
When temperatures start to rise, a great fan is essential to help you feel cooler. Where I live in the UK, we're now on our 45th heatwave of the year (an exaggeration, but it doesn't feel like it), and I'm basically never without a fan these days. I carry one about the house with me wherever I go, and I have one on throughout the night too. I've even bought one for the dog, although he's still quite suspicious of it.
At TechRadar, we've tested dozens of different models over the years. We have a best fan guide that includes just a select group of our favorites, but there are plenty more excellent fans we've tried out and which are still worthy of your consideration. Below, I've rounded up our best-rated models. These are all the fans that scored four or more stars in our review (and are still in production).
For easy browsing, I've split the guide into three broad categories — desktop and handheld fans, pedestal fans, and tower fans — and included a quick overview of each kind to help you decide if it's what you're looking for. Hit the 'More details' button to find out more about what we thought of each individual fan, and a link to read the full review. Stay cool out there.
Desktop & handheld fans
Want to blast air at one specific target? You need a desktop or handheld fan. The latter is designed for personal use, on the go. There are plenty of cheap options cluttering up the market (and landfill sites), but this year we've also been treated to a couple of high-quality, long-lasting options from two of the biggest brands in the cooling business — Shark and Dyson. We loved both of them on test.
A desktop fan is essentially a pedestal fan without its pedestal. It's designed to sit on a surface — like a desk — and offer localized cooling. I also use one of these to cool my dog by popping it on the floor and facing it at his bed. Some can oscillate widely for more general cooling, but if you're looking to tackle a whole room, you might be better off with a pedestal or tower fan.
Pedestal fans
A pedestal fan consists of a fan head on a tall, skinny pole. They sit on the floor and can generally be fixed at a specific target or set to oscillate to cool a wider area. They're more portable than a tower fan, and some have telescopic poles or swappable bases to enable them to be set at different heights.
Tower fans
Tower fans can differ in appearance, but the term can generally be applied to a fan where the head makes up most of the bulk of the build (as opposed to the lollipop shape of a pedestal fan). They're generally not that easy to move about, and are designed for cooling a whole room at once. They're also more likely to have advanced smart features, or added functions like purification.
Sign up for breaking news, reviews, opinion, top tech deals, and more.
Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as a preferred source to get our expert news, reviews, and opinion in your feeds.
Ruth is TechRadar's Collections Editor, responsible for masterminding TechRadar's approach towards the new Collections format — a themed, curated selection of product recommendations designed to provide readers with an exciting new way to shop for the very best new gadgets and gizmos.
View original source — TechRadar ↗

