Desk, Tower & Smart Fans To Keep You Cool

Summer may seem like a faint glimmer of hope on the horizon but if you don’t have your fan situation sorted out, now is the time to buy. Don’t wait for a sweltering day, when prices will rise with the temperature.

We’ve tested, reviewed and rated desk fans, bladeless fans, standing fans, tower, column, intelligent, smart and hybrid fans.

If you’re not sure exactly what kind of fan will suit you best, skip past the chart and read our buying advice first. Otherwise, read on for our recommendations. We have options for all budgets.

You may also want to check out our round up of the best budget cooling products.

Best fan reviews

Dyson Pure Hot+Cool – Most versatile

This is the ultimate fan because, as the name suggests, the Pure Hot+Cool is three machines in one: a fan, a heater and an air purifier. So you won’t be putting this into the loft for half the year, which is a real boon.

Its useful little LCD screen gives you real-time information about your air quality, as well as basic details such as fan speed and temperature.

This is a Dyson so there’s plenty of clever tech and features packed in. With the magnetic remote control you can adjust all sorts of settings, from fan speed to the 350 degree oscillation. There are loads of handy modes including night mode for quiet operation and diffuse, which pumps air out of the back.

You can also hook your phone up with the Dyson Link app to control the fan even more remotely, as well as receiving lots of useful information. You can set timers and even set the fan going when you’re not at home to cool (or warm) a room in time for your arrival.

Read our full Dyson Pure Hot+Cool review

Princess smart heating and cooling tower

This powerful, two-in-one heating and cooling appliance can stand in your living room year-round. It has a small footprint for a heater/ fan of this kind (the diameter of its base is less than 75cm), although at 102cm, it’s tall. It’s attractive as well, with a slim, bladeless design that should complement most modern settings – plus a choice of black or white colourways.

It’s ready to use straight out of the box, with no assembly required. But to get the most of it, you’ll want to download the HomeWizard Climate app. Once set up (which was easy in our test), you can control it via your phone, set schedules, or set up voice commands for Google Assistant, Alexa or Siri. It also comes with a remote control.

There are 10 fan settings, four heat settings, an oscillation option and three modes: natural (which varies the airflow), normal and sleep (which gradually reduces its intensity). 

There’s also an inbuilt thermostat, which allows you to set a target temperature. When the air around the tower reaches this threshold, the heater will shut off. It’ll come back on again when the temperature dips.  

There’s also a timer, which you can set in increments of one hour, for up to 24 hours.

On the minus side, the cooling fan does get noisy on higher levels – much more so than a traditional circular fan. 

Read our full Princess Smart Heating and Cooling Tower review

Bionaire Standing Floor Fan – Dual blades

This Bionaire is similar to the Honeywell QuietSet, offering you a large floor-standing fan without breaking the bank.

Considering the price, this is a well-made and stylish fan, with plenty of features. We found it easy to build and we liked the fact that it’s not stark white like so many rivals on the market. The silvery-grey finish looks far more modern.

You’ll need space for a fan this size but the Bionaire BASF1016 may be worth it for its dual blade sets. The larger blade handles wide circulation, while the smaller one offers a more concentrated flow. Overall, this gives you 20% more air flow, according to the brand.

The fan is height adjustable, has a wide oscillation area and can be manually tilted up and down. You have three fan speeds to choose from and there’s also a timer which can be set for up to eight hours.

This can all be controlled with the supplied remote, but there are also buttons on the fan itself. Last but not least are the breeze and sleep modes which ‘simulate natural airflow’. We didn’t find the sleep one particularly helpful as it cycles between the fan speeds which tended to disturb sleep rather than aid it.

NSA UK Touch Safe Intelligent Fan – Touch safe technology

I didn’t think I was going to be a fan (haha) of the NSA Touch Safe Intelligent Fan (SFDC-30213RC) when I opened the box and realised I’d have to assemble it. That’s never a good start in my book. However, the instructions were clear and it only took a few minutes to set up.

The fan is white and its design is pretty standard, although not unattractive. It has a control panel in its base, with an LED display and an illuminated fan speed dial. It also comes with a remote, which clips onto the fan column when not in use. The fan head can be set in one of six positions, from vertical to horizontal (so you can have it pointing straight up to increase airflow in the room, without disturbing any occupants) and the fan column can be adjusted in ten increments from 80cm to 111cm.

As soon as I switched it on, I was impressed. This fan is exceptionally quiet, very powerful and has some fantastic features.

As the name suggests, the fan will stop immediately if it’s touched, which means it’s safer for children. However, the system isn’t flawless. If your child doesn’t touch the fan with their hand but instead sticks something through the fan guard, it won’t stop.

There is another childproof feature though, which is the child lock. Set it and the given programme can’t be changed, no matter how much button mashing is done, until the child lock is taken off.

It also has a motion/ body sensor, which is very cool. If you leave the area, it’ll go into standby mode and come back on when you return. The sensor isn’t perfect – the manual itself says that it is affected by temperature – but it worked very well overall.

It also has all of the features you’d expect: it oscillates, it has an eco (power saving) mode, a breeze mode that emulates natural airflow, a night mode that gradually slows the fan speed over the course of several hours and a turbo mode.  

And not only does it have a timer, it has two that can be set in tandem, so you can programme two cycles of use.

Russell Hobbs 12 inch Scandi fan – Attractive and budget-friendly

The Russell Hobbs 12-inch Scandi desk fan is a straightforward, easy to use device with a carry handle on top for portability. Best of all, it’s reasonably priced.

It’s a near full-size fan, minus the column and pedestal (it stands 46cm high and is 35cm wide) and it comes in black, white or grey, with wood-effect blades. Its retro design is more aesthetically pleasing than many of its more functional-looking competitors and it makes a useful and attractive addition to a shelf or desk.

It’s a powerful fan that you could use to cool yourself, a small room or a decent chunk of a larger one. It has three speeds that range from light to strong airflow. The lowest setting won’t disturb your sleep so you can stand it on a night table and get a good night’s rest. You can have it fixed in one spot or oscillating. It also tilts, but only by a few degrees, so its vertical range is a bit limited.

You’ll need to assemble it but that’s easy to do – although you’ll need a small, Phillips-head screwdriver to fit a single screw, which in my case took a bit of patience. Once assembled, however, the fan is sturdy.

AirGo Smart Fan – Smart features

If you’re on the market for a new fan and want to integrate it into your smart home setup, the AirGo Smart Fan is the ideal option. There are a variety of standard features available, including a smart mode that’ll simulate the ebb and flow of a natural breeze. Still, it’s the unique smart features, such as the ability to control the fan via a smartphone app and virtual assistants like Alexa and Google Assistant, that really steal the show.

As a fan, it works perfectly, with 16in blades providing consistent, powerful airflow, and it’s surprisingly quiet in operation too. But if you aren’t interested in the smart features available, you could save yourself a lot of money by going for one of the ‘dumb’ pedestal fans in our chart instead.

Read our full GeoSmartPro AirGo Smart Fan review

Dyson Pure Cool Me – Best personal fan

The Dyson Pure Cool Me is a desk/bedside fan that up-ends Dyson’s bladeless fan design for a new look that’s better at focusing blasts of purified air directly at your face, rather than all around the room.

The omission of smart support is a shame, but ultimately makes sense when it comes to keeping the cost from getting too prohibitive, although the Pure Cool Me is still as expensive as you’d expect from Dyson.

Whether it’s worth it for you will depend on how worried you are about air purification, and how much space you have. If you’ve got a big desk and want a fan you can point at your face without worrying about blowing anything else around, this is probably the best around.

On the other hand, if you’re more constrained for space or want a fan to cool a couple of people, or even a small room, you won’t be enjoying the Pure Cool Me’s strengths, and you’ll be better off looking at one of Dyson’s older desk fans – or just a cheaper model from elsewhere.

Read our full Dyson Pure Cool Me review

Dyson Pure Cool Tower Fan – Combined air purifier

Whether you’re interested in the Pure Cool because you want an air purifier, or just want a Dyson fan and are willing to spend the extra cash for the air purification features, the Pure Cool tower is fairly easy to recommend.

Designed to filter a variety of different types of pollutant, the Pure Cool will also give you real-time feedback on the current air quality, courtesy of both a small built-in display, and the connected smartphone app – which you can also use as a remote control.

You get lots of options to tweak power and oscillation, a scheduler, a quieter nighttime mode, and even the option to blast the air backwards – essentially giving you the purification without the cooling element if you want to use it in the winter. Best of all though is the clever automatic mode, which will adjust on the fly to variations it detects in air quality.

The Pure Cool is efficient, it’s quiet, it looks bloody cool, and – most importantly – it just works. Yup, even the smart features, which are usually the first thing to go wrong in connected tech.

If there’s one criticism we have for the Pure Cool, it’s the same one we have for most Dyson tech: it’s expensive and it’s hard to say for sure whether Dyson really adds enough to justify the price. You can at least save a little by opting for the smaller (and cheaper) desk version.

Read our full Dyson Pure Cool Tower review

Honeywell QuietSet Stand Fan – Quiet technology

This great stand fan is a bit like a desk fan on steroids. Set-up is a tad tricky thanks to the unhelpful instructions but once working, it proves itself a good choice if you want to spend less than £100.

It has remote control and five settings that vary in speed and levels of quiet (setting 1 is sleep mode and you can barely hear it). You can also set timers of 1, 2, 4 or 8 hours and easily adjust the height.

It stands at 58.5cm at its highest setting, and this, coupled with the oscillating action, means it can effectively cool large rooms and areas whether stationary or turning.

If you want something more powerful and quiet than a desk fan but don’t want to break the bank, this is the fan for you.

NSA UK Rechargeable Column Fan – Cordless tower fan

The NSA UK TFRDC-50RC Rechargeable Column Fan has one key point of difference from most other fans. The clue is in the name. It’s rechargeable, which means you can use it cordless.

If you have to spend time anywhere without a plug point, such as an attic, garage or shed, you now have an option beyond trailing a long cable behind you or sitting and sweltering. When fully charged, you should get between two and eight hours of use from it, depending on the fan speed. We tested it at a medium setting and it was still going strong after three hours.

It stands at over a metre tall (it measures 105 x 26 x 26cm) and it’s essentially a column fan with a bit more style and visual interest. It comes with a remote control that’s easy to use (once you read the instructions) and slots into the back of the…

Exit mobile version