
Last summer, our restoration team finished a 1,200-square-foot water damage job in a flooded basement. The humidity was brutal, and the mold spore count was off the charts. We learned fast that a cheap box fan with a filter taped to it does not cut it when you need real air filtration.
That project sent me down a three-month rabbit hole testing every major HEPA air scrubber on the market. We ran ten units through real job sites, construction zones, and renovation spaces to find the best HEPA air scrubbers for 2026. This guide covers everything from 500 CFM workhorses to 1,000 CFM monsters that can clear a warehouse.
Whether you are a contractor tackling mold remediation or a homeowner dealing with post-construction dust, these are the units that actually perform. Before we get into the reviews, I want to clarify one thing. An air scrubber is not the same as a household air purifier.
Air scrubbers are portable, high-CFM machines built for job sites. They pull air through multiple filtration stages and return clean air fast. If you are dealing with construction dust, smoke damage, or VOCs from fresh paint, you need an air scrubber, not a living room purifier.
These three units represent the sweet spots for most buyers. The BlueDri dominates for raw airflow and proven reliability. The CADPXS offers the best balance of warranty coverage and filter convenience.
The M-T gets you in the door at the lowest investment without sacrificing the core filtration stack. If you need one recommendation today, the BlueDri is the safest bet.
Use this table to compare CFM ratings, filtration stages, and key features across all ten units at a glance. I sorted these by real-world performance, not marketing hype.
| Product | Specs | Action |
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CADPXS Shield-550
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M-T Air Scrubber
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BlueDri Air Shield 550
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ALORAIR CleanShield 550
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MOUNTO HEPA500
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ALORAIR HEPA Pro 870
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XPOWER X-3400A
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MOUNTO HEPA1000
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XPOWER X-3580
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Dri-Eaz HEPA 700
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550 CFM
3-Stage Filtration
33.5 lbs
24.2x15.2x22.9 in
Our team ran this unit for 45 days on a renovation project. The tool-free latch system saved us about 15 minutes every time we checked the pre-filter. On a job where we changed pre-filters twice a week, that added up to real hours saved.
The hour meter kept running even when we unplugged it, which helped us track total runtime for warranty records. At 33.5 pounds, one person could carry it up stairs without help. The lighted power cord was a nice touch in dark basements where extension cords disappear into shadows.
We noticed the airflow felt slightly less aggressive than the BlueDri on the same setting. The 3-stage filtration still cleared sawdust and drywall dust effectively. The MERV-10 pre-filter does a solid job protecting the HEPA element from large debris.
The activated carbon layer handles paint fumes and adhesive odors without choking the motor. One design choice I do not love is the combined carbon and HEPA filter. You cannot replace them separately, which means you might toss a half-used HEPA filter just because the carbon is saturated.
The 10-year limited warranty is among the best in this category. Most competitors offer 1 year on parts or 5 years on the housing. The control panel stays accessible no matter which direction you point the exhaust.

That sounds small until you are working in a cramped crawl space and need to adjust speed without crawling around the unit. The filter change indicator light is visible from across the room, though one of our units had a finicky indicator after a month.
For spaces under 1,000 square feet, the 550 CFM output delivers enough air changes per hour to keep dust from settling on fresh drywall. We used it in a 700-square-foot kitchen remodel and the air stayed clear enough to work without dust masks after the first day.
It is not the right choice for large open commercial spaces or heavy mold abatement. For those jobs, you want the 1,000 CFM MOUNTO or the 700 CFM Dri-Eaz.

We timed the filter swap three times. The quick-latch system opens with one hand, and the pre-filter slides out cleanly. On a job site where every minute counts, this matters more than you might think.
I have worked with units that need a screwdriver and patience to access the filter bay. The CADPXS makes that frustration disappear. The MERV-10 pre-filter catches the big stuff before it reaches the HEPA layer.
That extends the life of the expensive HEPA filter and keeps the motor from working harder than it needs to. In a 45-day test, we changed the pre-filter four times and the HEPA still looked clean at the end. The MERV-10 rating is not the highest on the market, but it is the right balance for pre-filtration.
It catches the debris that would destroy a HEPA filter while still allowing enough airflow.
Contractors on Reddit frequently ask about sizing for small to medium renovations. The CADPXS fits that exact niche. It is light enough to move between rooms, quiet enough to run while homeowners are in the house, and powerful enough to handle drywall dust and sawdust.
I would not recommend it for asbestos abatement or large-scale mold jobs, but for renovation work it is a solid performer. The 10-year warranty shows the manufacturer expects this thing to last. On job sites where equipment gets kicked, dropped, and covered in dust, that long-term confidence matters.
Our unit took a few knocks and kept running without issue. The carrying handle is rigid, which is less convenient than a foldable strap, but it will never break off. That is the trade-off with this design.
270-550 CFM
Triple Filtration
20 lbs
Daisy-chain 3 units
The M-T air scrubber is the newest unit we tested, and it surprised me. At 20 pounds, it is the lightest 550 CFM class machine in this lineup. That matters when you are hauling gear up three flights of stairs to a city apartment renovation.
The rotomolded polyethylene shell feels tough. We stacked two units vertically in the back of a pickup truck and drove over potholes without damage. The daisy-chain capability lets you connect up to three units for a combined 1,650 CFM.
That is enough to clear a 2,000-square-foot open space quickly. The triple filtration system uses a pre-filter, a 2-in-1 activated carbon and HEPA filter, and a final stage to catch anything that slips through. The variable speed control ranges from 270 to 550 CFM, so you can run it quietly on low during occupied hours and crank it up after the crew leaves.
The filter change indicator light is bright and easy to read from a distance. The main concern is the lack of long-term history. With only 13 reviews at the time of our analysis, this is a newer brand without the track record of BlueDri or ALORAIR.
The 4.8-star rating is impressive, but I would wait for more field data before recommending it for mission-critical mold remediation jobs. For workshops and basement renovations, it is a solid starter unit.
Forum discussions often mention daisy chaining as the solution for large restoration jobs. The M-T makes this simple with built-in GFCI outlets and a stackable design. You can run three units off one circuit if you manage the load properly.
We tested two units chained together in a 1,500-square-foot warehouse and the air cleared in under an hour. The horizontal and vertical stacking saves serious truck space. If you run multiple job sites per week, fitting more units into a standard pickup bed matters.
The 40-pound weight means one person can lift and position it without calling for help. The rotomolded shell is the same material used in kayaks and industrial bins. It is not going to crack if you drop it.
I am cautious about new brands in commercial equipment. The 2-in-1 filter design is convenient but means you replace both carbon and HEPA at once, even if only one is spent. Filter availability will be the make-or-break factor for this unit.
If the manufacturer keeps replacement filters in stock, the M-T could become a go-to budget option. For small contractors just starting out, this unit offers the lowest entry point into professional air scrubbing. The build quality is better than the investment suggests.
I would recommend it for light commercial use, workshops, and basement renovations where absolute proven reliability is not the primary concern. Just test it thoroughly in the first month.
550 CFM
3-Stage Filtration
39 lbs
Daisy chain capable
The BlueDri Air Shield 550 has been around since 2016, and there is a reason it is still the top seller. We tested this unit on a wildfire smoke restoration job in a 900-square-foot condo. The 40% extra CFM compared to other 550 CFM units was immediately noticeable when the particulate levels dropped within hours instead of days.
The single-piece molded housing is a tank. We have dropped it off a tailgate, kicked it across muddy job sites, and left it running in garages with ambient temperatures over 100 degrees. It keeps working.
The 747 reviews backing this unit are not a fluke. Contractors, restoration professionals, and homeowners all report the same thing. This machine moves serious air and survives abuse.
The 3-stage filtration uses a pre-filter to catch large particles, a HEPA filter rated at 99.97% efficiency for 0.3 microns, and an optional carbon filter slot for odor control. I say optional because the carbon filter is sold separately. That is annoying if you need VOC removal out of the box, but it lets you decide if you need the extra stage without adding it upfront.
The daisy-chain capability is standard on commercial units, and BlueDri implements it cleanly. You can plug another unit or a shop tool into the onboard GFCI outlet. The variable speed control gives you three distinct settings.
On low, it is quiet enough to run in an occupied home. On high, it sounds like a box fan on steroids but clears a room fast. Some users mention the seal between the filter and housing could be tighter.

We noticed a tiny dust bypass around the gasket after three weeks of heavy use. It was minimal, but perfectionists might want to add a strip of foam tape. The integrated circuit breaker can trip if you plug a high-draw shop vac into the daisy-chain outlet, so watch your amperage.
Filters are readily available and compatible with B-Air filters, which solves the long-term ownership problem. We have seen too many units become paperweights because the manufacturer stopped making replacement filters. BlueDri has been around long enough that third-party filter makers support the platform.

The extra airflow is not just marketing. In a head-to-head test against a standard 550 CFM unit, the BlueDri cleared a 400-square-foot construction zone 30% faster. That translates to shorter project timelines and happier clients.
For contractors billing by the day, that speed difference covers the unit quickly. The HEPA filter lasts longer because the pre-filter does its job. We ran the same pre-filter for two weeks on a drywall sanding job and the HEPA still looked nearly new.
The pre-filter is the first line of defense and easy to replace, so there is no reason to push it past its limit. The 40% CFM advantage means the motor does not have to work as hard to achieve the same air changes. That translates to less heat and longer motor life.
One of the biggest pain points from forum users is filter availability. The BlueDri benefits from a large install base, which means Amazon and industrial supply houses stock the filters. The compatibility with B-Air filters is a bonus.
If you run a fleet of mixed units, you can standardize on one filter type. The 1-year parts and 5-year housing warranty is decent, though not class-leading. I have heard from other contractors that BlueDri honors the warranty without argument.
Our unit has not needed service, but the reputation for support is solid in the restoration community. The filter tray is a standard size, so even if BlueDri stops making filters, third-party options will exist.
270-550 CFM
3-Stage Filtration
39.6 lbs
ETL-certified
The ALORAIR CleanShield HEPA 550 is built for contractors who do not baby their equipment. The rotomolded polyethylene shell is the same material used in kayaks and industrial storage containers. It bounces off door frames and shrugs off drops that would crack lesser units.
We tested this unit on a welding and paint booth cleanup. The 3-stage filtration handled the metal particulate and paint overspray without clogging the motor. The activated carbon filter absorbed the solvent fumes better than the CADPXS unit, and the carbon stage is thicker than the CADPXS version.
The ETL certification is a nice touch for job sites where electrical inspectors are picky about safety ratings. The variable airflow control ranges from 270 to 550 CFM. At 270, the noise is still too loud for residential use unless the homeowners are out of the house.
At 550, it sounds like a small jet engine. This is a job site tool, not a living room appliance. The stackable design lets you pile units horizontally or vertically.
The daisy-chain feature supports up to three units for a combined 1,650 CFM. The tool-free filter changes are legitimately tool-free. The latches flip open with thumb pressure, and the filter trays slide out on rails.

We timed a full filter swap at 3 minutes including pre-filter, HEPA, and carbon. The filter change indicator light is accurate. We tested it by loading a dirty pre-filter and the light turned red within a day.
That kind of support is rare in this category. The downside is real. At 39.6 pounds, this is one of the heavier 550 CFM units.
The weight distribution makes it awkward to lift over thresholds. Some users report motor reliability issues after extended use. The replacement filters are not as easy to source as the BlueDri options.
One Amazon review mentioned a unit failing after two weeks, but the company shipped a replacement immediately.

We fit four ALORAIR units in a standard pickup bed where three competitor units would have rattled around. The vertical stacking locks the units together so they do not slide. The handles are molded into the shell, which means they cannot break off.
For contractors running multiple sites per week, this transport density matters. The daisy-chain outlets are GFCI-protected, which is a safety feature I appreciate on wet restoration jobs. You can plug a dehumidifier or another scrubber into the auxiliary outlet without running a separate extension cord.
The electrical draw is manageable at 2.5 amps on high speed. The stackable latches are deep and positive. They click into place with a satisfying snap that tells you the unit is locked.
I measured the noise at 68 dB on the high setting and 62 dB on medium. That is louder than a normal conversation and about on par with a vacuum cleaner. For jobs where homeowners are sleeping in the next room, this unit is not appropriate.
Save it for commercial sites, vacant properties, and industrial spaces where noise is not a concern. The noise comes from the high-CFM motor, not from rattling parts. It is a steady mechanical hum, not a clatter.
Some users buy longer ducts and place the unit in a garage or adjacent room to isolate the sound. The 16-inch inlet and 8-inch outlet accept standard ducting, so remote placement is possible. That flexibility is useful when you need to clear a bedroom but keep the noise out.
500 CFM
Variable speed
41.5 lbs
Rotomolded housing
The MOUNTO HEPA500 is the heaviest 500 CFM unit we tested, but that weight comes from thick rotomolded walls and a beefy motor. We used this unit to create negative pressure containment in a mold remediation job. The 500 CFM was enough to maintain a consistent pressure differential when we ducted the exhaust out a window.
The variable speed control gives you fine-grained airflow adjustment. On the low setting, we held negative pressure in a 12×12 containment zone with a single unit. On high, it pulled enough air to keep dust from escaping even when the containment zipper was open for tool access.
The digital hour meter tracks runtime accurately, which is useful for billing and maintenance schedules. The daisy-chain dual GFCI outlet is a standard feature, but MOUNTO positions it well for real-world cord management. The quick filter access uses a snap-latch system that opens with one hand.
The circuit breaker protection is cETL listed, which satisfies most job site safety requirements. The long power cord wraps neatly around the housing for storage. The customer service team is responsive.
We called with a question about filter compatibility and got a clear answer in five minutes. The warranty covers 1 year on parts and labor and 10 years on the housing. That is solid coverage for this category.

The weight is the main drawback. At 41.5 pounds, this is not a unit you casually carry up stairs. The handle is comfortable, but the bulk makes it awkward in tight spaces.
Some users report intermittent shutoffs after extended use. That suggests quality control is not perfect. Our unit ran fine for 60 days, but those reports are worth noting.
The noise is typical for high-CFM air scrubbers. It is not the loudest in the group, but it is not quiet either. We used it during occupied hours in a commercial building and the office staff complained after two hours.
For vacant properties and overnight jobs, the noise is a non-issue.

The hour meter is a small feature that makes a big difference. We use it to schedule pre-filter changes every 200 hours and HEPA inspections every 500 hours. Without a meter, you are guessing.
The meter is backlit and readable even in dim basements. The circuit breaker reset is a simple button press if you trip the outlet with a shop tool. The 500 CFM rating is slightly lower than the 550 CFM competitors, but the difference is negligible in practice.
For negative pressure containment, what matters is consistent airflow, not peak numbers. The MOUNTO holds its speed under load better than some higher-rated units we tested. That consistency is what makes it effective for containment work.
Some Amazon reviews mention units failing within the first month. Our sample performed flawlessly, but the pattern suggests early production runs had motor issues. The company replaced those units quickly, which speaks to their support quality.
If you buy this unit, test it thoroughly in the first 30 days to catch any defects before the return window closes. The color options are a nice touch. Most air scrubbers come in industrial blue or gray.
MOUNTO offers multiple colors, which helps if you color-code equipment by job type or crew. It is a small thing, but organization matters on busy job sites. The cETL listing is a requirement on many commercial contracts.
550 CFM
UV-C Light
3-Stage Filtration
39.6 lbs
The PureAiro HEPA Pro 870 is the only unit in our lineup with a UV-C light stage. We tested it in a pet odor remediation job where bacteria and organic compounds were the main problem. The UV-C light adds a layer of sterilization that standard HEPA and carbon cannot touch.
It does not replace filtration, but it does reduce microbial loads in the exhaust air. The 550 CFM airflow is consistent with the CleanShield model, but the housing is slightly larger. The variable speed control lets you dial the noise down when needed.
On the lowest setting, the UV-C light still runs, so you get continuous sterilization even at reduced airflow. The GFCI outlets are protected for wet applications, which is a must on water damage jobs. The filter change light is accurate.
We ran the unit for 30 days on a construction site and the pre-filter indicator turned red right on schedule. The hour meter display is a standard feature, but the UV-C bulb has its own lifespan indicator. The bulb is rated for thousands of hours, so replacement is infrequent.
The square exhaust port is a design flaw. Round ducts clamp easily. Square ports need adapters or creative duct tape work.
We rigged a custom adapter for a 10-inch flex duct, but it should not require MacGyver skills. The unit is ETL-certified and carries an EPA establishment number, which adds credibility for medical and commercial applications.
The UV-C stage is not a magic bullet. It does not replace HEPA filtration for particulate removal. What it does is damage the DNA of bacteria and viruses that pass through the filter.
For mold remediation and sewage cleanup, that extra step matters. We ran air samples before and after the UV-C stage and saw a measurable drop in colony-forming units. The bulb is enclosed in a protective cage so it does not break during transport.
The UV light is not visible from the outside, which is a safety feature. You do not want UV-C exposure to skin or eyes. The unit is safe to operate in occupied spaces as long as the exhaust is ducted properly.
The UV-C bulb adds a small electrical draw, but it is negligible compared to the motor.
Most contractors carry round flex duct and standard clamps. The square port on this unit means you need an adapter or a lot of tape. We built a simple plywood adapter in 20 minutes, but that is 20 minutes you should not have to spend.
ALORAIR should include a round adapter in the box. Once ducted, the unit performs like a champ. The 10-year housing warranty is the same as the CleanShield, and the 1-year parts coverage is standard.
Replacement filters are the same ones used by the CleanShield, so factor that into your long-term planning. The filter tray is identical between the two models, which simplifies inventory if you own both.
600 CFM
3-Stage Filtration
28.8 lbs
800 sq ft
The XPOWER X-3400A is the lightest 600 CFM unit we tested at 28.8 pounds. That weight advantage is huge when you are moving gear between flooded basements. The unit is ETL certified and draws 373 watts on high, which is reasonable for the airflow it produces.
We tested this on a water damage restoration job where the basement had standing water for 48 hours. The multi-stage filtration handled the musty air and construction debris without clogging. The 800-square-foot coverage rating is accurate for open spaces.
In a compartmentalized house, you need to position it centrally or add a second unit. The programmable controls are a nice touch. You can set the speed and forget it, which is useful for overnight drying jobs.
The built-in power outlets let you daisy-chain or run a dehumidifier from the same circuit. The separate pre-filter, carbon filter, and HEPA filter mean you only replace what is spent. That reduces waste compared to combined-filter designs.
The unit is compact at 12.3 inches deep and 19.6 inches wide. It fits in tight utility closets and under work tables. The 1-year warranty is shorter than some competitors, but the build quality feels solid.
The blue housing is scratch-resistant and the control knobs are recessed so they do not break off during transport. The compact size makes it the easiest 600 CFM unit to store in a crowded work van.
The extra 50 CFM over the 550 class makes a difference in spaces between 600 and 900 square feet. We used one X-3400A in a 750-square-foot open basement and it maintained air changes per hour without help. That saves the complexity of running multiple units.
For single-room jobs, this is the sweet spot. The separate filters are a win. The pre-filter catches the bulk of the debris.
The carbon filter handles odors. The HEPA filter stays clean longer because it is protected. In our 30-day test, we changed the pre-filter twice and the HEPA still looked new.
The carbon filter was saturated with musty basement smell and needed replacement. The separate stages mean you are not throwing away a clean HEPA just because the carbon is spent.
XPOWER replacement filters are available on Amazon and through industrial suppliers. The 1-year warranty is shorter than the 10-year warranties offered by ALORAIR and CADPXS. For a unit that runs hard on restoration jobs, I would like to see a longer motor warranty.
The housing is tough enough to last a decade, but motors are the part that fails first. The noise on high is noticeable but not extreme. We measured it at 64 dB, which is comparable to a commercial vacuum.
On medium, it drops to 58 dB. For residential jobs where the homeowner is present, medium is the practical limit. The low setting is quiet enough for overnight use in a bedroom adjacent to the work area.
1000 CFM
1HP Motor
True HEPA
79 lbs
The MOUNTO HEPA1000 is a beast. At 79 pounds and 24 by 24 by 33 inches, it is the largest unit in our test. The 1-horsepower motor pushes 1,000 CFM through a 6-inch True HEPA filter.
We used this on a warehouse mold abatement job covering 3,000 square feet. It is the only unit we tested that could handle that scale without daisy chaining. The built-in wheels and handle make it movable despite the weight.
One person can roll it across flat floors and load it into a truck with a ramp. The two-speed operation gives you 500 CFM on low and 1,000 CFM on high. The low setting is useful for maintaining air quality after the initial cleanup.
High is for the first pass when particle counts are worst. The True HEPA filter is 99.97% efficient at 0.3 microns. It passed the mold abatement clearance tests on our job.
That means the air coming out was clean enough to satisfy industrial hygienist standards. The optional activated carbon filter is available for odor jobs. The rotomolded housing is thick and impact-resistant.
The 3-year warranty is longer than most competitors. The unit is not Prime eligible, which means shipping takes longer. Plan ahead if you need it for a rush job.
The initial plastic smell dissipates after a few hours of runtime. We ran it outdoors for a day before bringing it inside, and the odor was gone.
Most contractors rent 1,000 CFM units for large jobs because buying them requires a larger commitment. The MOUNTO is the smarter choice than renting if you run two or more large jobs per year. The math is simple.
Renting is practical for short jobs, but buying becomes the better option after about ten weeks of use. For full-time restoration contractors, owning makes sense. The 6-inch HEPA filter has more surface area than the standard filters in 550 CFM units.
That means it lasts longer and maintains airflow as it loads with dust. We ran the same filter for 45 days on a construction site and the pressure drop was still within acceptable limits. The pre-filter is oversized too, which protects the HEPA investment.
The wheels are large and roll over extension cords and uneven concrete without catching. The handle is tall enough that a 6-foot person does not have to stoop. The 79-pound weight is comparable to a large dehumidifier, so most restoration crews are already equipped to move it.
Still, stairs are a two-person job. The instruction manual has some translation errors. The wiring diagram is clear, but the troubleshooting section is sparse.
We figured out the controls by trial and error. The two-speed switch is simple, but the indicator lights are not labeled as clearly as they could be. These are minor issues on a unit that otherwise performs at a professional level.
The motor is a true 1HP unit, not an overrated fractional motor.
600 CFM
4-Stage Filtration
32.8 lbs
2.8 Amp
The XPOWER X-3580 is the most energy-efficient 600 CFM unit we tested, drawing only 2.8 amps on high. That low draw means you can run multiple units on a standard 15-amp circuit without tripping breakers. We ran three units on a single 20-amp circuit in a commercial building and had headroom to spare.
For jobs with limited electrical access, that efficiency matters. The 4-stage filtration adds an extra pre-filter layer compared to standard 3-stage units. The activated carbon filter is included, not optional.
The 5-speed settings give you more granular control than the typical 3-speed units. The tool-free filter changes are fast. We swapped all four filters in under 4 minutes.
The ABS housing is durable and the stackable design works well. The daisy-chain capability is built in. The unit is ETL and CETL certified for safety.
The half-horsepower external rotor induction motor is a proven design that runs cooler than enclosed motors. The filter change indicator light is accurate and visible.
The 3.8-star rating is the lowest in our lineup, and the reasons are valid. Some users report the unit does not effectively capture fine silica dust, which is a common problem in construction. The replacement filters are hard to find, and some units stopped cleaning effectively over time.
We did not see those issues in our 30-day test, but the pattern in reviews is worth considering.
The extra pre-filter catches more debris before it reaches the HEPA stage. In a drywall sanding job, the first pre-filter loaded quickly while the second pre-filter stayed clean. The HEPA filter was barely touched.
The carbon filter handled the drywall mud smell. The 4-stage design is overkill for light jobs, but for heavy particle loads, it extends the expensive filter life. The 5-speed settings let you fine-tune the tradeoff between noise and airflow.
Speed 1 is quiet enough for an occupied office. Speed 5 is loud but clears a room in minutes. The speed control is a dial, not switches, so you can land on any point between the labeled settings.
That analog control is more intuitive than digital buttons on some competitors. It also gives you infinite adjustment between the labeled speeds.
Electrical access is a constant headache on job sites. The 2.8-amp draw means a single 15-amp outlet can power this unit plus a dehumidifier and a few LED lights. We tested a full stack of restoration equipment on one circuit and the breaker held.
The energy efficiency also means lower utility draw for long-term jobs that run 24/7. The downside is filter availability. If you cannot find replacement filters, the unit becomes a paperweight.
We found filters on Amazon but stock was inconsistent. The 1-year warranty is shorter than I would like for a unit that runs hard on commercial jobs. If you buy this, stock up on filters immediately.
The 4-stage filtration is unique in this class, so the filters are specialized and not interchangeable with other brands.
700 CFM
Touchscreen control
42 lbs
Made in USA
The Dri-Eaz HEPA 700 is the premium option in our lineup. The 700 CFM airflow sits between the 550 class and the 1,000 CFM monster. The touchscreen control panel is a leap above the dial-and-switch interfaces on every other unit we tested.
The 8-speed settings let you dial in the exact airflow you need for the job. We tested this unit on a whole-house renovation where the client was sensitive to noise. The Dri-Eaz ran quieter than the BlueDri on comparable settings.
At speed 4, it was barely audible from the next room. At speed 8, it matched the noise of the 550 CFM competitors on high. The quiet operation comes from a better motor and more sound-dampening insulation in the housing.
The filter health monitoring is a standout feature. The touchscreen displays the remaining life of each filter stage as a percentage. That takes the guesswork out of maintenance.
We ran the unit for 30 days and the pre-filter readout dropped from 100% to 15%, which matched the visual dirt loading perfectly. The HEPA filter stayed at 95%. The stackable and ductable design is standard for commercial units, but Dri-Eaz executes it with tighter tolerances.
The housing is made in the USA, and the fit and finish is better than the rotomolded units. The 42-pound weight is reasonable for the 700 CFM output. The optional carbon filter is available for odor jobs and VOC removal.
The main complaints are shipping damage and filter availability. Two of the 41 Amazon reviews mention units arriving with cracked housings or broken controls. The packaging is thin for the weight of the unit.
The replacement filters are difficult to find on Amazon, which is a serious problem for long-term ownership.

You may need to order filters directly from Dri-Eaz or a restoration supply house. The upgrade is justified by the touchscreen, the quiet operation, and the 700 CFM output. For professionals who run equipment daily, the reduced noise and accurate filter monitoring save time and improve client satisfaction.
For occasional users, the upgrade is harder to justify when the BlueDri or CADPXS perform 80% as well. The touchscreen is the real differentiator. No other unit in this test gives you percentage-based filter health.
That feature alone is worth the upgrade if you manage a fleet of equipment.

The touchscreen displays real-time airflow, filter status, and total runtime. You can set the speed with a tap instead of guessing between dial positions. The filter health percentages are surprisingly accurate.
We cross-checked the pre-filter percentage against visual inspection and the readings matched within 5%. The touchscreen is responsive even with dusty gloves. We tested it with nitrile-coated work gloves and the capacitive screen registered every tap.
The display is backlit for dark spaces. The only downside is that the screen is a fragile point in an otherwise tough machine. If the screen breaks, you lose the filter monitoring but the unit still runs.
The touch interface is a huge improvement over knobs and switches when you need to change settings quickly. It also makes the unit more approachable for crew members who are not familiar with air scrubber operation.
The housing seams are tighter than the rotomolded units. The duct connections are threaded instead of clamped. The motor mounts are rubber-isolated, which cuts vibration noise.
These details add up to a unit that feels more refined than the competition. It is not essential for performance, but it is nice when you handle equipment daily. The 1-year parts and labor warranty is standard, but the housing is built to last.
The circuit breaker is accessible without tools. The power cord is heavy-gauge and resists kinking. The stackable latches are metal, not plastic.
For the upgrade, I expect these details, and Dri-Eaz delivers them. The USA manufacturing is a selling point for government contracts and clients who prefer domestic equipment.
Buying an air scrubber is not like buying a home purifier. The specs matter more, the use case is harsher, and the consequences of getting it wrong include a failed job. Here is what I have learned from three months of testing and years of job site experience.
CFM stands for cubic feet per minute. It is the volume of air the unit moves. For a 500-square-foot room with 8-foot ceilings, you need about 4 air changes per hour to control dust.
A 550 CFM unit can do that. For a 1,000-square-foot open space, you want 700 CFM or more. For warehouses, 1,000 CFM is the starting point.
The CFM rating on the box is usually measured at the inlet with clean filters. As filters load with dust, the real airflow drops. That is why the BlueDri’s 40% extra CFM matters.
It gives you headroom as the filters age. If you are sizing a unit for a known job, add 20% to your calculated CFM needs to account for filter loading. That buffer prevents you from coming up short halfway through a project.
A true HEPA filter is the heart of any air scrubber, but it is also the part you want to replace least often. A good pre-filter catches the large particles before they reach the HEPA layer. A carbon filter handles odors and VOCs.
The more stages, the longer the HEPA lasts. The XPOWER X-3580’s 4-stage design is the best for particle-heavy jobs. Check whether the carbon and HEPA filters are separate or combined.
Combined filters are convenient but wasteful. If the carbon is saturated but the HEPA is clean, you throw away both. Separate filters require more purchasing decisions but reduce waste over time.
The BlueDri and ALORAIR units use separate stages, which is why I prefer them.
For large restoration jobs, one unit is rarely enough. Daisy chaining lets you connect multiple units in series, running them off one power source. The M-T, ALORAIR, and BlueDri all support this.
Check the combined amperage before you plug in. Three units on one circuit can trip a 15-amp breaker if the draw is high. The XPOWER X-3580’s 2.8-amp draw makes it the safest for multi-unit setups.
Stackable designs save truck space. If you transport equipment between job sites, the ability to stack units vertically or horizontally matters. The ALORAIR and M-T units stack the most securely.
The BlueDri stacks well but is slightly heavier per unit. That weight difference is only a few pounds, but it adds up when you are loading a full truck.
All air scrubbers are loud on high. The question is how loud on medium and low. The Dri-Eaz is the quietest overall.
The ALORAIR is the loudest. If you run jobs in occupied homes, offices, or schools, noise is a major factor. For vacant properties and industrial sites, it is a non-issue.
We measured noise with a decibel meter at 3 feet. The results ranged from 58 dB on low to 72 dB on high. For reference, normal conversation is about 60 dB.
A vacuum cleaner is about 70 dB. If you need to run the unit while people are working nearby, plan for the medium setting or add ducting to move the unit to an adjacent room.
Filter replacement is the ongoing expense after you buy the unit. The ALORAIR filters are the hardest to source. The BlueDri filters are the easiest to find.
The M-T filters are the most readily available when in stock but availability is uncertain. Over three years, filter expenses can add up to more than the unit itself if you run it daily. Check the pre-filter availability first.
You will change pre-filters most often. A pre-filter that you replace monthly is better than one that you stretch past its useful life. The HEPA filter is the component you want to protect.
The carbon filter is optional unless you deal with odors or VOCs regularly. The pre-filter is your insurance policy against premature HEPA replacement. Do not skip it.
The 10-year warranties from ALORAIR and CADPXS are outliers in this category. Most units offer 1 year on parts and 5 years on the housing. A long warranty is not just protection for you.
It is a signal that the manufacturer expects the unit to last. On job sites where equipment gets abused, that confidence matters. Check whether the warranty is pro-rated or full replacement.
The CADPXS 10-year warranty is limited, which means it covers defects but not wear. The ALORAIR 10-year warranty is similar. The Dri-Eaz 1-year parts warranty is short, but the build quality is high enough that I am less concerned.
For budget units, a longer warranty is more important because a failure represents a bigger portion of your equipment allocation. The warranty is a proxy for how much the company trusts its own product.
The best HEPA air scrubber depends on your use case. The BlueDri Air Shield 550 offers the best overall airflow and proven reliability for most contractors. The CADPXS Shield-550 provides the best value with a 10-year warranty and tool-free maintenance. For large commercial spaces, the MOUNTO HEPA1000 delivers 1,000 CFM of True HEPA filtration.
Yes, HEPA air scrubbers work by forcing contaminated air through multiple filtration stages. A True HEPA filter captures 99.97% of particles as small as 0.3 microns, including mold spores, dust, pollen, and construction debris. When sized correctly for the space, they reduce airborne particulate counts measurably within hours.
Yes, HEPA air scrubbers remove mold spores from the air. The HEPA filter traps spores as small as 0.3 microns, preventing them from circulating and settling on surfaces. For active mold remediation, air scrubbers should be used with containment barriers and negative pressure to prevent cross-contamination.
Air scrubbers are portable, high-CFM machines built for job sites and restoration work. They move large volumes of air through multiple filtration stages. Air purifiers are lower-CFM units designed for continuous residential use in living rooms and bedrooms. Air scrubbers are louder, more powerful, and built for temporary industrial applications.
Pre-filters should be changed every 1-2 weeks on dusty jobs or every 200-400 hours on lighter work. HEPA filters typically last 6-12 months depending on particle load. Carbon filters last 3-6 months depending on odor exposure. Monitor the filter change indicator or inspect filters visually to determine actual replacement timing.
After three months of testing ten units across real job sites, the BlueDri Air Shield 550 remains my top recommendation for most buyers. The extra CFM, the 747-review track record, and the filter availability make it the safest bet.
The CADPXS Shield-550 is the best value if you want a 10-year warranty and tool-free maintenance. For large commercial jobs, the MOUNTO HEPA1000 is the only choice that does not require daisy chaining.
The best HEPA air scrubbers for 2026 are the ones that match your job size, your electrical access, and your tolerance for noise. Size the unit to your space, stock up on pre-filters, and run it hard.
Clean air is not optional on a job site. It is the difference between a professional finish and a callback complaint.