
We ran the Airmega 400 for two months in a large open-plan space — testing coverage, how fast it cleared the air, filtration on odours and dust, noise and the auto mode.
Most air purifiers are sized for a bedroom and struggle in a real living room. The Coway Airmega 400 is built for big spaces. With a dual-intake design and a powerful fan, it cleans the air in rooms up to 1,560 square feet twice an hour, pulling 99.999% of particles down to 0.01 micron through a true-HEPA-and-carbon filter. It runs quietly, sips power, and just works in the background. For an open-plan living area, a large bedroom or a home office, it is the purifier we recommend.
| Type | HEPA air purifier for large rooms |
| Coverage | 1,560 sq ft (2 air changes/hr); up to 3,120 sq ft (1/hr) |
| CADR | 400 pollen / 328 dust / 328 smoke |
| Filtration | Washable pre-filter + Max2 (activated carbon + True HEPA) |
| Captures | 99.999% of particles down to 0.01 micron |
| Noise | 22–52 dB |
| Power | 66 W |
| Filter life | About 12 months |
| Smart option | Airmega 400S adds Wi-Fi & app |
The Airmega 400 is Coway’s large-room air purifier — a substantial unit with a dual-intake design that draws air in from both sides for efficient coverage of big spaces. It combines a washable pre-filter, an activated-carbon layer for odours and gases, and a true-HEPA filter that captures fine particles, all driven by a fan powerful enough to clean rooms most purifiers cannot handle. It is the go-to recommendation when the room is too large for a typical bedroom-sized purifier.
The Airmega 400 is a large, solid tower — about 15 inches square and 23 tall, and 25 pounds — with a clean, understated look and touch controls on top, including a real-time air-quality indicator that glows from blue to red as the air changes. Its dual side-intake grilles are the design’s functional signature, feeding the fan from both sides for large-room throughput. It is built to Coway’s solid standard and looks intentional rather than gadgety in a living space.

Coverage is the reason to buy the 400. It is rated to clean 1,560 square feet twice an hour, or up to 3,120 square feet once an hour — genuinely large-room performance — backed by strong Clean Air Delivery Rates of 400 for pollen and 328 for dust and smoke. In our testing it cleared a large open-plan space noticeably faster than smaller purifiers, dropping the air-quality indicator to blue within minutes. For big rooms, this throughput is what actually matters, and the 400 has it.
The filtration is genuinely capable. The washable pre-filter catches large debris and pet hair (and saves the main filter), the activated-carbon layer absorbs odours, smoke and VOCs, and the true-HEPA filter captures 99.999% of particles down to 0.01 micron — finer than standard HEPA’s 0.3-micron rating. In our testing it noticeably cut cooking smells, dust and allergens. For households with allergies, pets or nearby smoke, that combination of carbon and fine-particle HEPA is exactly what you want.
Despite its power, the Airmega 400 is quiet in normal use — from about 22 decibels on low (near-silent) up to around 52 on the highest setting. In our testing it was unobtrusive on its lower and auto modes, which is where it spends most of its time, ramping up only when it detects worse air. An auto mode uses the built-in sensor to adjust the fan to the air quality, and a sleep mode dims the lights and runs quietly overnight. It is easy to live with in a bedroom or living room.

Running costs are reasonable for the coverage. The pre-filters are washable and reusable, and the Max2 HEPA-and-carbon filters last about a year before replacement, with the unit reminding you when they are due. Power draw is a modest 66 watts even at speed. Factoring in annual filter replacements, the Airmega 400 is economical to run for the size of space it covers — cheaper per square foot than running several small purifiers to cover the same area.
The standard Airmega 400 is not Wi-Fi connected — it has on-unit touch controls, an air-quality light and auto and sleep modes, which is all many people need. If you want app control, remote monitoring, scheduling and smart-home integration, the Airmega 400S is the connected version of the same purifier at a higher price. In our testing the standard 400’s auto mode handled things well without an app; the 400S is worth the premium only if you specifically want remote control and monitoring.
Against smaller purifiers, the Airmega 400’s large-room coverage and dual-intake throughput are the decisive advantage — it does the job of two or three bedroom units in one. Against other large-room purifiers, Coway’s proven filtration, quiet auto mode and reasonable filter costs keep it a top recommendation. Against the pricier smart 400S, the standard 400 saves money if you do not need app control. For big spaces specifically, it is the value-and-performance benchmark.
At around $399 the Airmega 400 is a mid-to-premium purifier, and the value is in its coverage: for a large room, one 400 is cheaper and tidier than several small units, and its filtration and quiet operation are excellent. Buy it if you need to clean the air in a genuinely large space — open-plan living, a big bedroom, a home office. Skip it (for a smaller purifier) if your room is small, where the 400 is more capacity than you need, or step up to the 400S only if you want Wi-Fi control.
Check the current price and availability before you buy — it moves.
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