Reasons to buy
- 13 attachments cover beard, body, ear, nose, and basic hair-clipping needs
- DualCut self-sharpening steel blades held an even edge through four months
- 60-minute lithium runtime per 1-hour charge
- All metal heads are washable, IPX7 waterproof body
Reasons to avoid
- Hair-clipper functionality is comb-only, no dedicated metal clipper head
- 2-year warranty (versus 5 on the Multigroom 5000)
- Body groomer attachment is functional but slow on dense hair
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedCutting performance: the same blades as the 5000Length precision and the comb stackBattery, build, and waterproofingVersatility and the one-tool argumentWho should buy the Philips Norelco All-in-One 3000?The verdict How it compares Full specifications FAQsQuick verdict
The Philips Norelco All-in-One 3000 13-in-1 is the smart pick if you want most of the Multigroom 5000’s coverage for less. After four months of weekly use its 13 attachments handled beard, body, ear, nose, and basic clipping, the DualCut steel blades stayed sharp, and the 60-minute battery covered roughly nine sessions per charge. You give up the dedicated metal clipper head, 20 minutes of runtime, and three years of warranty, but for most adults that is a fair trade.
Why you should trust this review
I bought the All-in-One 3000 in October to compare directly against the Multigroom 5000 I had already been testing for a month. Philips did not provide either unit. Across four months of alternating use between the two kits, I could judge them side by side rather than from spec sheets, which is the only way to know whether the cheaper sibling actually cuts as well as the pricier one.
The All-in-One 3000 is the lower-priced relative of the Multigroom 5000. It shares the same DualCut steel blade design, the same 60-minute lithium battery used in Philips beard trimmers, and the same IPX7 waterproof rating. The real question is whether the savings cost you anything that matters, and four months of weekly grooming across both kits is enough to answer it honestly.
How we evaluated
I used the 3000 in my actual weekly grooming routine, rotating through the beard, body, ear, nose, and detail heads, and alternated sessions with the Multigroom 5000 so I could feel the difference between the two on the same hair on the same week. I verified the IPX7 rating through months of bathroom and shower use rather than taking it on faith.
I measured the battery across three full discharge cycles, timed the charge, and checked the DualCut blades for dulling over the test window. I worked through the comb stack to judge how positively the attachments lock and whether they loosen, and I tested the head-clipping function specifically since that is the headline capability difference versus the 5000. The full protocol is on our methodology page.
Cutting performance: the same blades as the 5000
The DualCut steel blades on the beard, body, and detail heads use the same design as the rest of the Norelco line, and in practice the cut quality is indistinguishable from the more expensive Multigroom 5000. Over four months the beard head cut as cleanly as my long-term beard trimmer, the body head handled chest and stomach without snagging, and the ear and nose head removed hair without pulling.
That is the most important finding here: the parts that determine everyday grooming quality are identical between the 3000 and the 5000. If your routine is beard plus general detail work, you are getting the same edge for less money. The blades had not dulled after four months of weekly use, which tracks with the self-sharpening DualCut design, and switching between heads takes under five seconds.
Length precision and the comb stack
The kit ships with a stack of plastic combs that snap onto the beard, body, and detail heads, covering a 1mm to 16mm length range in roughly 2mm steps. That span handles most beard, body, and basic clipping applications, and the combs click on and off in under three seconds with a positive lock that has not loosened or chipped across four months of weekly swapping.
The meaningful compromise is head-hair clipping. The 3000 has no dedicated metal clipper head; you clip head hair using the beard head with a 16mm comb on top. It works for occasional fade maintenance and very short routines, but it is slower and less clean than a real clipper because the blade head is narrower and the motor is not tuned for bulk cutting. This is the single real capability gap between the 3000 and the 5000, and whether it matters depends entirely on whether you cut your own head hair.
Battery, build, and waterproofing
The 60-minute lithium runtime covers roughly nine 7-minute grooming sessions per charge. Across three discharge cycles I measured 56 to 58 minutes, in line with Philips’ 60-minute rating, and a full charge took about 56 minutes over the included cable. For weekly users, that works out to roughly two months between charges, which is plenty.
One dated detail: charging is micro-USB rather than USB-C, so if everything else in your bathroom is USB-C you will be keeping an extra cable around. The IPX7 rating held up through four months of use, weekly post-trim rinses, and a full shower test, and the metal heads pop off for direct rinsing. The motor body has shown no degradation. The weakest part of the kit is the fabric storage pouch, where the attachments roll around loosely, a minor irritation rather than a real flaw.
Versatility and the one-tool argument
The strongest practical case for the 3000 is that it collapses several single-purpose tools into one handle. Over four months I used the same motor body for trimming my beard, cleaning up body hair, knocking down ear and nose hair, and doing detail work around the edges, swapping heads in seconds rather than reaching for three or four separate devices. For anyone who currently owns a beard trimmer, a nose trimmer, and maybe a body groomer, consolidating all of that into one kit is a genuine declutter and a money-saver compared to buying each tool individually.
That versatility does come with the usual jack-of-all-trades caveat, which the testing made clear. The body groomer head is adequate for chest, stomach, and arms but slow on dense growth, and the head-clipping function is a stopgap rather than a real clipper. None of the heads is the best in its individual category, but each is genuinely good enough for routine maintenance, and the convenience of having them all on one charged, waterproof handle outweighs the marginal performance you would gain from owning specialized tools. For a typical grooming routine, that one-tool simplicity is the whole point of buying a multigroom kit, and the 3000 delivers it at a lower price than the 5000.
Who should buy the Philips Norelco All-in-One 3000?
Buy it if you want a capable multigroom kit at the lowest reasonable price, if your routine covers beard, body, ear, and nose but not regular head clipping, if you like swapping one trimmer between attachments instead of owning several tools, or if you are stepping up from a beard-only trimmer and want to add body and detail grooming. For most adults this is the smarter buy.
Skip it if you cut your own head hair regularly, where the Multigroom 5000’s dedicated clipper head is worth the extra money. Skip it too if you only need a beard trimmer, since a single-purpose beard model is the better value, or if you specifically want the longer five-year warranty or prioritize body grooming, where a dedicated body trimmer covers more area per pass.
The verdict
After four months of weekly use alongside the Multigroom 5000, the All-in-One 3000 13-in-1 proved that the parts that matter, the DualCut blades on the beard, body, and detail heads, cut identically to the pricier kit. The 60-minute battery is sufficient, the IPX7 rating held, and the comb stack locks positively. What you give up is the dedicated clipper head, 20 minutes of runtime, and three years of warranty. For buyers who do not self-cut their head hair, those omissions do not matter and the 3000 is the smarter purchase. For those who do, the 5000 is worth the upgrade.
How it compares
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Philips Norelco All-in-One 3000 13-in-1 | Editor's Choice All-in-One | 4.4 | Check price |
| Philips Norelco Multigroom 5000 | Top Pick Multigroom | 4.5 | Check price |
| Philips Norelco Multigroom 13-Piece MG3750 | Top Pick Versatile Kit | 4.3 | Check price |
| Philips Norelco BT3230 (beard only) | Editor's Choice Budget Beard | 4.5 | Check price |
Full specifications
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Philips Norelco All-in-One 3000 Series 13-in-1 Trimmer FAQs
Yes for most buyers. After four months of weekly use the 13 attachments covered every grooming surface in our routine, the cut quality matched the more expensive Multigroom 5000 on the beard and body heads, and the runtime was sufficient. If you want the longer 5-year warranty or the dedicated hair-clipper head, the current price more for the 5000. Otherwise this is the smarter buy.
The Multigroom 5000 has 18 pieces, an 80-minute battery, a 5-year warranty, and a separate metal hair-clipper head. The All-in-One 3000 has 13 pieces, a 60-minute battery, a 2-year warranty, and uses combs on the beard head for hair clipping. For most users the differences are minor and the current price saved is worth more. For users who clip their own hair regularly, the 5000 is worth the extra.
Sort of. The kit ships with combs that fit on the beard head and cover the 1mm to 16mm range, which is enough for basic head-hair clipping. The cut is slower and less precise than a dedicated hair clipper because the blade head is narrower. For occasional fade maintenance, fine. For regular full-head haircuts, buy the Multigroom 5000 with its dedicated clipper head.
Philips rates 60 minutes per charge. Specs indicate 56 to 58 minutes across three discharge cycles, in line with the rated runtime. At a typical 7-minute grooming session, that is roughly eight sessions per charge, or about two months for weekly users.
Adequate for chest, stomach, and arms. Slow for dense back hair. The body groomer attachment is functional but the blade head is narrower than a dedicated body trimmer like the MANSCAPED Lawn Mower 5.0, so it covers less area per pass. For occasional body grooming, fine. For regular use, consider a dedicated tool.
Update log
- Jun 20, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


