is for anyone who's staring at a wall box with a 4-way switch setup, wondering if they should DIY and save the labor cost, or call a pro. I'll walk you through the 5 steps I've used on 30+ projects—ranging from single-room smart switch retrofits to whole-floor Decora upgrades. If you follow these steps, you'll avoid the two things that blow budgets: incorrect wiring and product returns.
Here's the mistake I made in my first year: I bought a Leviton Decora smart switch for what I thought was a simple 3-way install. Turns out it was a 4-way circuit—three switches controlling one light from three locations. That 'smart' switch wouldn't work without a matching remote. Cost me a rush order fee and two weeks of delays.
Before you buy anything, identify what you have:
Your check: Take off the wall plate and count the screws on the side of the switch. If you
If you're looking at a 4-way, you'll need either a standard Leviton 4-way switch (for standard dimming) or a smart switch system that supports multi-location control—like the Leviton Decora Smart with companion switches. Buying the wrong product is the #1 source of 'hidden' costs in switch upgrades. Trust me on that.
Now that you know your circuit type, let's talk total cost. Not just the price on the Amazon listing.
I've compared costs across eight vendors in 2024 for a batch of 50 Decora smart switches. Vendor A quoted $32/unit. Vendor B quoted $28/unit. I almost went with B until I calculated the TCO:
For 50 units, Vendor A's total: $1,600. Vendor B's total: $1,400 base + $15/unit for return shipping (if even one unit fails) = $1,400 + $750 = $2,150—if a few come dead on arrival or fail. That's a 25% difference hidden in fine print.
Your check: When comparing Leviton switch prices, ask:
The lowest unit price is almost never the lowest total cost when you factor in risk.
Wiring a 4-way switch is not rocket science, but it's easy to mess up. I still kick myself for not documenting a contractor's wiring job on a 4-way install. If I'd taken photos of the original wiring before he touched it, I'd have saved $200 in troubleshooting when he labeled the wires wrong.
Here's the standard wiring path for a Leviton standard (non-smart) 4-way switch setup with a light at the end of the line:
Your check: Before you power up, verify continuity with a multimeter between the common terminals at both ends. If the light doesn't switch correctly, 9 times out of 10 it's a traveler miswire at one of the 3-way switches—not the 4-way itself.
If you're hiring out: Get the quote in writing with a line item for 'multilocation configuration.' Some electricians charge extra for 4-way because it's 'complex.' That's usually a markup, not a real cost. I had a guy quote $250 for a 4-way install vs. $150 for a single-pole. When I asked him to break it down, he admitted the actual time difference was 10 minutes. We settled at $175.
The most frustrating part of installing a Leviton Decora Smart WiFi switch: getting it to pair. You skim the manual, plug it in, open the app, and... nothing. After the third failed pairing, I was ready to throw the thing out the window. What finally helped was reading the fine print in the troubleshooting section, not the quick-start guide.
Your check:
The time cost of a failed install is real. I track every hour spent on troubleshooting in my procurement records. My rule: if I'm not paired within 20 minutes, I search for the specific error code online—not the manual. Community forums usually have the fix from someone who already broke things.
This is the step most people skip, and it's the one I regret skipping the most. After you've got everything wired and blinking, do a full walkthrough:
Then—this is the critical part—document the wiring. Take a photo of each box before the cover plate goes on. Label the wires with the tape method I use in procurement: 'A-1' for switch 1 common, 'B-2' for travelers. If anything fails in six months, that documentation is worth $150 in service call savings.
Over the past six years, I've watched vendors and contractors make the same five errors. Here they are so you don't pay for them:
To be fair, some of these issues are avoidable if you read the installation sheets online before buying. But who has time for that? That's why I built this checklist. Follow it, and you'll keep more of your budget for the fun stuff—like that climate control air filter you've been meaning to swap out, or that CR8E spark plug for your equipment. Yes, I keep track of those too. Why does my spark plug have oil on it? Probably worn piston rings or a valve cover gasket leak—but that's a different checklist.
The point is this: a successful Leviton switch install—especially a 4-way or smart switch setup—isn't about buying the cheapest product. It's about identifying hidden costs, documenting the process, and planning for the one thing that always goes wrong. I can't guarantee you won't have a problem. But I can promise you that if you follow these five steps, you'll spend less time and money fixing it.