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May 01, 2023

Are Portable Air Conditioners a Lot of Hot Air?

Consumer Reports' tests find that these heavy units are iffy at cooling—and hardly portable

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Think of portable air conditioners as the cooling choice of last resort. They’re better than a fan but far less effective than a window AC.

That's what Consumer Reports’ experts consistently see in our tests of portable air conditioners. Despite the manufacturer claims, these units barely get a room below sweltering, let alone to the 78° F that's considered the upper threshold of indoor comfort. Portable air conditioners are intended for homes in which window configurations or building regulations prevent the installation of window units. "A portable air conditioner is an alternative—but not an ideal one," says Chris Regan, who oversees Consumer Reports’ air conditioner tests. Portable units are typically bigger, noisier, and more expensive than window units, and they use more energy. In fact, retailers report that many portable air conditioners are returned each season by dissatisfied customers.

Unlike a window air conditioner, all the mechanical parts of a portable air conditioner are sitting inside the room you’re trying to cool. This contributes to the noise they can make.

It's also a reason for less-than-capable cooling. While a window AC uses outside air to cool the coils on the outdoor part of the unit, a portable air conditioner uses conditioned air from the room it's sitting in to cool the mechanicals. That creates negative pressure that causes warm, unconditioned air from nearby rooms or the outdoors to flow into the room you’re trying to keep cool.

And it's debatable how portable they are. Once the hose is connected to the kit in the window (to vent it outdoors), you won't want to move the unit. Not to mention that they typically weigh 50 to 80 pounds, sometimes more.

While they do have wheels, portable air conditioners can be difficult to roll on carpets and over raised thresholds between rooms.

They also need their space. The hose is 5 to 7 feet long, and the air conditioner must be positioned away from any walls or furniture that may block its airflow.

"There's a consumer learning curve," says Thomas Kelly, senior marketing director at GE Appliances. "Some consumers don't realize that they have to vent the portable AC to the outdoors."

While window air conditioners have been subject to federal energy efficiency standards for more than 25 years, portable air conditioners have not. In 2016, the Department of Energy set new efficiency standards for them, but they don't go into effect until 2025. Many manufacturers have already been producing units that meet those standards.

The result? When you’re shopping, you might see portable air conditioners that list a Btu rating according to the new standard—and some that list an inflated or misleading Btu rating. (Btu, or British thermal units, measures cooling capacity.) And during this transition, you might see two Btu ratings listed on the same box.

For example, a portable model that was formerly listed at 14,000 Btu (called the ASHRAE rating, from the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers) may now carry a DOE rating of 10,000 Btu.

But even with this change, you still can't compare a portable air conditioner with a window unit regarding Btu. "The DOE's test conditions for window ACs are more demanding than those for portable ACs," says Joanna Mauer, who tracks energy efficiency for the Appliance Standards Awareness Project, a group that advocates for efficiency standards. "A window AC rated at 6,000 Btu will therefore deliver more cooling than a portable AC unit rated at 6,000 Btu."

At Consumer Reports we test each air conditioner in a room appropriate for its claimed size. We’ve adjusted our testing according to the DOE's new standard. "We now go by the DOE's Btu rating," Regan says. "That means we are testing each unit in a room more appropriate to its cooling capacity."

In our air conditioner tests, we measure how long it takes a portable air conditioner to lower the temperature in the test chamber from 90° F to 85° F. It takes at least 20 minutes—and often much longer. By comparison, the best window air conditioners can cool the room by 10° F in about 15 minutes or less.

Install it right. All portable air conditioners come with a kit that you install in a window. It consists of a plastic panel with connections for the exhaust hose, and can be installed horizontally in a double-hung window or vertically in a sliding window. Make sure all your connections are tight, and seal any air gaps.

Get a ceiling fan. Create a breeze by running a ceiling fan. It will make the room feel cooler.

Block the sun. Close the curtains and shades to keep the sun from overheating your room.

None of the portable ACs in our tests make our list of recommended air conditioners, but if you have no alternative, consider one of the five highest-performing models below.

Mary H.J. Farrell

Mary H.J. Farrell is a senior editor at Consumer Reports whose real passion is for cooking and all that entails. She has expanded CR's cookware category to include not only more pots and pans but also other essentials like stand mixer attachments, sheet pans, and vacuum sealers. Mary also covers vacuums but finds cooking way more fun than cleaning. Since the mid-1990s, Mary has held senior positions at People.com, MSNBC, and Ladies’ Home Journal. One of her earliest jobs was at Good Housekeeping.

Install it right. Get a ceiling fan. Block the sun.
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