TechRadar Verdict
The Blueair Mini Restful is one of the most interesting air purifiers I’ve tested. Not because it does purification differently, but because it combines it with a sunrise alarm clock and wake-up light in a single compact device that sits neatly on a bedside table. The purification is strong and whisper-quiet on the lower settings, and the wake-up light is impressively bright for its size. The alarm’s light graduation could be smoother, the app can be laggy at times, and it’s not as compact as I’d like, but it offers something highly original and genuinely useful and is worth the higher price.
Pros
- +
Powerful purification airflow
- +
Compact, attractive design
- +
Impressively bright wake-up light
- +
Quiet on lower settings
- +
Built in USB-C charger
Cons
- –
Sunrise graduation not always smooth
- –
App is obligatory but can be slow to respond
- –
No voice assistant support
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Blueair Mini Restful air purifier: two-minute review
The Blueair Mini Restful Sunrise Clock Air Purifier is a three-in-one device — technically a four-in-one if you include the built-in USB charger — that combines an air purifier, a sunrise alarm clock and a wake-up light in a single unit. It launched as part of Blueair’s Sleep collection with a clear USP: rather than cluttering your nightstand with separate devices, one appliance handles the air quality, the light and the alarm. If you’ve been browsing the best compact air purifiers for a bedroom, the Mini Restful sits in a category of its own.
The purification uses Blueair’s HEPASilent technology, which captures 99.97% of particles down to 0.1 microns — finer than a standard HEPA filter — and my hayfever symptoms were noticeably more manageable on mornings after I’d had the Mini Restful running.
It runs across three fan speeds plus a Night mode, covers rooms up to 33m² / 355 sq ft, and is QuietMark certified. The brand claims noise levels of 21dB on its lowest setting whereas my own tests averaged 32dB, much of which was ambient.
In reality, it’s whisper quiet and I could easily run it through the night without disturbing my sleep. I even forgot to switch it off a lot of the time because it’s so quiet, I didn’t realize it was still running.
What makes it stand out most from other purifiers I’ve tested is the wake-up light: a circular ring below the touchscreen display that brightens gradually over 15–30 minutes before your alarm time. This is designed to mimic natural sunrise, and you can also choose from multiple alarm sounds via the app, including birdsong, soft tones, and rainfall.
This wake-up light is impressively bright for its size and the whole appliance’s design is attractive enough for you to actually want on your bedside table. I tested the Blueair Mini Restful in summer so while it helped rouse me gently, it’s hard to judge exactly how effective it would be in the depths of winter, say, when a more gentle wake-up is most needed.
At 11.8in / 30cm tall and just 2.36lbs / 1.07kg, it sits comfortably on a standard nightstand, and the USB-C port at the back means it can charge your phone too, saving you even more space by eliminating the need for a separate charger.
My biggest complaint about the Mini Restful is the Blueair app, which doesn’t quite live up to the rest of the device’s performance. When it works, it’s great — intuitive and clean. Yet there’s no way to track air quality levels, and during my review period there was often a lag between adjusting settings and the device responding. This became frustrating quickly. The connectivity dropped completely three times during the four weeks of tests and I had to fully reconnect to my Wi-Fi and phone.
For anyone who suffers from allergies and has been meaning to try a sunrise alarm, the Mini Restful makes a compelling case that one device can do all of it well. But even if you already own one of the best air purifiers on the market and a separate sunrise alarm, the Mini Restful makes a strong argument for consolidating. It will definitely feel like an upgrade.
Blueair Mini Restful air purifier review: price and availability
- List price: $199.99 / £169
- Available in the US and UK
The Blueair Mini Restful is available directly from Blueair US and Blueair UK, as well as from Amazon US, Amazon UK, Walmart and John Lewis. It has a list price of $199.99 / £169, which converts to about AU$280, but at the time of writing it’s not available in Australia.
On purification alone, it’s easy to find cheaper options. Blueair’s own £79 Blue Pure Mini Max, the £59.99 GoveeLife Smart Air Purifier Lite and the £149.99 Levoit Core 300S are all strong compact options that cost less and if all you want is cleaner air in a bedroom, any of those will do the job well. However, none of them has a sunrise alarm or wake-up light. Nor do they charge your phone.
In fact, there is no direct equivalent on the market — no other purifier currently combines HEPASilent filtration with a built-in sunrise alarm and wake-up light in a single bedside device. This means the real question isn’t how it compares to other purifiers, but whether it’s cheaper and better than buying two separate devices.
On that measure, it mostly wins. The Hatch Restore 3 ($169.99 / £220) is widely considered the best standalone sunrise alarm clock you can buy, while a compact bedroom purifier like the Levoit Core 300S adds another $99 / £90 on top. That’s $260 / £240 for two devices that take up more space, require two separate apps and two separate power outlets. The Mini Restful does both jobs for $199.99 / £169 in a single unit that sits comfortably on a bedside table.
The trade-off is that neither function quite matches what a dedicated device delivers. The sunrise graduation isn’t as smooth as the Hatch Restore 3, and the purification coverage is limited to spaces up to 33m² / 355 sq ft. If you need serious room coverage or a flawless sunrise simulation, you’d be better served buying separately. But for a standard bedroom and anyone who wants to simplify their nightstand, the value case is very strong.
Replacement filters cost $29.99 / £24 and need changing every nine months — a running cost worth budgeting for, even though it’s in line with most other comparable purifiers.
- Value for money score: 4 out of 5
Blueair Mini Restful air purifier specs
Swipe to scroll horizontally
|
List price |
$199.99 / £169 (about AU$280) |
|
Fan speeds |
4 |
|
Oscillation |
360 degrees |
|
Filtration |
99.97% of particles to 0.1 microns |
|
Filters |
Particle & Carbon (HEPASilent) |
|
Control |
Touchscreen display, Blueair app |
|
Wake-up light brightness |
3 levels via touchscreen, slider control via app |
|
Noise levels |
32dB |
|
Height |
11.8 inches / 30cm |
|
Base diameter |
6.7 inches / 17cm |
|
Weight |
2.36lbs / 1.07kg |
Blueair Mini Restful air purifier review: design
- Compact and attractive enough to earn its place on a nightstand
- Soft woven fabric exterior
- Touchscreen display doubles as clock face
- Controls can feel awkward at table height
The Mini Restful is one of the better-looking air purifiers I’ve had in my bedroom, which matters more than it might sound.
Most purifiers are designed for corners and shelves where nobody has to look at them. They’re functional, but they largely earn their keep by blending in. The Mini Restful is instead designed to stand out, and Blueair has clearly put effort into the aesthetic. The woven fabric exterior, which is available in Coastal Beige or Midnight and can be removed and cleaned, feels closer to an Alexa speaker than a home appliance. For comparison, the Levoit Core 300S — a purifier I rate highly for performance — is a plain white cylinder that would look out of place on my nightstand.
At 11.8 inches / 30cm tall and 6.7 inches / 17cm across, it has a similar footprint to a bedside lamp, albeit slightly more imposing. It’s taller than I had expected for something described as a bedside device and it’s not as compact as I’d like (the Blueair Blue Pure Mini Max, for instance, is shorter and lighter) but it does fit comfortably. I could fit the purifier and my phone charger on my nightstand without it feeling cluttered.
At 2.36lbs / 1.07kg, it’s also light enough to pick up and move without any effort. The cord runs neatly through the base and plugs into a standard outlet, and at the back there’s a USB-C port for charging your phone overnight. This is easy to reach without having to move the unit, and it’s one of those small additions that makes a real difference to how the product fits into a bedside routine.
All of the controls sit on the top of the device, arranged around a circular touchscreen display. The display shows the time, current fan speed and filter status at a glance, and is the main interface for adjusting settings manually. It’s responsive and readable in low light and the icons are intuitive — power, fan speed, display lock and purification mode are all clearly differentiated. I found I could adjust settings without turning the main light on after the first few days of use. The display can also be locked via the app if you want to prevent accidental changes overnight.
Just below the display is the light ring — a circular band that serves as both the wake-up light and a soft night light. It’s a smaller lit area than you’d find on a dedicated sunrise alarm like the Hatch Restore 3, which uses its entire face as a light source, and I was skeptical that such a narrow ring could produce enough light to actually wake me. It did, and it looked elegant doing so.
Setup is straightforward. The Mini Restful arrives in a simple box with the device, a cord and a plug — thread the cord through the base, attach the plug, remove the plastic cover from the filter inside and you’re done, in under two minutes.
From there you download the free Blueair app, create an account, and connect the device to your home Wi-Fi. The whole process took me around five minutes, and the app walks you through each step clearly. It’s here that you’ll set your alarm times, choose your wake sounds, adjust the sunrise duration, and create purification schedules.
The one ergonomic issue I found is that having everything on top means you need to lean over to adjust anything manually when the unit is at table height. It’s a minor inconvenience rather than a dealbreaker, and in practice I used the app for most adjustments after the first week, but it’s not ideal. Overall, this is a product that has been designed with the bedroom specifically in mind, and it shows in almost every decision Blueair has made.
- Design score: 4.5 out of 5
Blueair Mini Restful air purifier review: performance
- Powerful purification even on lowest settings
- Near-silent on Night mode and speed 1
- Wake-up light impressively bright for its size
- Sunrise graduation can be abrupt
The Mini Restful has two jobs to do — clean the air and wake you up gently — and it approaches both with more conviction than I expected from a device of this size.
I tested it over four weeks as my primary bedroom purifier and alarm clock, running it every night and monitoring air quality via the Blueair app each morning. I also measured noise levels at each fan speed using a decibel meter, and ran the sunrise alarm as my sole alarm throughout the review period rather than keeping a backup.
Starting with the purification. The HEPASilent filtration captures 99.97% of airborne particles down to 0.1 microns, which is finer than a standard HEPA filter, and covers dust, pollen, pet dander and most common allergens with ease. I suffer from hayfever and the review period coincided with peak pollen season, which gave me a useful real-world test. On mornings after running the Mini Restful through the night on speed 1 or 2, I noticed a genuine difference: less of the throat tightness and eye irritation I’d normally get.
To test the purification speed specifically, I sprayed deodorant directly at the unit for five seconds on both the lowest and highest settings, then timed how long it took for the air quality reading in the app to return to normal. On the lowest setting it took around 45 minutes to fully clear. On the highest setting it took just 12 minutes — a significant difference. The app’s air quality history chart, which shows readings over the past 24 hours and 30 days, is useful for tracking these changes and gave me a clear picture of how conditions shifted.
On noise, the Mini Restful is super quiet. Blueair claims 21dB on the lowest speed; my measurements put it at around 32dB. This sounds like a huge difference but the purifier is almost inaudible, even in a quiet room. Speed 2 registers around 35dB, which produces a gentle white noise that actually helped me sleep rather than disturbing me. Speed 3 is noticeably louder at around 48dB — not unpleasant, but enough that I wouldn’t choose to run it while trying to fall asleep. The Night mode handles the transition well though, stepping the fan down to its quietest setting automatically, and I left it on this mode for the majority of the review period.
Blueair says the Mini Restful works best in rooms between 14–33m² / 151–355 sq ft, which will cover most standard bedrooms. I tested it in a medium-sized room and found it kept up well, with the air quality sensor registering improvements within 20–30 minutes of switching on after a day with the windows open. It won’t cope with large open-plan spaces — for that you’d need something with considerably more power, like the Dyson HushJet Compact — but for a bedroom it’s more than adequate.
The wake-up light is the more interesting part of the performance story. The light ring is small relative to a dedicated sunrise alarm but on its highest brightness setting it lit the room enough to wake me without the alarm sound triggering at all on several mornings. The three manual brightness levels via the touchscreen are useful, and the app’s slider control allows finer adjustment if you want to dial it in precisely.
The issue is with the graduation. The light is supposed to brighten gradually over 15–30 minutes before your alarm time, mimicking a natural sunrise. For the most part it does, and on the mornings it worked as intended the experience was gentler than waking to a conventional alarm. But on several occasions — I counted at least six across the four-week review period — the light jumped to full brightness abruptly rather than easing up to it, which is jarring. It doesn’t ruin the experience entirely but it stops the Mini Restful from matching the consistently smooth graduation of a dedicated wake-up light. If the sunrise simulation is the primary reason you’re considering this, that inconsistency is worth noting.
Elsewhere, the alarm sounds themselves are pleasant and varied — birdsong, soft tones, rainfall — and the volume is adjustable via the app.
- Performance score: 4.5 out of 5
Blueair Mini Restful air purifier review: app
- Required for full setup and alarm customization
- Doesn’t show air quality levels
- Clean, well-organized interface
- Lag between app and device is frustrating
- No HomeKit, Alexa or Google Home support
Despite a small number of flaws, I can barely fault the hardware of the Blueair Mini Restful. The same can’t be said for the app though, sadly.
Firstly, the Blueair app isn’t optional. You can use the touchscreen to turn the device on and off and cycle through fan speeds, but doing anything of note, such as setting alarms, choosing wake sounds, adjusting the sunrise duration, creating purification schedules and checking air quality history, all require the app.
This is great when it works. The interface is clean and logically laid out, with the device status and filter life all visible without having to dig through menus. Setting a sunrise alarm takes seconds: you pick a time, choose a sound, set the brightness duration between and you’re done.
The filter replacement reminder is useful; the display lock feature is a sensible addition for overnight use; and the scheduling tools are flexible enough to set different purification levels for different times of day.
However, knowing how to view live air quality readings isn’t obvious, and I ended up having to Google for help. Even then, you can only see the current outdoor air reading (via the Outdoor air section on the homepage) and not a live, room-by-room chart.
Then there’s the problem with lag. There was a consistent, frustrating delay between adjusting a setting in the app and the device responding throughout almost the entire review period. This could be anything from a few seconds to almost 30 seconds on occasion. Switching fan speeds via the app often took longer than just tapping the top of the unit, which defeats part of the point of having remote control in the first place.
What’s more, during my four-week review period the connection dropped completely three times, requiring a full reconnection through the app each time. I’d find myself checking the app before bed to make sure the alarm was still set and the connection was still live, which is exactly the kind of friction a product like this should be eliminating.
The absence of any smart home integration is also a real gap. There’s no HomeKit support, Alexa skill or Google Home compatibility, which means the Mini Restful exists entirely within its own ecosystem. For anyone who controls their bedroom environment through a smart home setup — lights, heating, other devices — the Mini Restful sits outside all of that. It’s not a dealbreaker, but it’s a limitation that feels out of step with both the price and what other, similar connected bedroom devices offer.
Blueair has clearly invested in the app’s design and the range of features it offers, and the bones are good but the execution needs a lot of work.
- App score: 3 out of 5
Should you buy the Blueair Mini Restful air purifier?
Swipe to scroll horizontally
|
Attribute |
Notes |
Score |
|---|---|---|
|
Value |
Pricier than a standalone purifier, but replaces two devices at a lower combined cost. |
4/5 |
|
Design |
Attractive, compact and genuinely bedroom-appropriate, with a few ergonomic niggles. |
4.5/5 |
|
Performance |
Strong purification and a capable wake-up light, let down slightly by occasional abrupt sunrise graduation. |
4.5/5 |
|
App |
Clean interface with useful features, but lag and connectivity drops are a real problem. |
3/5 |
Buy it if…
If you’re not sure whether the Blueair Mini Restful is the right air purifier for you, here are two other options to consider:
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Goveelife Smart Air Purifier Lite
A portable air purifier that makes a noticeable difference to air quality, and unlike the Blueair Mini Restful, has smart home connectivity. We weren’t very impressed by its aromatherapy feature, though.
Read our full Goveelife Smart Air Purifier Lite review
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Blueair Blue Pure Mini Max
A very affordable, efficient little air purifier, the Mini Max isn’t as feature-packed as the Mini Restful, but far exceeded our expectations during testing.
Read our full Blueair Blue Pure Mini Max review
How I tested the Blueair Mini Restful air purifier
- Tested over four weeks as purifier and alarm clock
- Used the sunrise alarm as my sole morning alarm
- Measured noise levels at each fan speed with a decibel meter
- Tested purification speed by spraying deodorant at the unit and timing air clearance
- Monitored air quality data via the Blueair app
I used the Blueair Mini Restful as my main bedroom purifier and alarm clock for four weeks, running it every night and monitoring the air quality readings in the app each morning.
To test purification speed, I sprayed deodorant directly at the unit for five seconds on both the lowest and highest fan settings, then timed how long it took for the air quality reading in the app to return to normal.
I measured noise levels at each fan speed using a mobile phone decibel meter and ran the sunrise alarm as my sole morning alarm throughout the review. I also tested the app’s scheduling tools, the USB-C charging port and the manual touchscreen controls.
Read more about how we test.
First reviewed May 2026
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