Best rain sensor for Hunter and Rain Bird sprinkler systems
A rain sensor pauses a controller's scheduled runs once enough rain has fallen to satisfy the lawn. The result is lower water bills, less runoff onto sidewalks, and fewer wasted cycles on a wet zone. Most modern residential installs are required by local code to have one: Florida, New Jersey, and Minnesota mandate them statewide on new automatic systems; Texas requires them on new installs and most replacements (per TCEQ Rule 30 TAC §344.62); California and several Atlanta-metro counties impose similar rules. Even outside those jurisdictions, the EPA WaterSense program recommends rain sensors on every automatic irrigation system as a baseline efficiency measure.
Four canonical residential sensors anchor this comparison: Hunter Mini-Clik, Hunter Wireless Solar Sync, Rain Bird RSD-Bex, and Rain Bird WR2, plus freeze-sensor variants and a few cross-brand picks. Wired vs wireless tradeoffs, controller compatibility, and a clean install procedure follow.
Wired vs wireless: which path fits your install
Both kinds work; the choice is about how much cable you want to pull and how much battery upkeep you're willing to do.
Wired
Cheaper (typical $40–$65 for the sensor itself), and there's nothing to maintain once installed. The sensor sits in open sky at the install site, and a two-conductor cable runs back to the controller's sensor terminals. The downside is the wire run. If the open-sky mount is on the far side of the house from the controller, that can mean 60+ feet of UF-rated direct-burial cable through soffit, attic, or under a deck. Wired sensors are normally-closed dry-contact switches, which means almost every controller on the market accepts them; cross-brand wiring is the rule, not the exception.
Wireless
No long cable run, which makes wireless the right call when the only viable open-sky location is on a detached structure (garage, shed, gable on the opposite side from the controller). The transmitter sits at the sensor, sends a low-power radio signal to a receiver wired to the controller's sensor terminals, and runs on a lithium battery the manufacturer rates for 5+ years. The tradeoffs are upfront cost (typical $120–$220), a pairing step at install, and the periodic battery swap. Hunter's Wireless Solar Sync transmits ET data along with rain status, so its receiver also feeds a smarter weekly seasonal adjust to the controller; the Rain Bird WR2 transmits rain and freeze status only.
Hunter Mini-Clik / Solar Sync vs Rain Bird RSD-Bex / WR2
The four sensors most commonly named on residential install drawings. Specs cited from Hunter's MINI-CLIK, WSS, and Wireless Rain/Freeze data sheets and Rain Bird's RSD and WR2 product sheets.
| Model | Brand | Wired / wireless | Adjustable rain threshold | Freeze sensor | Controller compatibility | List price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hunter Mini-Clik (HUN-58-0013) | Hunter | Wired | 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" (per Hunter data sheet) | No (pair with Freeze-Clik) | Any normally-closed sensor input (all Hunter, Rain Bird, K-Rain, Irritrol residential) | ~$43 |
| Hunter Rain-Clik QRS (HUN-58-1084) | Hunter | Wired | Factory-preset 1/8" (Quick Response disc — interrupts an in-progress run within minutes per Hunter) | No | Any normally-closed sensor input | ~$50 |
| Hunter Wireless Solar Sync WSS-SEN (HUN-58-1465) | Hunter | Wireless | N/A — uses solar radiation, temperature, and rain data to compute ET-driven daily adjustment (per Hunter Solar Sync product page) | Yes (built-in freeze sensor) | Solar Sync–capable Hunter controllers (Pro-C, Pro-HC, HCC, I-Core, ACC2 among others; see Hunter's Solar Sync compatibility chart) | ~$224 |
| Hunter Wireless Rain/Freeze (HUN-58-0050) | Hunter | Wireless | 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" (per Hunter Wireless Rain/Freeze data sheet) | Yes (built-in freeze) | Any normally-closed sensor input (the receiver wires to standard SEN terminals) | ~$123 |
| Rain Bird RSD-Bex (RBD-58-1565) | Rain Bird | Wired | 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" (per Rain Bird RSD product page) | No | Any normally-closed sensor input | ~$42 |
| Rain Bird WR2 WR2RFC (RBD-58-1994) | Rain Bird | Wireless | 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" (per Rain Bird WR2 product page) | Yes (built-in freeze, 32°F) | Any normally-closed sensor input (the receiver wires to standard SEN terminals) | ~$125 |
| Rain Bird WR2RFC-48 (RBD-58-0001) | Rain Bird | Wireless | 1/8", 1/4", 1/2", 3/4" plus selectable 48-hour rain-hold after dry-out (per Rain Bird WR2RFC-48 product page) | Yes (built-in freeze, 32°F) | Any normally-closed sensor input | ~$125 |
If you want the simplest reliable answer for a Hunter system, the Mini-Clik on a Hunter controller is the install pros' default. For a Rain Bird system on the same logic, the RSD-Bex is the equivalent default. For wireless on either brand, the WR2RFC gets you rain plus freeze in one transmitter; the WR2RFC-48 adds a 48-hour rain hold for climates where the lawn stays wet a day or two after a storm clears.
Will it work with my controller?
Short answer: almost certainly, regardless of brand. Long answer: there are two layers of compatibility.
Brand-native pairings (always work, drop-in)
- Hunter controllers + Hunter sensors: X-Core, Pro-C, Pro-HC, X2, HCC, and I-Core all accept any of the Hunter Mini-Clik / Rain-Clik / Freeze-Clik / Wireless Rain/Freeze line via the SEN terminals. The Wireless Solar Sync (WSS-SEN) is a separate compatibility story: it pairs with the Pro-C, Pro-HC, HCC, I-Core, and ACC2 among others. Check Hunter's Solar Sync compatibility chart for your specific model before ordering.
- Rain Bird controllers + Rain Bird sensors: ESP-Me, ESP-TM2, ESP-RZXe, and ESP-Me3 all accept the RSD-Bex (wired) and WR2 (wireless) on the SEN terminals.
Cross-brand pairings (work as a dry-contact switch)
Every sensor named above is a normally-closed dry-contact switch: rain opens the contact, dry closes it. That means any controller with a sensor input (almost all residential controllers built in the last 20 years) accepts any of these sensors regardless of brand. A Rain Bird RSD-Bex works on a Hunter X-Core; a Hunter Mini-Clik works on a Rain Bird ESP-Me. Wire the two conductors to the controller's SEN1 and SEN2 terminals, flip the sensor switch to "Active," and the bypass switch handles override during testing.
The one exception: Hunter's Wireless Solar Sync (WSS-SEN) isn't a dry-contact sensor — it's an ET data feed into Hunter's Solar Sync seasonal-adjust system, and it only works with a Solar Sync–capable Hunter controller. Don't try to pair it with a Rain Bird ESP-TM2; the protocol isn't shared.
Install in four steps
- Pick the mount location. Open sky exposure (no overhang, gutter, or tree canopy above), out of the spray pattern of any head, and on a gable or fascia where the disc faces up so rain reaches it. The discs are hygroscopic: they swell when wet to open the contact, so a sheltered mount means a sensor that never trips. South or east-facing surfaces dry out faster after a storm, which is the behavior you want.
- Mount the sensor + run the wire. The included bracket bolts to fascia, soffit, or gutter; the dish should sit clear of the mounting surface. For wired sensors, run two-conductor UF-rated 18 AWG direct-burial sensor cable back to the controller, through soffit or attic where possible to avoid an exposed run. Wireless saves this step; mount the transmitter and place its receiver near the controller within the manufacturer's rated range (Hunter and Rain Bird both rate residential transmitters to 800+ feet line-of-sight).
- Wire the controller. Most residential controllers terminate the two sensor conductors at terminals labeled SEN1 and SEN2 (or just SENSOR; check your model's wiring diagram). On Hunter X-Core / Pro-C: remove the bypass jumper between the SEN terminals before wiring the sensor. On Rain Bird ESP-Me / ESP-TM2: same. The jumper is what completes the circuit when no sensor is installed; leave it in and the sensor input does nothing.
- Test with the bypass switch. Every Hunter and Rain Bird controller has a sensor bypass switch on the face. Flip the sensor to "Active," run a manual cycle from the controller, then press and hold the test button on the sensor itself (it forces the disc-side contact open) and confirm the controller pauses. Flip the bypass to "Bypass" and confirm the controller ignores the sensor — useful when you need to run a system test in the rain.
Featured products
- Hunter Mini-Clik Wired Rain Sensor (HUN-58-0013)
- Hunter Rain-Clik Quick Response System (HUN-58-1084)
- Hunter Freeze-Clik Sensor (HUN-58-1051)
- Hunter Wireless Solar Sync WSS-SEN (HUN-58-1465)
- Hunter Wireless Rain/Freeze Sensor (HUN-58-0050)
- Rain Bird RSD-Bex Wired Rain Sensor (RBD-58-1565)
- Rain Bird WR2 Wireless Rain/Freeze (RBD-58-1994)
- Rain Bird WR2RFC-48 Wireless Rain/Freeze with 48-Hour Hold (RBD-58-0001)
Cross-brand options also in stock at Total Sprinkler:
- K-Rain Universal Wireless Rain/Freeze Sensor (KRN-3208-UWRFS)
- Weathermatic 420GLS Adjustable Wired Rain Sensor (TEL-58-1010)
- Weathermatic RFS5 Wireless Rain/Freeze Sensor (TEL-58-1346)
- Irritrol RS500 Wired Rain Sensor (IRR-58-1010)
Keep going
Browse the full Sensors category for every rain, freeze, and soil-moisture sensor in stock, the Controllers category for compatible Hunter and Rain Bird residential controllers, or the brand pages: Hunter and Rain Bird.
For the Hunter controllers each sensor above pairs with natively, including the Solar Sync–capable lineup, see our Best Hunter Sprinkler Controllers buying guide.

