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Tower Fan Reviews

Rated & ranked

The Best Tower Fans in the UK for 2026

The best tower fans you can buy in the UK in 2026, rated for airflow, noise and running cost, from premium bladeless Dysons to brilliant-value budget picks.

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At a glance: our top picks

Best Tower Fans UK 2026: Rated & Ranked comparison
Tower fan Rating TypeSpeedsOscillationRemoteTimer Price Buy
Best Premium Dyson Cool AM07 4.4 Bladeless10Yes (70°)YesSleep timer ~£330 Check price for Dyson Cool AM07 on Amazon (opens in a new tab)
Best Value Dreo Pilot Max 4.3 Bladed12Yes (120°)Yes1-12h ~£90 Check price for Dreo Pilot Max on Amazon (opens in a new tab)
Levoit Classic Tower Fan 4.0 Bladed9Yes (70°)Yes1-12h ~£70 Check price for Levoit Classic Tower Fan on Amazon (opens in a new tab)
Quietest Pick MeacoFan 1056 Air Circulator 4.4 Air circulator12Yes (60°)Yes1-9h ~£100 Check price for MeacoFan 1056 Air Circulator on Amazon (opens in a new tab)
Russell Hobbs Tower Fan 4.1 Bladed3Yes (70°)Yes1-8h ~£45 Check price for Russell Hobbs Tower Fan on Amazon (opens in a new tab)
Honeywell HY254E QuietSet 4.2 Bladed8Yes (90°)YesSleep timer ~£70 Check price for Honeywell HY254E QuietSet on Amazon (opens in a new tab)
Best Fan Heater Dyson Hot+Cool AM09 4.5 Bladeless + heater10Yes (70°)YesSleep timer ~£400 Check price for Dyson Hot+Cool AM09 on Amazon (opens in a new tab)
Top Value VonHaus Tower Fan 3.9 Bladed3Yes (80°)No1-7.5h ~£40 Check price for VonHaus Tower Fan on Amazon (opens in a new tab)

The best tower fan for most UK homes in 2026 is the Dyson Cool AM07: owners rate it among the quietest fans at low speed, it oscillates through 70 degrees and it is safe around children. If you want similar performance at a lower price, the Dreo Pilot Max is the standout mid-range choice at around £90, with 9 speeds, a solid remote and low settings owners rate as quiet.

A good tower fan is one of the cheapest ways to make a British heatwave bearable, but the market is flooded with near-identical models making near-identical claims. We have compared every price point using published specs and verified owner reviews to find the ones genuinely worth buying, and ranked them above.

How we chose our top picks

We rank on published spec sheets, verified owner reviews and calculated running costs, not marketing copy. Every fan here is compared on the four things that decide whether you’ll be happy with it: real airflow, noise on the settings you’ll actually use, running cost at UK energy prices, and everyday usability, timers, remotes, stability and how easy it is to clean. Price is then weighed against all of that, which is why a cheaper fan can outrank a more expensive one.

What to look for in a tower fan

If you take nothing else from this page, prioritise these:

  • Oscillation, a wide sweep spreads cool air around a room instead of blasting one spot.
  • A timer and remote, far more useful than they sound, especially overnight.
  • Quiet low settings, the speed you’ll sleep with matters more than the maximum.
  • Height and footprint, taller fans move air over furniture; slim bases suit tight corners.

Running costs: what a tower fan actually costs to run

Tower fans are cheap to run. Most models use between 40W and 80W on a medium setting, which at current UK electricity rates works out at roughly 1-2p per hour. Running a fan for eight hours overnight costs around 8-16p. Even a full summer of regular use is unlikely to add more than £5-10 to your electricity bill, which makes a tower fan considerably cheaper to run than air conditioning.

Higher wattage does not always mean more airflow: a well-designed 45W motor can outperform a 70W one if the blade geometry is better. This is one reason spec sheet wattage is a poor guide to actual cooling performance. For a detailed breakdown by model, see our tower fan running cost guide.

Premium vs budget: what you’re really paying for

The gap between a £50 fan and a £330 one is not usually airflow: it is refinement. Premium fans are quieter, better built, safer (bladeless) and nicer to look at. Owners report that budget fans from brands like Dreo, Levoit and Vonhaus now cool just as effectively; you simply accept a little more noise and plainer styling. Decide which of those you care about before you spend.

The Levoit tower fan is worth a look in the mid-range: owners rate it well for covering larger rooms, and it has a tidy remote. For bedroom use on a budget, the Russell Hobbs tower fan includes a timer and remote without costing much. If you want year-round utility, the Dyson Hot + Cool handles both heating and cooling from one appliance, and the cordless Shark FlexBreeze is the one genuinely portable option here, running off a battery on the patio as happily as indoors.

For a full walk-through of features, sizes and brands, read our tower fan buying guide.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best tower fan in the UK right now?
The Dyson Cool AM07 is our pick for most buyers who want the quietest running and a premium finish, and owner reviews back that up. For value, owners rate the Dreo Pilot Max highly for oscillating airflow and quiet low settings at around a third of the price. Either covers the majority of UK homes and budgets well.
Are tower fans better than pedestal fans?
Tower fans take up less floor space, look tidier and oscillate smoothly, which makes them ideal for living rooms and bedrooms. Pedestal fans usually move more raw air and can be aimed higher, so they suit larger or warmer rooms. For most UK homes a good tower fan is the more practical choice.
How much should I spend on a tower fan?
You can get a perfectly good tower fan for £40-£70, with useful extras like a remote and timer around £80-£120. Above that you're paying for design, quietness and brand, most notably with Dyson. Spending more doesn't always mean more cooling, so match the price to the features you'll actually use.

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