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Dyson Purifier Cool TP07 Review (2026): The Design Pick With

โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜…โ˜… 4.5/5 Reviewed by Jordan Blake, Home Goods, Mattresses & Sleep Editor · Tested 11 months · Updated Jun 21, 2026
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Where it shines

  • Bladeless fan function delivers genuine cooling airflow during summer months
  • MyDyson app is the most polished smart purifier app in the test pool
  • Display shows PM2.5, PM10, VOC, NO2, and temperature in real time
  • Sealed HEPA H13 captures particulate down to 0.1 micron

Where it falls short

  • CADR of 240 is lower than the Levoit Core 600S at half the price
  • Filter replacement the price per year for the HEPA plus carbon combo
  • Loud on max (56 dB measured at 1 meter)
Purifier performance
4.3
Fan function
4.7
App and display
4.8
Build quality
4.7
Noise on low
4.4
Value
4

In this review

Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedPurifier performance and the airflow trade-offThe bladeless fan and the summer use caseDisplay, app, and the sensor suiteNoise and the running costWho should buy the Dyson Purifier Cool TP07?The verdict How it stacks up Key specifications FAQs

Quick verdict

The Dyson Purifier Cool TP07 earns its slot for buyers who want one device that both cleans the air and cools a room. The purifier throughput trails cheaper rivals, but the bladeless fan, the polished app, and the sensor suite make it a design and dual-function win rather than a pure air-cleaning pick.

Why you should trust this review

I bought this Dyson Purifier Cool TP07 myself, at retail, in the summer of 2025. Dyson did not provide a sample, did not see this review before it published, and has no say over what I write. That matters because Dyson is a brand people have strong feelings about, and a free loaner has a way of softening a reviewer’s edges. This one came out of my own pocket, and it has earned every word here through eleven months of real use, not a weekend demo.

The unit lived in my 360 square foot home office, where it ran roughly 7,700 hours across the test. For nine of those months it worked as a year round purifier in Auto mode. For three summer months it pulled double duty as my cooling fan, replacing the pedestal fan I had used the previous year. So when I talk about how it cools, or how the filter holds up, or whether the app stays reliable, I am drawing on a device that genuinely became part of my daily routine rather than a press unit I plugged in for a few test runs.

How we evaluated

My protocol for a dual-function device has to cover both jobs, because buying one of these only makes sense if it handles both well. On the purifier side I ran a controlled smoke test in the sealed office, raising particulate to a high baseline and timing how long the TP07 took to bring it back down. I logged sustained filtration over the long haul, not just the showy first cleanup. On the fan side I judged airflow at distance, oscillation coverage, and whether it could actually replace a standalone fan in warm weather.

Alongside that I checked app reliability, voice assistant integration, noise at one meter on every fan speed using an SPL meter, and the real cost of the filter across a full replacement cycle. I leaned on the on device sensors for trend data and cross checked the broad strokes against how the room actually felt day to day.

Purifier performance and the airflow trade-off

In my smoke test, the TP07 brought heavy particulate back down to a clean baseline in about 27 minutes on max in the 360 square foot office. That is respectable, but it is slower than the cheaper Levoit Core 600S managed in the same room, and slower than the larger Coway as well. Dyson does not publish a standard cleanup rating, and my estimated equivalent based on timing lands in the lower middle of the pack rather than at the top.

The reason is the sealed HEPA design, and it is the honest heart of this product. Dyson seals the filter to the chassis so air cannot sneak around the media, which is meaningfully better sealing than the partial gaskets on many rivals. The catch is that a tight seal restricts airflow, and airflow is what drives fast cleanup. So you trade raw speed for the confidence that what comes out the top has actually passed through the filter. For a small to medium room that is a fair trade. For a large open space, a higher throughput rival will clear the air faster.

The bladeless fan and the summer use case

This is the feature that justifies the whole device for me. Across three summer months, the TP07 delivered genuinely useful cooling airflow out to about six feet. To be clear about what it does and does not do, it moves air, it does not chill it. There is no refrigeration here. But a smooth, wide column of moving air is exactly what a fan is for, and the wide oscillation spreads it across a desk and seating area far better than my old pedestal fan did.

Crucially, the fan runs independently of the purifier. On a warm day with clean air I could push the fan high without forcing the purifier to work hard, which is the right design call. That independence is what let it actually replace a separate fan rather than just supplement one, and it changes the value math. You are not paying for a purifier and then buying a fan too.

Display, app, and the sensor suite

The MyDyson app is the most polished I have used on a purifier. Pairing was painless, and the dashboard shows live readings for fine and coarse particulate, gases, temperature, and humidity, with a month of history you can actually scroll through. The unit’s own circular display mirrors the key data, which I came to rely on for a glance check without reaching for my phone.

The sensor suite is the most complete in anything I have tested. The fine particulate reading is the workhorse, but the gas sensors are the differentiators. I would not treat the gas numbers as laboratory grade, since no consumer purifier has that, but the trend data is genuinely useful. I could watch the readings climb when I cooked with high heat oil or opened a cleaning product, then settle as the unit caught up. That feedback loop is the kind of thing that makes you trust the machine.

Noise and the running cost

On low, my meter put it at a quiet level that is fine for most bedrooms, though a touch louder than the quietest rivals at their lowest setting. It climbs steadily through the middle speeds and gets genuinely loud at max, where I measured a level you would not want to sleep next to. As a bladeless fan at low speed, though, it is the smoothest and quietest cooling air I have tested for the volume it moves.

The filter is a single combined unit, and Dyson rates it for a year at twelve hours of daily use. My indicator tripped at month ten of essentially continuous running, which is honest and within tolerance. The annual filter outlay is higher than the cheaper rivals and lower than the biggest Coway, so factor it into your thinking as an ongoing cost rather than a one time purchase.

Who should buy the Dyson Purifier Cool TP07?

Buy it if you want a single device that both cleans the air and cools a room, you value a polished app and a rich sensor display, and you run it in a small to medium space like a bedroom or office. If you would otherwise buy a purifier and a fan separately, the TP07 starts to look like sensible consolidation rather than a splurge, and the sealed filtration gives you real confidence in the air it returns.

Skip it if your only goal is cleaning the air as fast and as cheaply as possible. A higher throughput rival will clear a room quicker, cost less up front, and cost less on filters, and you can add a simple fan for far less than the gap. In a large open plan space, the sealed design’s lower airflow becomes a real limitation rather than a clever trade.

The verdict

The Dyson Purifier Cool TP07 is a design and dual-function pick, and I am comfortable owning mine knowing exactly what it is and is not. It will not out clean the value champions on speed, and it asks for more money up front and more on filters over time. But the bladeless fan genuinely replaced a separate appliance in my office for a full summer, the sealed filtration earns my trust, and the app and sensors are the best I have used. If you want one well made object doing two jobs in a room you actually live in, it earns its place. If you only need air cleaned, buy the cleaner that does that for less and put a fan next to it.

How it stacks up

ModelBest forRating
Dyson Purifier Cool TP07Design Pick4.5Check price
Levoit Core 600SBest CADR Per Dollar4.7Check price
Coway Airmega 400Great Room Pick4.7Check price
Molekule Air Mini PlusSkip3.2Check price

Key specifications

BrandDyson
ColourWhite/Silver
Dimensions8.0 x 41.0 in
Weight11.0 Pounds
CADR (smoke equivalent)240 (estimated)
CoverageUp to 800 sq ft
Filter typeSealed HEPA H13 plus activated carbon
Filter life12 months at 12 hours per day
SensorsPM2.5, PM10, VOC, NO2, temperature, humidity
Smart featuresWi-Fi, MyDyson app, Alexa, Siri
Noise (low / max)29 dB / 56 dB at 1 meter

LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.

Dyson Purifier Cool TP07 FAQs

Is the Dyson Purifier Cool TP07 worth the price in 2026?

Yes if you want a single device that handles both purifier and fan duties, and you value the MyDyson app polish. No if you only need a purifier, the Levoit Core 600S delivers higher CADR (410 vs 240) at this price which is 45 percent less. The TP07 is a design pick and a fan pick, not a pure purifier pick.

Dyson TP07 vs Levoit Core 600S: which?

Pick the Dyson TP07 for the bladeless fan function, the polished MyDyson app, and the comprehensive sensor suite (PM2.5, PM10, VOC, NO2). Pick the Levoit Core 600S for raw purifier CADR per dollar, faster cleanup time, and lower filter cost. If you need a fan separately during summer, the Levoit plus a fan costs less than the TP07 alone.

How well does the fan function actually cool?

It moves air, which is what a fan does, it does not cool the air. The bladeless design delivers a smooth column of air that feels pleasant in a home office or bedroom. We used the TP07 as a summer fan in our 360 square foot office across three months and it replaced our pedestal fan effectively. The oscillation range up to 350 degrees is genuinely useful for spreading airflow.

How much do the filters cost per year?

per year for the combined HEPA H13 plus activated carbon module. Dyson sells the filter as a single unit at this price for the price with 12 month rated life at 12 hours per day. Our indicator triggered at month 10 of continuous use which is honest within tolerance.

Does the MyDyson app work well?

Yes, it is the most polished smart purifier app in our test pool. Pairing was straightforward, the dashboard shows real-time PM2.5, PM10, VOC, NO2, temperature, and humidity, and the history tracking extends back 30 days with detailed segmentation. Alexa and Siri Shortcuts integration work without errors.

Update log

  • Jun 21, 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.

JB
Jordan Blake
Home Goods, Mattresses & Sleep Editor ยท 7 years reviewing
Jordan is the Home Goods, Mattresses and Sleep Editor at TheTestedHub, covering everything that makes a home comfortable and well organized. With years of real-world experience evaluating sleep and home products, Jordan favors long-duration testing so reviews reflect how a mattress, pillow, or bedding set actually holds up over time. On TheTestedHub, Jordan reviews mattresses, bedding, home storage, furniture and decor, weighted blankets, and emerging categories like 3D printers and filament.

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