Air purifiers selected by measurable performance.

Recommendations are based on usable CADR, typical noise levels, and long-term filter availability — not advertised maximums.

Pick by apartment size

30 m² Air purifier for 30 m²

Best for ~30 m² (1–2 rooms)

Balanced airflow and low noise for everyday use. Designed for a bedroom or small living area with the door mostly open.

  • Target CADR (smoke): ~425 m³/h (AHAM-level air cleaning)
  • Noise goal: low at effective speed (sleep-friendly)
  • Running cost: affordable filters, low yearly replacement
60 m² Air purifier for 60 m²

Best for ~60 m² (bigger flat)

Higher airflow for shared living spaces where faster air turnover matters more than ultra-low noise.

  • Target CADR (smoke): ~740 m³/h (AHAM-level air cleaning)
  • Noise goal: reasonable at effective speed (daytime / evening use)
  • Running cost: check HEPA and carbon filter availability and price

Why we don't recommend "whole house" air purifiers

1. AHAM air-change targets limit effective coverage

AHAM guidelines assume approximately 4.8 air changes per hour. When applied to consumer air purifiers, this level of air cleaning is realistically achievable only up to ~60–63 m². For apartments or houses above ~70 m², no single consumer unit can maintain AHAM-level air changes across the entire space.

2. Effectiveness decreases as air must travel farther

In smaller apartments, especially with a central corridor and open doors, a single air purifier can serve multiple rooms. As total area increases, airflow paths become longer and more complex, reducing how effectively clean air reaches distant rooms. Beyond a certain size, consistent air cleaning requires multiple units placed closer to where people spend time.

For larger homes, this becomes a distribution problem rather than a noise or settings issue.

Why We Don’t Recommend “Whole-House” Air Purifiers

Many air purifiers advertise coverage areas of 150 m², 250 m², or even more. In practice, those numbers are based on low air-change assumptions that do not reflect consistent air cleaning across a real apartment or house.

1) Coverage claims are based on low air-change rates

Most manufacturers calculate “maximum coverage” using ~1 air change per hour (ACH) — meaning the air is filtered once every 60 minutes.

For effective particle reduction, higher air turnover is required. A common reference level is ~4.8 air changes per hour (AHAM-style sizing). When you apply that, realistic coverage drops sharply.

  • A unit around ~740 m³/h supports about ~60 m² at a 2.5 m ceiling.
  • Beyond ~70 m², one consumer unit usually can’t maintain AHAM-level air changes.

2) Air doesn’t move uniformly across rooms

Air purification is local airflow management, not whole-home HVAC distribution. In small apartments with open doors, one unit can support adjacent rooms. As spaces get larger, walls and corridors reduce circulation and performance drops with distance.

3) What works better in larger homes

Instead of one oversized unit, multiple correctly sized units placed near high-use areas typically provide more consistent air turnover, lower average fan speeds, and better real-world performance.

Top picks (starter shortlist)

Add 3–6 products max. Keep it simple.
Best value PRODUCT PHOTO

Model A (value pick)

Best price/airflow ratio, low filter cost, stable auto mode.

  • Room: up to ~50–70 m²
  • Noise: good at low speed
  • Filters: easy to find
Quietest PRODUCT PHOTO

Model B (quiet pick)

If you hate noise: best bedroom option with good filtration.

  • Room: up to ~40–60 m²
  • Noise: excellent sleep mode
  • Carbon: decent odors
High CADR PRODUCT PHOTO

Model C (large spaces)

Strong airflow for open-plan. Watch filter costs.

  • Room: up to ~100+ m²
  • Airflow: high CADR
  • Filters: higher yearly cost

Quick comparison (example table)

This helps visitors decide fast.
Model Best for CADR (m³/h) Noise (sleep) Filter cost / year Link
Model A
Value pick
50–70 m² 250 ~26 dB €60–€90 Price →
Model B
Quiet pick
40–60 m² 220 ~20 dB €70–€110 Price →
Model C
Large spaces
100+ m² 500 ~30 dB €120–€200 Price →

Keep the table short. Too many options reduces conversions.

FAQ

How do I size an air purifier?

Air purifiers should be sized for AHAM-level air cleaning (≈4.8 air changes per hour). This site already does that calculation for you — just pick the model recommended for your apartment size.

Do I need carbon filters?

Carbon filters help with odors, smoke, and gases. For pollen and dust, HEPA filtration matters more.

What's the hidden cost?

Filters. Always check availability and yearly replacement cost before buying.

Why don’t you recommend “whole-house” air purifiers?

Because air cleaning doesn’t scale across rooms. Beyond ~60 m², AHAM-level cleaning requires multiple right-sized units, not one oversized purifier.