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Dyson Purifier Cool TP07 Review

A smart, stylish fan-plus-purifier that cools and cuts household dust/odours—great for homes, not for fast smoke clearance.

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Editor

Dyson Purifier Cool TP07 Review

Purifier Cool TP07 Review

The TP07 is the buy-if-you-want-one-device-that-cools-and-cleans: at £599 it delivers real bladeless airflow, sealed H13 filtration and 350° coverage, but it won’t clear smoke as fast as a high‑CADR standalone purifier.


The quick answer

This is for homeowners who want a tidy, smart appliance that both cools a room and meaningfully reduces dust, pollen and household smells. It’s worth the £599 if you prioritise even-room circulation, app/voice control and a compact footprint; our score: 7.2/10.


What we tested

We evaluated the white Purifier Cool TP07 in a 25–30 m² living room for six weeks, running Auto and fan modes for daytime use and Sleep at night while noting perceived airflow, noise and visible dust reduction.


What it does well

Even-room distribution The 350° oscillation and Dyson Air Multiplier design push air farther than box-style purifiers; in tests you feel airflow reaching corners most tower purifiers miss.

Real cooling airflow Dyson lists up to 290 L/s in fan mode — that’s noticeably stronger, and noticeably cooler-feeling, than typical purifier-only units that barely move air.

Sealed H13 filtration The 360° sealed H13 HEPA plus activated carbon filter captures fine particles (Dyson claims up to 99.95% down to 0.1 µm) and reduces household odours in one replaceable cartridge.

Smart, low-effort operation MyDyson app, Auto mode, voice assistant support and the hidden LCD make monitoring and scheduling painless compared with manual-only purifiers.

Quieter night operation (mostly) Sleep mode and low-speed settings are genuinely quieter for bedrooms, though noise character varies by setting.


Where it falls short

Slower at clearing heavy pollution Purifier-mode airflow is around 45 L/s (Dyson spec), much lower than high‑CADR options like Philips’ 3000/3200-series (≈520 m³/h ≈ 144 L/s). If you need fast removal during wildfire smoke or a heavy indoor source, this isn’t the tool for the job.

Occasional high‑pitched whine at low speeds A minority of owners report a high, whistling tone at lower fan settings; if you’re a sensitive sleeper, test the unit before committing it to a bedroom.

Ongoing filter cost Dyson recommends replacing the combined HEPA/carbon filter roughly every 12 months — predictable, but an annual recurring cost to budget for.


How it compares

The closest competitor is the Philips 3000/3200 series (high CADR ~520 m³/h). Pick the Dyson TP07 if you want a single attractive device that actually cools and quietly circulates purified air across a room; pick the Philips if your priority is the fastest, clinical air clearance for smoke or heavy particulate events.

Products in this article

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