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Coway Airmega 350: one-minute review
The Airmega 350 is a large-room air purifier from the South Korean brand Coway that’s been quietly building a reputation outside the UK for over 30 years. It’s designed to cover spaces up to a whopping 245 square meters, packing a CADR of 713 cubic meters per hour and a three-stage HEPA and activated carbon filter.
In terms of design, it’s a clean, white cylinder that blends into most rooms without any fuss, topped with an intuitive touch panel and a color-changing ring that gives you a quick read on air quality. It looks good, though the plastic chassis does feel a bit cheap in places, especially the removable filter panel at the back.
Performance is where the Airmega 350 really stands out, though. It’s remarkably quiet during everyday use, even compared to the best air purifiers, the sensor reacts fast to cooking smells and dust, and it cleared my living room noticeably within minutes of detecting something. Auto mode means it can run in the background completely hands-off, and Sleep mode means it can do its job while you’re sleeping in the same room, since it’s near-silent. I also noticed a real drop in surface dust after just a few days of running it.
The biggest downside in the Airmega 350 is the lack of any Wi-Fi or app control, which is a bit disappointing — especially at this price. You can’t check stats, adjust settings remotely, or turn it off from your phone. It’s also a big unit with no wheels and only one handle, so moving it between rooms isn’t ideal. But if you value air-cleaning performance over smart features, the Airmega 350 is a powerful purifier that won’t disappoint.
Coway Airmega 350 review: Price and release date
- Costs $249.99 / £254.99 / AU$699
The Airmega 350 is available to buy now in the US and UK. It sits in the premium end of the air purifier market, but it’s not unreasonable for what you’re getting. Even at its RRP of £299.99 / $339 / AU$699, it undercuts a lot of Dyson‘s range, sitting alongside comparable models from Philips and Blueair. What’s more, at the time of writing, the unit is on sale direct from Coway’s official web store in the UK and US for £254.99 and $249.99 respectively, making it an even better deal.
Replacement filters don’t come cheap, however, costing around £69.99 / $89 / AU$135. Coway says they should last over a year with normal use. At the time of writing, filters in the UK were available on Amazon UK but were sold out on Coway’s UK site, which is a bit frustrating if you prefer buying from the brand directly. Coway says these will be back in stock soon, but it’s worth keeping in mind.
Coway Airmega 350 review: Design
- Clean, cylindrical design that blends in with most rooms
- Touch controls are intuitive but feel a bit plasticky
- No wheels and only one handle for a unit this size
The Coway Airmega 350 is a tall, white cylinder that stands about 59cm high and 30cm across. It’s not small, but the cylindrical shape means it takes up less visual space than a boxy purifier would, and the clean white, minimal finish means it doesn’t demand too much attention, blending in well with most home decor.
The translucent touch panel on top is nicely laid out and intuitive to use. There’s buttons for mode, fan speed, timer (one, four or eight hours), a lights on/off toggle, and a filter replacement reminder. The color-changing ring around the panel shifts from blue (clean air) through green and yellow to red (high pollution), giving you quick visuals on what’s going on without you needing to check a screen. Even without reading any instruction manuals, it didn’t take me long at all to figure out what everything did, which is exactly how it should be.
I’ll be honest, though: the unit’s build quality doesn’t quite match its looks. The touch panel works well and is responsive enough, but the plastics feel a bit on the cheap side. The removable back panel that gives access to the filter clips off easily enough (perhaps a little too easily, actually) and has a slightly flimsy feel to it. It’s not going to fall apart, but it does knock the premium impression down a notch when in the hand.
One thing worth knowing is that the purified air blows upwards out of the top, not outwards like a fan. So if you’re thinking this might double up as a cooling device, it won’t. It’s a purifier, not a fan, and Coway hasn’t tried to pretend otherwise here.
And finally, for those who might be looking to move this device around often depending on where they feel air purification is needed, it’s worth knowing there are no wheels on the base, and there’s only a single carry handle on the back. For something this size, that’s probably a bit of an oversight. On the other hand, it’s relatively light (just under 8kg) and so not too difficult to carry between short distances.
Coway Airmega 350 review: Features and performance
- Remarkably quiet, even on the most powerful mode
- Sensor is very responsive to cooking smells and smoke
- No Wi-Fi or app is a missed opportunity
Performance is where the Coway Airmega 350 really shines. Turn it on and the first thing you notice is just how quiet it is. On its lowest settings, it’s genuinely hard to tell it’s running. Even in Auto mode, where the fan ramps up and down based on what the sensor detects, the noise stays in the background. Sleep mode is practically silent, and I had no trouble running it overnight, even in the same room.
What’s more, when the sensor detects something specific it needs to react to, it does so fast. During use, I found that cooking smells from the kitchen would trigger the fan to kick up within seconds, with the ring shifting from blue to yellow or red, and within a few minutes the air would be noticeably fresher and the ring would settle back to blue. The same went for general dust and pet-related particles. It just gets on with its job quietly — you hardly notice it’s there.
The real star of the show, however, is the Airmega 350’s three-stage filter (pre-filter, HEPA and activated carbon). In my tests, I found this did a great job across the board. Coway claims it captures 99.99% of airborne pollutants, and while I can’t verify that number, I can say that the amount of dust settling on surfaces in my living room was noticeably less during use. And when it comes to changing it, the filter itself is easy to access through the unit’s side panel, popping out without any tools needed.
I found that the Airmega 350’s four modes (Auto, Sleep, Eco and Turbo) cover most scenarios well. Auto is the one I used most, and it’s genuinely impressive at regulating itself. Sleep dims the lights and drops the fan to near-silence, while Eco runs on low power until it detects something, then kicks in. Meanwhile, Turbo is for emergencies, like when you’ve burnt the toast, the smoke alarm is going off and you need to clean the air ASAP. It’s louder, obviously, but I found it can clear the air super fast.
There’s only one major niggle in the Airmega 350, and that’s its lack of Wi-Fi and app support. In fact, there’s no smart home integration whatsoever. For a purifier at this price, that feels like a missed opportunity and it’s kind of expected for a device of this calibre these days, so it’s something I think buyers will miss. This lack of app support means you can’t check air quality stats from your phone, you can’t adjust settings remotely, and you can’t turn it off if you’ve left it running and you’re already out the door. It’s not the end of the world, but it is an odd omission when Coway’s own pricier Airmega 450 does have app connectivity. It feels like the 350 is being held back on purpose to protect the model above it, which is a bit annoying.
- Features and performance score: 4 / 5
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Coway Airmega 350 review: Also consider
How I tested the Coway Airmega 350
I used the Coway Airmega 350 as my main air purifier for several weeks in an open-plan living room. I tested all four modes during my time with it, which included monitoring the sensor’s reaction to cooking, dust and general household air, and assessing the build quality, noise levels, filter access and day-to-day usability throughout.
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