Air Purifiers Salt Lake City | Whole-House & HEPA

Air Purifiers in Salt Lake County

February 5, 2025. The 14th consecutive day of a particularly severe PCAPS inversion event. Outdoor PM2.5 had been pinned above 70 µg/m³ for nine straight days at the Salt Lake City Airport monitor; the EPA’s 24-hour NAAQS limit is 35 µg/m³. A customer named Caroline B. in Yalecrest — the heat-pump conversion and humidifier-restoration customer from earlier case studies — called us because despite all the IAQ upgrades from her fall 2024 projects, indoor PM2.5 was running 22-31 µg/m³ during the inversion. Her existing MERV 13 filtration was reducing outdoor pollution by approximately 65%, which sounds excellent but still left her with indoor PM2.5 at 2-3x the WHO recommended limit of 10 µg/m³. Caroline asked the right question: “What’s the next layer?” Priya Sandoval’s recommendation: add a Trane CleanEffects whole-house electronic air cleaner to the existing system (operates in series with the MERV 13 media filter, captures 98% of particles down to 0.3 micron via electronic precipitation), plus a Coway Mighty AP-1512HH supplemental HEPA unit in Caroline’s bedroom for nighttime sleep protection. Total project: $1,840 installed. Follow-up measurements during a similar mid-March inversion event: living-area PM2.5 dropped to 4.2 µg/m³ (88% reduction from outdoor levels), bedroom PM2.5 at 1.8 µg/m³ (95% reduction). Caroline’s morning headaches during inversions — which she’d previously attributed to weather pressure — resolved within a week of operation. Inversion-season indoor air quality is a layered problem, and proper air purifier integration is the layer beyond filtration that meaningfully closes the gap to outdoor air conditions.

Air purifier technology divides into two broad categories: whole-house systems that integrate with your central HVAC and treat all air circulated through the home, and standalone units that serve single rooms with their own dedicated blowers and filtration. Both categories have legitimate use cases; the choice depends on home characteristics, IAQ goals, and budget. The marketing landscape for air purifiers is significantly polluted by overstated claims, pseudoscientific technologies, and units that perform far below their advertised specifications. We install equipment with documented third-party performance data (AHAM CADR ratings, ASHRAE testing, EPA documentation) and skip products that rely on marketing rather than science. Below is what we install, what each technology actually does, and how to choose between options. For broader IAQ context see the indoor air quality services hub.

Air Purifier Technologies

Mechanical Filtration (MERV Filtration)

How it works:
Air passes through a pleated or panel filter; particles are captured on the filter media via interception, impaction, and diffusion. Standard mechanical filtration without other technologies. MERV 8 captures 70%+ of particles 3-10 microns; MERV 13 captures 75%+ of 0.3-1 micron particles plus everything coarser.
What it removes well:
Pollen, dust, pet dander, mold spores, larger particulates. Bacteria-sized and virus-sized particles partially captured at MERV 13.
What it doesn’t remove:
Gases (VOCs, ozone, smoke odors), ultra-fine particulates below filter rating, biologically active material remains active even when captured (no inactivation function).
Implementation in our installations:
4-inch or 5-inch deep pleated media filter housing installed in return ductwork. AprilAire 213, AprilAire 413, Honeywell F100, Honeywell F200, Carrier Performance 30 series. Annual or semi-annual filter replacement.
Cost:
$285-$485 installed for filter housing. Annual filter replacement $35-$85.

Electronic Air Cleaners (Electrostatic Precipitation)

How it works:
Air passes through an ionization chamber that charges incoming particles. The charged particles are then captured on oppositely-charged collection plates downstream. Captured particles are washable; collection plates can be removed and rinsed periodically.
What it removes well:
Sub-micron particulates that mechanical filtration captures poorly. Trane CleanEffects rates 98% efficient at 0.3 micron (better than MERV 16 mechanical). AprilAire 5000 rates 95%+ at 1.0 micron.
What it doesn’t remove:
Gases, larger particulates that don’t ionize efficiently. Some models produce trace ozone (a respiratory irritant) as a byproduct; we install only ozone-safe models.
Implementation in our installations:
Replaces the standard filter housing in central HVAC return ductwork. Equipment-specific power supply required (typically 120V dedicated circuit). Collection plates washable every 3-6 months.
Brands:
  • Trane CleanEffects — flagship electronic air cleaner, 98% at 0.3 micron, widely considered the highest-performing residential electronic precipitator
  • AprilAire 5000 — combination electronic + media filtration, 95% at 1.0 micron
  • Lennox PureAir S — combines MERV 16 media filtration with UV-C oxidation (different technology pairing)
  • Honeywell F300 / F50 — older platform, still installed in some applications
  • Carrier Infinity Air Purifier — integrates with Carrier Infinity controls platform
Cost:
$840-$2,800 installed depending on model.

HEPA Filtration (True HEPA, 99.97% at 0.3 micron)

How it works:
Dense mechanical filtration using HEPA media that captures 99.97% of particles at the most-penetrating particle size (0.3 micron) per the formal HEPA definition. Often combined with activated carbon for gas-phase filtration.
What it removes well:
Essentially all particulate material above 0.1 micron, including PM2.5, smoke particles, bacteria, virus carriers, mold spores, pet dander, dust mite particles.
What it doesn’t remove:
Gases unless paired with activated carbon. Some VOCs at very low molecular weight pass even carbon.
Implementation in our installations:
Generally NOT installed in central residential HVAC return slots — the static pressure exceeds most residential blower capacity. HEPA-grade central filtration requires dedicated HEPA filter housing with bypass airflow, or whole-house electronic air cleaners that achieve HEPA-equivalent particle removal at lower static pressure cost. Standalone HEPA units (with dedicated blowers) are appropriate for room-level filtration.
Standalone unit brands:
  • Austin Air HealthMate — medical-grade HEPA + activated carbon, made in USA, 5-year filter life
  • AirPura T600 — HEPA + 18 lbs activated carbon, specifically rated for tobacco smoke and chemical sensitivity
  • Coway Mighty AP-1512HH — HEPA + carbon, AHAM Verified CADR 246 cfm
  • IQAir HealthPro Plus — HyperHEPA filtration (99.97% at 0.003 micron), highest performance category
  • Blueair Classic 605 — HEPASilent technology combining mechanical + electrostatic
Cost:
Standalone HEPA units: $385-$1,200 each retail. We install or just supply, depending on customer preference.

UV-C and Photocatalytic Treatment

Less directly relevant to particulate removal but commonly bundled with air purifiers. UV-C wavelengths (253.7 nm primarily) inactivate biological material (bacteria, virus, mold spores). Photocatalytic oxidation (PCO) generates hydroxyl radicals from UV light + titanium dioxide that decompose VOCs and biological matter. Combined approaches like the Reme-Halo LED combine UV-C with PCO. Full detail on the UV light treatment page.

Activated Carbon Filtration

How it works:
Activated carbon (typically coconut shell or coal-derived) has enormous surface area per pound (500-1,500 m² per gram). VOCs and odor molecules adsorb to the carbon surface. Different carbon types target different molecules; potassium permanganate-impregnated carbon targets formaldehyde and other specific compounds.
What it removes well:
VOCs (formaldehyde, benzene, toluene from construction materials, paints, sealants), tobacco smoke odors, cooking odors, pet odors.
What it doesn’t remove:
Particulates (must be paired with mechanical filtration). Very small or non-adsorbing molecules.
Implementation:
Usually integrated with HEPA standalone units (Austin Air, AirPura, etc.). Whole-house carbon installations possible but less common; require significant filter housing space and frequent replacement to remain effective.
Cost:
Included in standalone HEPA units that feature it. Whole-house carbon: $640-$1,200 installed plus annual cartridge replacement.

Choosing Between Options

Default starting point: MERV 13 media filtration.
For most homes with no specific IAQ concerns, a 4-inch or 5-inch MERV 13 media filter installed in the return duct addresses 75-85% of PM2.5 and most common allergens at relatively modest cost ($285-$485 installed). Annual filter replacement $35-$85. This is the baseline we recommend for most homes.
Upgrade to whole-house electronic air cleaner if:
  • Severe inversion-season concerns (downtown SLC, lower bench properties)
  • Wildfire smoke season is a major concern
  • Household includes severe asthma or respiratory sensitivity
  • Particle count measurement during IAQ assessment shows MERV 13 is insufficient
  • Budget supports the additional $840-$2,800 investment
Add standalone HEPA for bedroom protection if:
  • Severe respiratory sensitivity requiring optimal sleep-period air quality
  • Wildfire smoke season concerns
  • Pet allergies with pet sleeping in or near bedroom
  • Cooking smoke or chemical sensitivities in adjacent kitchen spaces

Standalone HEPA in primary bedrooms supplements whole-house filtration rather than replacing it.

Consider PCO/UV-C addition if:
  • Documented biological contamination (mold growth in HVAC, persistent musty odors)
  • Specific concerns about virus transmission (immunocompromised household members, recurring respiratory infections)
  • VOC concerns from new construction off-gassing

See the UV light treatment page for specifics.

What to Look For (And What to Avoid)

Legitimate Performance Indicators

  • AHAM Verifide CADR rating. Clean Air Delivery Rate from Association of Home Appliance Manufacturers, independent third-party verification. Real number, hard to fake. Standalone units should show CADR for smoke, dust, and pollen.
  • ASHRAE testing data. American Society of Heating, Refrigerating and Air-Conditioning Engineers testing for whole-house units. Standard performance documentation.
  • HEPA classification with specific particle-size testing. True HEPA = 99.97% at 0.3 micron, tested per IEST RP-CC001 or equivalent. Anything claiming “HEPA-type” or “HEPA-grade” without the formal specification is marketing language.
  • Specific particle-removal efficiency claims with documentation. “Removes 99.9% of contaminants” is meaningless; “Captures 95% of particles at 1.0 micron per ASHRAE 52.2” is testable.
  • UL listing and electrical safety certification. Essential baseline for any electrical equipment.

Red Flags

  • Vague “kills 99.9% of viruses” or “captures 99.9% of allergens” without specific test methodology. These claims are designed to impress non-technical consumers; they have no scientific meaning without specific testing protocol referenced.
  • “Ozone generators” or units that intentionally produce ozone. Ozone is a respiratory irritant at concentrations above 0.05 ppm. The EPA explicitly warns against ozone generators marketed as air purifiers (see EPA’s “Ozone Generators That Are Sold as Air Cleaners” guidance).
  • “Ionizers” without electronic precipitator. Ionizing alone (without collection plates) just charges particles in your home. They eventually settle on walls and surfaces, creating staining. Not a legitimate air cleaning approach.
  • “Bipolar ionization” without specific independent testing data. The technology may be legitimate in specific applications, but residential marketing claims significantly exceed documented performance.
  • “Free trial” or “money-back guarantee” sales tactics. Reputable products don’t require these pressure tactics. Legitimate air purification companies sell based on independent testing data, not high-pressure sales.
  • Massive markup over published retail price. Whole-house units have widely published manufacturer suggested retail. Significantly higher pricing without specific justification (custom equipment, complex installation) is a red flag.

Pricing Reference (Q2 2026)

MERV 13 media filter upgrade (4-inch or 5-inch):
$285-$485 installed. Annual filter replacement $35-$85.
Trane CleanEffects whole-house electronic air cleaner:
$1,840-$2,400 installed. Annual or biennial collection plate cleaning service $145.
AprilAire 5000 whole-house combination cleaner:
$1,200-$1,840 installed.
Lennox PureAir S (MERV 16 + UV-C):
$1,600-$2,200 installed (only paired with Lennox equipment).
Carrier Infinity Air Purifier:
$1,800-$2,800 installed (typically paired with Carrier Infinity equipment).
Honeywell F300 / F50 electronic precipitator:
$840-$1,400 installed. Older platform, still available.
Standalone HEPA bedroom unit:
Coway Mighty AP-1512HH: $385 retail. AirPura T600: $895 retail. Austin Air HealthMate: $695 retail. IQAir HealthPro Plus: $1,200 retail. We supply or install based on customer preference; installation typically adds $145-$245 for proper placement and electrical setup.
Whole-house carbon filtration housing:
$640-$1,200 installed. Annual cartridge replacement $145-$285.
Annual filter and equipment service:
Included in Comfort Care plan for plan members. Non-plan members: $145-$285 per service visit depending on equipment.

Common Air Purifier Concerns

How do I know if I need an air purifier beyond standard filtration?
Measurement is the only honest answer. An IAQ assessment with calibrated PM2.5 measurement during typical inversion or wildfire conditions provides the data. If your indoor PM2.5 stays below 10-12 µg/m³ during outdoor pollution events with just MERV 13 filtration, you don’t need additional equipment. If indoor PM2.5 climbs above 15-20 µg/m³ during pollution events, supplemental purification provides measurable improvement.
Will an air purifier eliminate odors?
Depends on type and odor source. Activated carbon filtration removes gas-phase odors effectively (cooking smells, smoke smells, chemical smells from construction). Mechanical filtration alone (MERV 13, HEPA) does not remove odors because odor molecules are gas-phase, not particulate. UV-C and PCO can address some biological-origin odors. For significant odor concerns, activated carbon is the necessary technology.
Are air purifiers safe for people with asthma?
Most types yes. MERV 13 filtration and HEPA both reduce asthma triggers without introducing irritants. Electronic precipitators can produce trace ozone in some models — we install only ozone-safe certified models. Avoid: ozone generators (explicitly harmful for asthma), some older electronic air cleaners (may produce ozone), units with unproven “bipolar ionization” technology. The standard recommendation for asthma households: MERV 13 + Trane CleanEffects (verified ozone-safe) + Coway or Austin Air supplemental.
How often do filters need replacement?
Depends on type and runtime. 4-inch and 5-inch media filters: every 6-12 months for typical residential use. Electronic precipitator collection plates: cleaned every 3-6 months (no replacement needed). HEPA filters in standalone units: typically every 12-24 months. Activated carbon: every 3-12 months depending on application. We can include filter replacement in Comfort Care plan service visits.
How long do air purifiers last?
Whole-house equipment with proper maintenance: 12-20 years typical service life. Standalone HEPA units: 8-15 years depending on usage and quality. The motors and electronics typically outlast the home occupants’ interest in the equipment. Brand and quality matter more than warranty length for long-term reliability.

Frequently Asked Questions

What’s the most effective air purifier for wildfire smoke?
Layered approach: whole-house MERV 13 + electronic air cleaner (Trane CleanEffects or AprilAire 5000) for whole-house particle reduction, plus standalone HEPA + activated carbon (Austin Air HealthMate or AirPura T600) in primary occupied rooms for additional protection. The standalone units are particularly valuable during wildfire smoke events because they can operate continuously without the HVAC system being on, providing dedicated air cleaning even when the heating/cooling system isn’t running.
Will an air purifier help my COVID-19 concerns?
Indirectly. Mechanical filtration captures virus-laden droplets (most respiratory viruses travel attached to larger droplets and particulates). MERV 13 captures most of these; HEPA captures essentially all. UV-C can inactivate viruses with sufficient exposure time. Air purification reduces but doesn’t eliminate viral transmission risk; combine with adequate ventilation and other public health measures during outbreak periods.
How much do air purifiers cost to operate?
Whole-house electronic air cleaners typically consume 80-120 watts during operation. Monthly operating cost during heavy use $5-$15. Standalone HEPA units typically 40-80 watts continuous operation $3-$12 monthly. Filter replacement adds $35-$285 annually depending on equipment.
Can I install an air purifier myself?
Standalone units: yes, plug-and-play essentially. Whole-house units integrated with HVAC: professional installation recommended. The work requires opening into the return ductwork, electrical connections, and proper integration with the HVAC blower. Installation errors can damage the HVAC system or create dangerous electrical conditions. Most manufacturers void warranty for non-professional installation.
Will an air purifier eliminate my need to dust?
Reduce significantly, not eliminate. Effective air purification removes airborne particulates before they settle on surfaces. Most household dust accumulation comes from airborne sources (skin cells, fabric fibers, outdoor PM, cooking particles). Customers with effective whole-house electronic precipitators or HEPA filtration typically report 60-80% reduction in surface dust accumulation. Skin cells and other near-surface sources still produce some dust that requires periodic cleaning.

Schedule Air Purifier Assessment

Air purifier decisions should be measurement-based. We perform PM2.5 and particle count measurement during your in-home assessment, particularly valuable during inversion or wildfire smoke periods when the baseline matters.

Schedule Your Assessment →

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  • Office Staff: Monday – Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Closed: Weekends and State/Federal Holidays (emergency line always active)