Best Tower Fans for 2026: We Tested 14 Fans to Help You Keep Cool During This Heat Wave


14 tower fans ready for testing

I tested 14 of the latest tower fan models, most of which arrived as review samples from manufacturers.

John Carlsen/CNET

John Carlsen/CNET

As I planned my tower fan tests, I thought about why people use fans. For example, airflow, loudness and energy efficiency are immediately obvious criteria, but I considered other ways tower fans can be comfortable. Ultimately, I decided that air texture and sound profiles (white noise and device sounds) were also important.

There are 10 total points possible for each test criterion. Here’s how I calculate the product scores:

  • Airflow (20%): You’ll get the maximum cooling effect with higher airflows — measured in feet per minute on an anemometer — because it helps sweat evaporate faster.
  • Air texture (15%): How a tower fan feels is a game changer for people who are sensitive to airflow like I am, but my texture test is very subjective because I lack the resources to study whether turbulence is the deciding factor. While I evaluated medium and high speeds, I didn’t test the low speed in this category. This is because some of the low speeds were almost imperceptible, like Dyson and Levoit, while faster fans from Amazon Basics and OmniBreeze weren’t much different than the medium speeds.
  • Loudness (15%): Even if a tower fan sounds nice, being overly loud can grate on the senses, especially when you or a child is trying to sleep. I measured this in decibels (dBa) across low, medium and high speed settings.
  • Sound profile (15%): What a fan sounds like in terms of white noise, and the ability to turn off interface sounds greatly enhances the user experience. Evaluating white noise is the subjective half of this test, while the ability to mute and disable device sounds forms the objective half.
  • Energy efficiency (15%): The average energy consumption of tower fans, measured in watts, isn’t particularly high, but it adds up on your electric bill. This is doubly true when running multiple fans 24/7.
  • Price (10%) and features (10%): These round out the remainder of the score, but generally depend on static specifications rather than qualitative testing.

Airflow: Speed

tower fan airflow testing with anemometer cardboard tunnel and fan

While airflow speed is important in terms of providing an objective comparison point between tower fans, it also affects the air texture, loudness and white noise, so it weighs more heavily than other categories in my scoring.

John Carlsen

I previously used an anemometer to test handheld vacuums and car vacuums, but it was difficult to log data over time. (Plus, a particularly powerful vacuum damaged it.) For tower fan testing, I upgraded to an app-enabled anemometer for more automatic logging.

For this test, I used speed in feet per minute instead of volume in cubic feet per minute to keep the test simple enough to leave time for other testing. For example, using cubic feet per minute would triple the test time as I’d need to measure the airflow in more than one place. Likewise, it requires knowing the area of each fan’s air outlet, which is more difficult to determine on the narrow outlets of bladeless fans. Using FPM means I have a reasonably balanced comparison between fans of all types and sizes, even if I lose some of the nuance that comes with measuring volume.

My airflow testing uses a simple tunnel — courtesy of Dreame’s massive shipping box — to isolate airflow between the fan and the anemometer. Initially, I used clear plastic to seal one end around the fan so only the exhaust blew through the tunnel, but it interfered with bladeless fans like the Dyson. So I added a second test with the tunnel unsealed. Because I did two kinds of tunnel tests for low, medium and high speeds, this means a total of six one-minute tests per fan. I tested each speed continuously for one minute, giving enough time between each test for speeds to level out. Across 14 fans, that’s over 5,000 second-by-second data points.

Unsealed-tunnel testing: In terms of pure power, the Dreo TurboCool is the undisputed champion. Not only did it produce the highest median speeds in the medium and high categories, but it was the only tower fan with a maximum speed above 1,000 FPM (1,043 FPM). Across the three speeds I tested, it had a median speed of 689 FPM, making it the only fan to surpass 600 FPM.

Zafro 42, Dreo Smart, OmniBreeze and Zafro 36 all produced exceptional airflow above 500 FPM, while the Vornado OSCR37 came in at 492 FPM. None of the other fans came in above 400 FPM, with the Midea, Levoit and Vornado Strata in the 300s. All of the bladeless tower fans produced lower airflow overall than the traditional models. Part of the reason for this is the relatively tiny air outlets on bladeless fans, making measurement more difficult. Dyson and Lasko tied for the lowest median airflow — 197 FPM.

Sealed-tunnel testing: In general, most of the fans performed worse in the sealed-tunnel test, so it plays almost no role in the scoring. However, Midea (472 FPM median) and Amazon Basics (453 FPM median) performed better when sealed. I suspect these fans handle back pressure more effectively, but it doesn’t really affect day-to-day use outside these isolated tests. Lasko and Vornado Strata didn’t consistently do well in sealed-tunnel tests, but did better at low and high speeds, respectively.

Airflow: Air texture

dreame mf10 tower fan next to side table

When temperatures are mild, I’d argue that how the air feels on your skin at lower speeds is more important than how fast it blows.

John Carlsen/CNET

High airflow is only part of the equation for an excellent tower fan — the texture of the airstream matters just as much. Unlike wind speed, my texture test is purely subjective — it’s simply how consistently I enjoyed the breeze from a tower fan at medium and high speeds. 

Although the bladeless tower fans from Dyson, Dreame and Shark didn’t perform as well in terms of raw power, they produced the most comfortable air textures at medium and high speeds — 10 out of 10. The Vornado Strata 8 Omni and Levoit Classic also earned perfect texture scores on both settings. While Dreo TurboCool earned 9 out of 10 in both categories, it achieves a 10 when the misting function is active. Lasko WhisperForce earned a perfect texture score at medium speed, though its max speed was slightly more turbulent.

This isn’t to say the other fans were uncomfortable, as Midea and Zafro generally felt nice, while Dreo Smart and Vornado OSCR37 lost some charm at top speed. However, the wind from OmniBreeze and Amazon Basics — the only fans under $40 — was only passable.

Sound profile: Loudness

tower fan loudness testing with sound meter and fan

In terms of volume, none of the tower fans surpassed 60 dBa on the highest speed setting, meaning they’re unlikely to drown out a normal conversation.

John Carlsen/CNET

I used my trusty sound meter to measure the loudness of each fan from 39 inches away (1 meter). While this is a good distance for testing, most people place fans farther away, so your experience will likely be quieter than these results. I reduced noise as much as possible in my home office for this test, which meant leaving the AC off on a hot day and taking occasional breaks to cool the room as the indoor temperature reached into the 80s.

On low speeds, most of the fans weren’t loud enough for the sound meter to register a result — it can’t measure below 30 dBa. However, Midea (39 dBa), OmniBreeze (41 dBa) and Amazon Basics (42 dBa) were more audible, but not all that loud.

The standouts during medium-speed tests were Shark (39 dBa), Vornado Strata (41 dBa) and Levoit (42 dBa), because they were equal to or better than the worst performers in the low-speed test. OmniBreeze was the loudest in this test, producing 54 dBa, while Dreo Smart and Amazon Basics both came in at or just above 50 dBa. In general, I found most fans under 50 dBa to be more than quiet enough for a bedroom at night.

Although none of the fans was quieter than 50 dBa in the high-speed test, Amazon Basics (51 dBa), Vornado Strata (51 dBa), Shark (53 dBa), Dyson Cool (54 dBa) and Zafro 36 (54 dBa) were all equal to or quieter than the loudest models of the medium-speed tests. Both Dreo models were the loudest in this test at 59 dBa.

Sound profile: White noise

dyson cool am07 tower fan next to side table

While I’ll admit my subjective ear isn’t ideal for rating white noise on fans like the Dyson Cool, I’ve extensively used white noise daily for well over a decade to help me sleep.

John Carlsen

If you rely on the noise a tower fan makes almost as much as its ability to blow air, you can relate to how some fans have idiosyncrasies like wobbles, whines and hums that spoil otherwise great white noise. Fans with fewer of these, or where they were pleasant, earned more credit.

The tower fans with the cleanest, most enjoyable white noise were Dreo, Dyson and Levoit. I’m particularly fond of Levoit’s respective hum and whoosh on low and high speeds. Dyson’s pleasant hiss was similarly outstanding as was the loudness of Dreo’s white noise. While Midea’s slight wobble and Zafro’s humming oscillation on low speeds were nearly as pleasant, the overall white noise quality is excellent.

Vornado Strata, Shark TurboBlade, Dreame, Lasko and Amazon Basics all had various wobbles, whines and hisses that stood out as I listened. Short-term white noise is good, but might grate on the nerves of people with sensory sensitivities after a while. Vornado OSCR37’s whine and wobble were even more distracting. Still, the worst white noise profile was OmniBreeze, which has a whir and a whine that are borderline annoying, especially because the whine changes pitch when you turn on the oscillation.

Sound profile: Beeps and clicks

tower fan remotes on side table with plant in background

Loud beeps and overly clicky remotes can break focus and disturb light sleepers.

John Carlsen/CNET

Another sound consideration beyond white noise and loudness is how the tower fan sounds when you’re controlling it. The gold standard is a fan that has beeps, but also allows you to disable them until you want them again: a persistent mute function. Dreo, Shark, Levoit and Zafro all have this setting, though Zafro retains a startup chime, even if you unplug the fan to move it to another room. Dreame has a semi-persistent mute that resets when changing outlets.

Dyson, Lasko and Vornado all lack beeps entirely, but this removes an audio feedback option that might benefit people with visual impairments.

While OmniBreeze has a mute function, it resets every time to turn the fan off, which I’ve found very distracting. Midea lacks a mute function entirely.

Another thing I listened for was how clicky a remote was, again giving more credit to silent remotes like those of Vornado and OmniBreeze. Dyson and Shark’s remote made noise, but it was relatively quiet. However, most tower fan remotes landed in the moderately clicky category — Dreo, Zafro, Levoit, Midea and Dreame — they aren’t loud by any means, but noticeable. Lasko’s remote felt the loudest and had a harsh click that I found unpleasant.

Energy efficiency

tower fan energy efficiency testing with smart plugs

I used Tapo P115 smart plugs to monitor each fan’s energy draw in low and high modes during the other tests.

John Carlsen/CNET

While tower fans aren’t necessarily energy hogs compared to other cooling methods, having more efficient devices can save a fair amount on energy bills, particularly when using multiple fans in a household.

The average power draw on the lowest fan speed was 9 watts, with the Vornado Strata 8 Omni (1 watt) earning the prize for most efficient, even if it’s a small fan. Lasko, Levoit and Zafro weren’t far behind at 2 watts of energy draw. Except for Midea (20 watts), Amazon Basics (21 watts), OmniBreeze (24 watts) and Vornado OSCR37 AE (36 watts), the other fans all came in below 6W on low.

Vornado Strata (13 watts) and Levoit Classic (19 watts) maintained dominance in the highest-speed testing as well, with Zafro and Dreo Smart falling below 25 watts. Amazon Basics, Dreo TurboCool, Lasko and Midea form the center of the pack, mostly keeping close to the average of 34 watts. Shark, Dyson, Dreame, OmniBreeze and Vornado OSCR37 AE were the least-efficient models in this test, averaging 49 watts.

Tower fan test results

Tower fan Median airflow Texture Max loudness White noise Beeps and clicks Max power consumption
Zafro 36 532 FPM 9/10 54 dBa 9/10 9/10 20 watts
Vornado Strata 8 Omni 335 FPM 10/10 51 dBa 8/10 9.5/10 13 watts
Levoit Classic 42-inch 335 FPM 10/10 55 dBa 10/10 9/10 19 watts
Dreo TurboCool 765S 689 FPM 9/10 59 dBa 10/10 9/10 40 watts
Shark TurboBlade 236 FPM 10/10 53 dBa 8/10 8/10 48 watts
OmniBreeze Wi-Fi 551 FPM 7/10 57 dBa 6/10 8/10 50 watts
Amazon Basics 28″ 453 FPM 6.5/10 51 dBa 8/10 4.5/10 30 watts
Dreame MF10 256 FPM 10/10 56 dBa 8/10 8/10 45 watts
Dreo Smart 554S 591 FPM 7.5/10 59 dBa 10/10 9/10 25 watts
Dyson Cool AM07 197 FPM 10/10 54 dBa 10/10 9/10 50 watts
Lasko WhisperForce 197 FPM 9.5/10 57 dBa 8/10 8/10 31 watts
Midea Detachable 335 FPM 8/10 56 dBa 9/10 6.5/10 36 watts
Vornado OSCR37 AE 492 FPM 8/10 55 dBa 7/10 9.5/10 50 watts
Zafro 42 591 FPM 8.5/10 56 dBa 9/10 9/10 25 watts





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Most people do not need another vacation that looks perfect online. They need one that feels good while they are living it.

That sounds simple, but it is where so many trips go wrong. We chase the famous view, the trending hotel, the restaurant everyone is posting about, and the itinerary that sounds impressive when we explain it to friends. Then we come home tired, over budget, and strangely unsatisfied.

The truth is, the best trips are not always the biggest, flashiest, or most expensive. They are the ones that match who you are, how you travel, and what you actually need from your time away.

Maybe that means quiet mornings instead of packed schedules. Maybe it means a mountain lodge instead of a city hotel. Maybe it means one unforgettable excursion instead of five average ones. Maybe it means finally admitting that your dream trip should feel like your dream, not someone else’s highlight reel.

After years of traveling through wild places, luxury resorts, small towns, national parks, historic cities, and far-flung corners of the world, we have learned one thing repeatedly: the magic usually starts when you stop planning the trip you think you are supposed to want.

Stop Planning for the Person You Wish You Were

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There is a version of you who wakes up before sunrise every day, hikes ten miles, eats only at hidden local spots, never needs downtime, and looks effortlessly put together in every photo. That person may not actually exist.

Too many travelers build itineraries for an imaginary version of themselves. They plan nonstop days when they know they need rest. They book adventurous excursions when what they really want is a slow food tour. They choose nightlife-heavy destinations when they are happiest watching sunset from a balcony with a glass of wine.

A better trip starts with honesty. Do you like structure or freedom? Do you want pampering or grit? Do you love cities or do they drain you? Are you traveling to explore, recover, reconnect, celebrate, or simply breathe?

There is no wrong answer, but there is such a thing as the wrong trip for the wrong traveler.

The Best Itinerary Has White Space

couple relaxing on New york bench in front of the skyline at sunset time having a safe travel experience
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A full calendar can make a trip feel valuable before you leave, but once you arrive, it can feel like a trap.

White space is not wasted time. It is often where travel gets interesting. It is the extra hour at breakfast when a local gives you a tip you would never find online. It is the afternoon spent wandering a neighborhood instead of rushing to another attraction. It is the unplanned stop that becomes the story you tell for years.

This is especially true in destinations with big personalities. Alaska does not always follow a schedule. Mountain weather has its own agenda. Historic cities reward wandering. Small towns reveal themselves slowly.

Leave room for the place to surprise you.

Choose a Base That Changes the Trip

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Where you sleep shapes everything.

A hotel is not just a bed. It influences your mornings, your evenings, your stress level, your access, and often your entire relationship with a destination.

A well-located boutique hotel can turn a city trip into a walkable delight. A remote lodge can make wilderness feel immersive instead of logistical. A resort with strong summer programming can transform a ski destination into a warm-weather escape. A charming inn can make a small town feel like home.

Sometimes the right base matters more than adding another activity. Ask what your accommodations make easier. If the answer is very little, keep looking.

Trade Checklist Travel for Texture

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Checklist travel says: see the landmark, take the photo, move on.

Texture travel asks what a place actually feels like.

You find texture in farmers markets, neighborhood bakeries, local music, ferry rides, scenic backroads, family-run restaurants, historic hotels, guided walks, and conversations with people who live there.

Texture is what separates “we went there” from “we felt like we understood it a little.”

It is easy to build a trip around attractions. It is harder, and usually better, to build a trip around moments.

Spend More on the Part You Will Remember

Train entering tunnel Alaska Railroad Anchorage Alaska
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Not every trip needs to be luxury from beginning to end. In fact, some of the smartest trips are built around one or two intentional splurges.

That might be a flightseeing tour, a private guide, a special dinner, a room with a view, a spa day, a scenic train ride, or an experience that gets you closer to the heart of a place.

Spend where it changes the story. Save where it does not.

A forgettable upgrade is rarely worth much. A once-in-a-lifetime experience usually is.

Let Food Lead You Somewhere Real

Salmon dish at Salmon and Bear Restaurant McCarthy Alaska
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Food is one of the easiest ways to move beyond surface-level travel.

Not every meal needs to be fancy. Some of the best food memories come from bakeries, roadside stands, markets, pubs, diners, and family-owned restaurants that tell you exactly where you are.

Order the regional specialty. Ask what is local. Take the food tour. Visit the market. Try the thing you cannot get back home.

Food gives a destination flavor in the most literal sense, but it also gives it context. It reveals history, migration, climate, agriculture, celebration, and comfort.

A good meal can explain a place faster than a brochure ever could.

Do One Thing That Scares You a Little

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Not reckless. Not unsafe. Just slightly outside your normal lane.

Kayak near a glacier. Take the winter trip. Ride the e-bike. Book the guided hike. Try the unfamiliar dish. Visit the destination that feels a little harder to reach.

The edge of your comfort zone is often where the best travel memories live.

You do not have to become a different person. You just have to give yourself one good story.

Stop Letting Photos Run the Trip

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Photos matter, but memories matter more.

There is nothing wrong with wanting beautiful images, especially when you are visiting beautiful places. But when every decision becomes about the photo, the trip starts to shrink.

You may miss the quiet moment because you are chasing the perfect angle. You may overlook a meaningful experience because it does not look flashy online. You may spend more time documenting joy than actually feeling it.

Take the picture, then put the camera down.

Let the place be bigger than the post.

Build in Recovery Time

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This is the travel advice almost everyone needs but few people plan for.

Arrival day should not be overloaded. Departure day should not feel heroic. The day after a major excursion should allow for breathing room.

Travel takes energy. Airports, rental cars, time changes, weather, crowds, and constant decision-making add up quickly.

A trip with recovery time feels more luxurious, even when it costs exactly the same.

You are not failing at travel because you need rest. You are making room to enjoy it more fully.

The Right Guide Can Change Everything

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A great guide is not simply someone who shares facts.

A great guide translates a place.

They know when to go, where to stand, what to skip, what matters, and what you would never notice on your own. They can transform a landscape into a story, a meal into cultural understanding, or a wildlife sighting into something unforgettable.

Independent travel is wonderful, but guided experiences can add depth, safety, access, and ease.

The right expert often makes a trip more meaningful, not less authentic.

Go Where the Season Has Something to Say

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Every destination has a rhythm.

Some places sparkle in winter. Others come alive in summer. Some are best in the quiet shoulder seasons, when crowds thin and the destination exhales.

Instead of asking when it is most popular, ask when it feels most itself.

A ski town in summer can offer wildflowers, hiking trails, patio dining, and mountain air. A historic city in winter can feel atmospheric and romantic. A wilderness destination in shoulder season can feel even more intimate.

The calendar can be one of your most powerful travel tools.

Make the Trip Yours Before You Leave

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The best trips begin before the suitcase comes out.

Read a novel set there. Watch a documentary. Learn a few phrases. Study the food. Understand the geography. Learn what shaped the place before you arrive.

A little context makes everything richer.

You notice more. You ask better questions. You connect faster.

Travel becomes more than movement. It becomes understanding.

Final Thoughts: Better Travel Starts With Better Questions

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The vacation you think you want might be beautiful, popular, and perfectly respectable. But the trip you actually need may be quieter, deeper, wilder, slower, softer, or more personal.

That is often the trip worth taking.

Instead of asking where everyone else is going, ask what kind of experience will stay with you. Instead of building an itinerary that looks impressive, build one that feels alive. Instead of collecting places, collect moments that remind you why you wanted to leave home in the first place.

Because the best travel does not simply show you something new. It gives something back.

It offers wonder, perspective, courage, rest, and sometimes even a version of yourself you are very glad to meet.

Hi! We are Jenn and Ed Coleman aka Coleman Concierge. In a nutshell, we are a Huntsville-based Gen X couple sharing our stories of amazing adventures through activity-driven transformational and experiential travel.



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