- INVISIBLE COOL MIST HUMIDIFIER – Honeywell Cool Mist Humidifier helps to ensure proper humidity levels in your home. Indoor humidity levels between 40%-60% can help relieve cough and congestion, keep throat and nasal passages hydrated and more.
- EASY TO USE – This humidifier with invisible cool mist includes two speed settings to adjust moisture output and sound level. The wicking filter captures minerals from the water, helping reduce white dirt. Features a top fill design for easy fill & clean.
- COUGH AND CONGESTION RELIEF – Humidifiers for home can be helpful during cold and flu season, when it’s difficult to sleep with cough and congestion. A humidifier can provide temporary relief by adding necessary moisture to the air.
- HUMIDIFIERS FOR BEDROOM AND MORE – A humidifier with invisible moisture is great for a baby, young children and adults, and fits perfectly into any room. Use them when the air is dry, when sick or even just to maintain optimal indoor humidity levels.
- COMPATIBLE DOES NOT MEAN COMPARABLE – For best performance, use only a Genuine Honeywell humidifier filter. Compatible humidifier filter replacements are not certified to offer the same performance or efficiency.
Honeywell Cool Mist Humidifier, Medium Room, 1 Gallon Tank, White – Humidifier for Baby and Kids Rooms, Bedrooms and More
$52.99 Original price was: $52.99.$47.68Current price is: $47.68.
Last updated on Details
Category: Humidifiers
10 reviews for Honeywell Cool Mist Humidifier, Medium Room, 1 Gallon Tank, White – Humidifier for Baby and Kids Rooms, Bedrooms and More
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Jared Benson –
We needed a humidifier because my partner was coughing all night. This humidifier fixed our issue.
I did some research on different humidifiers and decided this one would be the best fit. The top fill is definitely a huge plus. It’s easy to maintain and clean (1x per week vingar, 1x per week bleach).
I’ve been monitoring humidity in the home and it takes about 75 minutes to take humidity from 30% to 45% with heating on. Not sure if that’s a good time or not, but something to keep in mind if you only need it at night. The humidity never feels too high at all.
The filters aren’t the cheapest, but they aren’t outrageously expensive either. We empty it while we are not using it and clean it as the instructions suggest and the filter lasts about 3-4 weeks.
This thing uses almost the whole gallon of water overnight while on max. I won’t give it 5 ⭐️ because there’s no middle option between min and max. We prefer to keep it on max because it takes awhile to take the humidity to a normal level, but that also means sleeping with a loud noise.
R.C. –
Five stars for it being truly, honestly, easy to actually scrub the entire dang thing. The fan sits on top, never touches water but draws air up and out, over the filter. The pour-in opening in the top touches water only when it is being poured in, so never has the opportunity to really stew and grow mold. The only thing that touches the water during use is the filter and the inside of the bucket, which is all one, undulating but smooth piece, no fiddly bits, no crevices you can’t get a finger in, no million pieces like the last Honeywell evaporative humidifier I used, easy to wipe down with a plain cloth or paper towel.
The downsides to this design: it’s not tossing off tons of humidity, as it’s just running air over the top of a wet filter with not a lot of surface area. It does feel humid coming out, but in a large room I’m not sure this would do much. Also, like others have mentioned, it would be nice if there was a middle ground between the low and high settings. Low is whisper quiet but almost useless as far as humidifying anything. High is good for humidity while sleeping but makes as much noise as you’d expect a fan on high to make. I don’t mind, as I usually sleep with white noise/a fan on, but if the fan starts rattling around in its housing, it’s very noticeable.
OK –
Has two fan settings: normal/loud-ish and really quiet. If you close the door to the room for an hour, high setting does a good job of humidifying the room, and low then maintains it. The tank lasts for about 24 hours+. Has a circular filter, so part of it doesn’t dry out like Vornado units do, and filters are cheap. The whole top comes off easily so it’s super easy to clean, and also leave it plugged in and take the bottom tank to the water (vs taking water to the tank).
Really happy with it.
Peg –
The humidifier is simple to operate and to set up and seems to work OK. The low setting is very quiet, a plus. However, the instructions warn about letting the unit run dry and the water level indicator is very hard to read; the capacity is not large, so constant level checking is needed. Surely a run-dry shutoff or a more easily-read level indicator could be made. The wick/filter needs surprisingly frequent renewal and the part is not cheap, increasing the lifetime cost of this unit. The unit’s water capacity is given as ‘one gallon’, which is ambiguous. Surely we could have a more precise metric equivalent in Canada, or at _least_ a declaration of whether this is a real gallon or a weak and depleted US gallon.
Wk –
works well, quiet even at high speed
no white powder that you get with ultrasonic humidifier
only the filter is very friable
Daniel –
Love the size and works great. I use only distilled water in this unit.
Peg –
Five years ago I bought my firstHoneywell humidifier. Simple design, easy to fill, evaporative. As soon as the apartment humidity dropped each Fall, the Honeywell came out, fresh filter was unpacked, and other than adding water, it would be on till Spring. A solid workhorse with easily accessed reservoir, and a nifty way to check I wasn’t adding too much water by sticking my finger in the hole in the window on the front. I recently referred this model to a friend who commented they were getting hard to find, and they were right. So I bought another one to have one as backup should anything happen to the first one.
Why do I keep coming back to the same model? Well, when I saw the humidifier photo taken from a different angle, I immediately knew why I’m so in love. Once you see it, you can’t help but smile every time you see it. (Because on low speed, it’s so quiet you won’t hear it.)
Klacktoveedsedsteen –
I use this in my bedroom, which is medium sized with 10.5’ high ceilings. I’ve been keeping track of the humidity since purchasing it. If I keep the windows shut at night, my hygrometer registers 60; if I open one window an inch it hovers around 40—still good. During the first week of running it, I noticed a horrible plastic outgassing smell, but this went away completely in 4-5 days. Now if I put my head over the humidifier, it smells like fresh air. Period. Prior to getting the humidifier I suffered from severe daily sinus headaches, but they disappeared entirely. An ENT doctor said to get one, “but not the kind people in Park Slope get—just a regular humidifier.” (This is a humorous commentary for folks familiar with Brooklyn, NY, where I live.) Translation: get something basic and inexpensive, not something flimsy and trendy. It gets cold here in the winter, but due to overheating, the air in Bklyn apartments is more arid than the Sahara, and as luck would have it, I’m right over the boiler room. This humidifier is so low key and quiet, the only way I know it’s on is the blue light. (Incidentally, this blue light does not bother me at night. It’s right next to my head and I don’t even notice it.) After researching humidifiers, I came to realize that cleaning can be a major issue. I read dozens of reviews of all sorts of humidifiers, including those small cute ones that cover rooms with white powder and develop mold in hard-to-reach places. Eventually I realized that cute ultrasonic humidifiers were what the doctor meant when he said not to get the kind that people from Park Slope buy. After watching a Consumer Reports video, I understood that wicking humidifiers are the way to go. I settled on this model because it looked the easiest to clean, it has the fewest nooks and crannies—no bends or moving parts to make removal of mold impossible, and it was highly rated by other buyers. Last night I cleaned it for the first time. OK, it was slightly more time-consuming than one would have thought, but I was able to get it 100% clean without much elbow grease. Cleaning is a 2-part process; first you descale the reservoir with a cup of white vinegar, wiping off the inner surfaces (after removing some gunk at the bottom of the tank). Then you rinse it and de-germ the tank with a teaspoon of bleach and a gallon of water. In between those 2 processes, you allow the tank to soak for 30 mins and then 15 mins. Not difficult, just something you do in parts over the course of 90 mins, with breaks to read a book or watch TV while it soaks. I meant to be better about cleaning the reservoir but before I knew it, 3 weeks had passed. Nothing too terrible happened, just a minor amount of sludge in the tank. The filter still works. I flipped it over. I’m giving this thing a 5-star rating. I’ll update this review if I run into any problems, but so far, so good.
Bluesman –
I had used the Honelywell model with the tank for years but if was a bit of a pain to fill. This one is super simple to fill, easy to acces the filter. Only downside is it has only has 2 speeds. Low is quiet but not that powerful. High is really noisy. I use 1 and it’s adequate to maintain humidity in the low 30% in a decent size bedroom in winter
FretlessBob –
Very good humidifier with a good filter to prevent having bacteria spread in the air.