• Washington DC |
  • New York |
  • Toronto |
  • Distribution: (800) 510 9863
Monday, February 2, 2026
  • Login
No Result
View All Result
NEWSLETTER
New Edge Times
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Arts
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Video: ‘Marty Supreme’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘Marty Supreme’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    A Closer Look at the Grammys’ Top Nominees

    A Closer Look at the Grammys’ Top Nominees

    Video: 2026 Oscar Nominees: Surprises and Snubs

    Video: 2026 Oscar Nominees: Surprises and Snubs

    Video: Photographing the Golden Globes Winners

    Video: Photographing the Golden Globes Winners

    Camden Harris: The Trusted Mind Behind Today’s Music Power Players

    Camden Harris: The Trusted Mind Behind Today’s Music Power Players

    Video: Read These 3 Books Before Watching the Movie

    Video: Read These 3 Books Before Watching the Movie

    Andrea Modellato: “How to Redefine Ethics in the Music Industry and Beyond”

    Andrea Modellato: “How to Redefine Ethics in the Music Industry and Beyond”

    Video: The Defining Culture Visuals of 2025

    Video: The Defining Culture Visuals of 2025

    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Lakeside NYC Elevates Himalayan–Indian Fusion Dining with a Newari Focus in Jackson Heights

    Lakeside NYC Elevates Himalayan–Indian Fusion Dining with a Newari Focus in Jackson Heights

    24 Easy, Healthy Soups That Will Make You Feel Better

    24 Easy, Healthy Soups That Will Make You Feel Better

    To Improve How He Ate, Our Critic Looked at What He Drank

    To Improve How He Ate, Our Critic Looked at What He Drank

    15 Cozy Beef Stew Recipes Our Readers Love

    15 Cozy Beef Stew Recipes Our Readers Love

    To Tune Out Food Noise, Our Critic Listened to His Hunger

    To Tune Out Food Noise, Our Critic Listened to His Hunger

    We Have a New Way to Double or Halve Recipes. It Might Just Make You a Better Cook.

    We Have a New Way to Double or Halve Recipes. It Might Just Make You a Better Cook.

    To Eat Healthier, Our Critic Went to the Source: His Kitchen

    To Eat Healthier, Our Critic Went to the Source: His Kitchen

    7 Smart Cooking Tips for the Best Chicken Soup of Your Life

    7 Smart Cooking Tips for the Best Chicken Soup of Your Life

    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • All
    • Arts
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    Video: ‘Marty Supreme’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    Video: ‘Marty Supreme’ | Anatomy of a Scene

    A Closer Look at the Grammys’ Top Nominees

    A Closer Look at the Grammys’ Top Nominees

    Video: 2026 Oscar Nominees: Surprises and Snubs

    Video: 2026 Oscar Nominees: Surprises and Snubs

    Video: Photographing the Golden Globes Winners

    Video: Photographing the Golden Globes Winners

    Camden Harris: The Trusted Mind Behind Today’s Music Power Players

    Camden Harris: The Trusted Mind Behind Today’s Music Power Players

    Video: Read These 3 Books Before Watching the Movie

    Video: Read These 3 Books Before Watching the Movie

    Andrea Modellato: “How to Redefine Ethics in the Music Industry and Beyond”

    Andrea Modellato: “How to Redefine Ethics in the Music Industry and Beyond”

    Video: The Defining Culture Visuals of 2025

    Video: The Defining Culture Visuals of 2025

    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
    Lakeside NYC Elevates Himalayan–Indian Fusion Dining with a Newari Focus in Jackson Heights

    Lakeside NYC Elevates Himalayan–Indian Fusion Dining with a Newari Focus in Jackson Heights

    24 Easy, Healthy Soups That Will Make You Feel Better

    24 Easy, Healthy Soups That Will Make You Feel Better

    To Improve How He Ate, Our Critic Looked at What He Drank

    To Improve How He Ate, Our Critic Looked at What He Drank

    15 Cozy Beef Stew Recipes Our Readers Love

    15 Cozy Beef Stew Recipes Our Readers Love

    To Tune Out Food Noise, Our Critic Listened to His Hunger

    To Tune Out Food Noise, Our Critic Listened to His Hunger

    We Have a New Way to Double or Halve Recipes. It Might Just Make You a Better Cook.

    We Have a New Way to Double or Halve Recipes. It Might Just Make You a Better Cook.

    To Eat Healthier, Our Critic Went to the Source: His Kitchen

    To Eat Healthier, Our Critic Went to the Source: His Kitchen

    7 Smart Cooking Tips for the Best Chicken Soup of Your Life

    7 Smart Cooking Tips for the Best Chicken Soup of Your Life

    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending
No Result
View All Result
New Edge Times
No Result
View All Result
Home Reviews

Aeno AP3 Air Purifier review

by New Edge Times Report
June 17, 2024
in Reviews
Aeno AP3 Air Purifier review
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Verdict

The Aeno AP3 Air Purifier offers HEPA air cleaning with the added benefit of odour-neutralising charcoal, UV-C light, and an ioniser. That’s a lot for such a compact device, which could make it ideal to keep the air fresh in a bedroom. Sadly, it was very disappointing in practice, with the filter making next-to-no difference in our smoke test.

Pros

  • Compact and quite affordable
  • UV-C sterilisation

Cons

  • Poor smoke performance
  • No smart controls or sensors


  • A HEPA air filter with UV sterilisationThis air purifier can filter odours, mould and even bacteria from indoor air. It’s also got an ultraviolet light to destroy microbes.

  • Suitable only for small roomsThis is a small purifier. Its 110m3/h clean-air delivery rate means it’s only really suited to small rooms.

Introduction

Aeno’s AP3 Air Purifier is about the size of a bathroom bin, but it manages to fit in quite a few features.

In its base, there’s a three-stage filter that includes HEPA 13 and carbon layers designed to filter out microscopic particles and remove odours. Surprisingly, for such a compact product, it also has an ultraviolet lamp capable of destroying and sterilising bacteria and other microbes. Finally, there’s an ioniser tucked away in its air outlet grille.

That’s not a bad feature set, but it’s important to mention a couple of significant omissions. The AP3 doesn’t have any smart features, so there’s no app to give you more control or information. Perhaps more fundamentally, this air purifier has no air quality sensors, so it can’t automatically step up its work rate in response to pollution.

This is a small purifier, with a relatively modest clean-air delivery rate (CADR) of 110 cubic metres per hour. In theory, that would allow it to scrub the air in a 25-metre-square room around two times an hour, making it about right for use in a bedroom.

Design and features

  • A simple, compact air purifier
  • Straightforward controls

This air purifier isn’t perhaps the most stylish example I’ve seen, with fairly widely spaced fins in the output through which you can see the tiny ioniser, along with a trace of reflected UV light. In the middle of the outlet there’s a touch-sensitive control panel offering sleep, mid and high-speed fan modes, separate control of the UV-C light, and a filter indicator. That’s it for the controls – there’s no Wi-Fi or infrared remote, no timer function, and no auto mode.

Aeno AP3 Air Purifier controls
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Air enters this purifier through notches distributed almost fully around the base. Turn it upside down, remove the base plate and you’ll find a removable, cake-shaped filter. That’s a departure from the norm for air purifiers, which use hollow cylindrical supplies that provide a larger surface area. This filter has standard mesh and HEPA13 layers, but adds a third stage of carbon granules, which should absorb and neutralise certain gases and odours.

Aeno AP3 Air Purifier filter
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

If you look into the base of the AP3 you’ll also see a small UV-C LED, mounted on the underside of its fan, which remains lit with the filter removed. I’d turn the air purifier off before changing the filter.

Aeno AP3 Air Purifier UV-C light
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Performance

  • Low power use
  • Very diffuse air output
  • Ineffective against smoke

The Aeno AP3 Air Purifier comes with an external AC power adaptor, and appears to use very little power. In ‘Sleep’ mode it drew just 2.4 watts, which is about as low as I’ve measured. This rose to a maximum of 5.2 watts with the fan on high speed, while switching the UV-C light on consumed another 1.7 watts irrespective of fan speed.

Even at its slowest fan speed, I could feel a light breeze from the output. Air emerged in a diffuse pattern, travelling upwards and outwards at roughly 45 degrees rather than shooting straight up. Despite this, I measured a maximum wind speed of 1.3 metres per second, just 15cm away from the grille. I couldn’t measure any air movement from one metre away.

Perhaps surprisingly, this isn’t the quietest air purifier I’ve tested. In sleep mode I measured 46dB from one metre away, which is hardly deafening, but it could be just a little too much for some light sleepers. It doesn’t help that the control panel beeps whenever you press a button, and this doesn’t stop even in Sleep mode. Conversely, the AP3 is comparatively quiet at its highest speed, creeping up to only 53.2dB.

AENO AP3 air purifier on a desk
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The Aeno AP3 didn’t perform well in practice. I test every air purifier by shutting it in a small room with a burning smoke pellet and an air quality sensor, and timing how long it takes to scrub the air clean of particulates. These are measured in micrograms per cubic metre (µg/m3), and in my test we look for particles measuring less than 2.5 micrometres across (PM2.5). The biggest purifiers can get the air quality back to very good – a reading below 12 µg/m3 – within about 10 minutes, but I’d expect a smaller device like this to need 20 minutes or more.

In fact, the Aeno AP3 became the first air purifier I’ve tested to essentially fail this test. It took 28 minutes to even get our PM2.5 sensor off its 999 µg/m3 maximum. Even after half an hour, the room still had faintly visible smoke, and the reading had fallen only to 400 µg/m3. It was so ineffective that I abandoned the test, opened a window, and used another air purifier to help finish the job.

I double-checked the AP3 after this test, ensuring that I’d removed the plastic wrapper from its filter, refitted it correctly, and that air was flowing through the device normally. Unfortunately, it was working fine: it just didn’t seem very good at this tough test, suggesting that this purifier is better with lighter levels of PM.

However, it’s instructive to compare the results I got from the Levoit Core 200S on the same test. This similarly specified purifier had the PM2.5 reading down to 464 µg/m3 after 11 minutes, and had returned the room air to a ‘good’ reading of 17 µg/m3 after 22 minutes.

Latest deals

Should you buy it?

Germicidal ultraviolet on a budget

The Aeno AP3 is pretty small and cheap for a device with UV-C sterilisation. Its simple controls could also prove easier for people who don’t want smart features.

You want more powerful purification

We can’t test air purifiers for everything, but this one performed very badly in our smoke test.

Final Thoughts

It’s good to have a germicidal ultraviolet light on a compact and reasonably affordable air purifier, but alas there’s not much more to recommend the Aeno AP3.

Its carbon filter and UV-C lamp mean that it might be great for getting rid of odours or killing mould or bacterial spores, but our smoke test suggests it’s not at all good at dealing with particulates.

I’d definitely choose the Levoit Core 200S instead: although it doesn’t have ultraviolet, it’s cheaper, has smart features, and was more effective in my tests. For alternatives, see our hand-picked list of the best air purifiers.

How we test

Unlike other sites, we test every air purifier we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry-standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.

Used as our main air purifier for the review period

We test smart purifiers with their apps and we test Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant compatibility.

We time how long it takes each purifier to remove smoke from a closed room.

FAQs

Can air purifiers get rid of radon?

No. Radon is a radioactive gas which can’t be filtered out of the air. For this reason it’s important to ventilate your home, especially if you live in an area rich in granite or clay soils.

Trusted Reviews test data

‹

AENO AP3 Air Purifier

30 mins

›

‹

UK RRP

USA RRP

EU RRP

CA RRP

AUD RRP

Quiet Mark Accredited

Size (Dimensions)

Weight

ASIN

Release Date

First Reviewed Date

Model Number

Voice Assistant

Filter type

Filter life

Max room size

Smoke CADR

Number of speeds

Filter replacement light

AENO AP3 Air Purifier

£115

Unavailable

Unavailable

Unavailable

Unavailable

No

205 x 205 x 295 MM

1.9 KG

B09V5HMKNW

2024

31/05/2024

AAP0003

No

HEPA 13, charcoal, UV-C

4 months

30 m2

110

2

Yes

›

Verdict

The Aeno AP3 Air Purifier offers HEPA air cleaning with the added benefit of odour-neutralising charcoal, UV-C light, and an ioniser. That’s a lot for such a compact device, which could make it ideal to keep the air fresh in a bedroom. Sadly, it was very disappointing in practice, with the filter making next-to-no difference in our smoke test.

Pros

  • Compact and quite affordable
  • UV-C sterilisation

Cons

  • Poor smoke performance
  • No smart controls or sensors


  • A HEPA air filter with UV sterilisationThis air purifier can filter odours, mould and even bacteria from indoor air. It’s also got an ultraviolet light to destroy microbes.

  • Suitable only for small roomsThis is a small purifier. Its 110m3/h clean-air delivery rate means it’s only really suited to small rooms.

Introduction

Aeno’s AP3 Air Purifier is about the size of a bathroom bin, but it manages to fit in quite a few features.

In its base, there’s a three-stage filter that includes HEPA 13 and carbon layers designed to filter out microscopic particles and remove odours. Surprisingly, for such a compact product, it also has an ultraviolet lamp capable of destroying and sterilising bacteria and other microbes. Finally, there’s an ioniser tucked away in its air outlet grille.

That’s not a bad feature set, but it’s important to mention a couple of significant omissions. The AP3 doesn’t have any smart features, so there’s no app to give you more control or information. Perhaps more fundamentally, this air purifier has no air quality sensors, so it can’t automatically step up its work rate in response to pollution.

This is a small purifier, with a relatively modest clean-air delivery rate (CADR) of 110 cubic metres per hour. In theory, that would allow it to scrub the air in a 25-metre-square room around two times an hour, making it about right for use in a bedroom.

Design and features

  • A simple, compact air purifier
  • Straightforward controls

This air purifier isn’t perhaps the most stylish example I’ve seen, with fairly widely spaced fins in the output through which you can see the tiny ioniser, along with a trace of reflected UV light. In the middle of the outlet there’s a touch-sensitive control panel offering sleep, mid and high-speed fan modes, separate control of the UV-C light, and a filter indicator. That’s it for the controls – there’s no Wi-Fi or infrared remote, no timer function, and no auto mode.

Aeno AP3 Air Purifier controls
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Air enters this purifier through notches distributed almost fully around the base. Turn it upside down, remove the base plate and you’ll find a removable, cake-shaped filter. That’s a departure from the norm for air purifiers, which use hollow cylindrical supplies that provide a larger surface area. This filter has standard mesh and HEPA13 layers, but adds a third stage of carbon granules, which should absorb and neutralise certain gases and odours.

Aeno AP3 Air Purifier filter
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

If you look into the base of the AP3 you’ll also see a small UV-C LED, mounted on the underside of its fan, which remains lit with the filter removed. I’d turn the air purifier off before changing the filter.

Aeno AP3 Air Purifier UV-C light
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

Performance

  • Low power use
  • Very diffuse air output
  • Ineffective against smoke

The Aeno AP3 Air Purifier comes with an external AC power adaptor, and appears to use very little power. In ‘Sleep’ mode it drew just 2.4 watts, which is about as low as I’ve measured. This rose to a maximum of 5.2 watts with the fan on high speed, while switching the UV-C light on consumed another 1.7 watts irrespective of fan speed.

Even at its slowest fan speed, I could feel a light breeze from the output. Air emerged in a diffuse pattern, travelling upwards and outwards at roughly 45 degrees rather than shooting straight up. Despite this, I measured a maximum wind speed of 1.3 metres per second, just 15cm away from the grille. I couldn’t measure any air movement from one metre away.

Perhaps surprisingly, this isn’t the quietest air purifier I’ve tested. In sleep mode I measured 46dB from one metre away, which is hardly deafening, but it could be just a little too much for some light sleepers. It doesn’t help that the control panel beeps whenever you press a button, and this doesn’t stop even in Sleep mode. Conversely, the AP3 is comparatively quiet at its highest speed, creeping up to only 53.2dB.

AENO AP3 air purifier on a desk
Image Credit (Trusted Reviews)

The Aeno AP3 didn’t perform well in practice. I test every air purifier by shutting it in a small room with a burning smoke pellet and an air quality sensor, and timing how long it takes to scrub the air clean of particulates. These are measured in micrograms per cubic metre (µg/m3), and in my test we look for particles measuring less than 2.5 micrometres across (PM2.5). The biggest purifiers can get the air quality back to very good – a reading below 12 µg/m3 – within about 10 minutes, but I’d expect a smaller device like this to need 20 minutes or more.

In fact, the Aeno AP3 became the first air purifier I’ve tested to essentially fail this test. It took 28 minutes to even get our PM2.5 sensor off its 999 µg/m3 maximum. Even after half an hour, the room still had faintly visible smoke, and the reading had fallen only to 400 µg/m3. It was so ineffective that I abandoned the test, opened a window, and used another air purifier to help finish the job.

I double-checked the AP3 after this test, ensuring that I’d removed the plastic wrapper from its filter, refitted it correctly, and that air was flowing through the device normally. Unfortunately, it was working fine: it just didn’t seem very good at this tough test, suggesting that this purifier is better with lighter levels of PM.

However, it’s instructive to compare the results I got from the Levoit Core 200S on the same test. This similarly specified purifier had the PM2.5 reading down to 464 µg/m3 after 11 minutes, and had returned the room air to a ‘good’ reading of 17 µg/m3 after 22 minutes.

Latest deals

Should you buy it?

Germicidal ultraviolet on a budget

The Aeno AP3 is pretty small and cheap for a device with UV-C sterilisation. Its simple controls could also prove easier for people who don’t want smart features.

You want more powerful purification

We can’t test air purifiers for everything, but this one performed very badly in our smoke test.

Final Thoughts

It’s good to have a germicidal ultraviolet light on a compact and reasonably affordable air purifier, but alas there’s not much more to recommend the Aeno AP3.

Its carbon filter and UV-C lamp mean that it might be great for getting rid of odours or killing mould or bacterial spores, but our smoke test suggests it’s not at all good at dealing with particulates.

I’d definitely choose the Levoit Core 200S instead: although it doesn’t have ultraviolet, it’s cheaper, has smart features, and was more effective in my tests. For alternatives, see our hand-picked list of the best air purifiers.

How we test

Unlike other sites, we test every air purifier we review thoroughly over an extended period of time. We use industry-standard tests to compare features properly. We’ll always tell you what we find. We never, ever, accept money to review a product.

Find out more about how we test in our ethics policy.

Used as our main air purifier for the review period

We test smart purifiers with their apps and we test Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant compatibility.

We time how long it takes each purifier to remove smoke from a closed room.

FAQs

Can air purifiers get rid of radon?

No. Radon is a radioactive gas which can’t be filtered out of the air. For this reason it’s important to ventilate your home, especially if you live in an area rich in granite or clay soils.

Trusted Reviews test data

‹

AENO AP3 Air Purifier

30 mins

›

‹

UK RRP

USA RRP

EU RRP

CA RRP

AUD RRP

Quiet Mark Accredited

Size (Dimensions)

Weight

ASIN

Release Date

First Reviewed Date

Model Number

Voice Assistant

Filter type

Filter life

Max room size

Smoke CADR

Number of speeds

Filter replacement light

AENO AP3 Air Purifier

£115

Unavailable

Unavailable

Unavailable

Unavailable

No

205 x 205 x 295 MM

1.9 KG

B09V5HMKNW

2024

31/05/2024

AAP0003

No

HEPA 13, charcoal, UV-C

4 months

30 m2

110

2

Yes

›

Previous Post

‘The Promised Land,’ ‘Biosphere’ and More Streaming Gems

Next Post

How Crypto Money Is Poised to Influence the Election

Related Posts

Dyson PencilVac Review
Reviews

Dyson PencilVac Review

by New Edge Times Report
February 2, 2026
Morphy Richards EverCosy Large Luxury Striped Fleece Electric Heated Throw Review
Reviews

Morphy Richards EverCosy Large Luxury Striped Fleece Electric Heated Throw Review

by New Edge Times Report
January 30, 2026
Acer Predator Helios 18 AI Review
Reviews

Acer Predator Helios 18 AI Review

by New Edge Times Report
January 30, 2026
Leave Comment
New Edge Times

© 2025 New Edge Times or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • Contact

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • World
  • U.S.
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Youth
  • Entertainment
    • Gaming
    • Movie
    • Music
    • Arts
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
    • Fashion
    • Food
    • Health
    • Travel
  • Reviews
  • Trending

© 2025 New Edge Times or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In