The best heated clothes airers to save time and money when drying your laundry, tested

4 hours ago 1

An energy crisis and perma-drizzle have conspired to keep the nation’s laundry damp, not least by making it such a turn-off to turn on the heating. No wonder heated clothes airers are having a moment. These modish appliances sell out within hours of reaching shops and inspire evangelistic fervour among owners, who call them “life-savers” and “gamechangers”.

Can a hot clothes horse really change your life, let alone dry your washing as fast as a tumble dryer for a fraction of the cost and with none of the noise? I needed to be convinced, so I put 13 bestsellers through their paces with my soggy washing to find out whether they’re the best thing in laundry since the clothes peg – or destined for the loft.

At a glance

Why you should trust me

I’ve spent three decades testing products from Sky boxes to mattress toppers, and it’s made me professionally sceptical of manufacturers’ claims to magically solve domestic problems. I also have a solid background in procrastinating by doing laundry, hanging laundry and folding laundry, so I couldn’t resist the Guardian’s offer to pay me to watch clothes dry.

A person test the temperature of a heated clothes airer with an infrared thermometer
We tested the temperature of the heated clothes airers with an infrared thermometer. Photograph: Jane Hoskyn

How I tested

Heated airers all do much the same thing in much the same way. There are small differences in design – some have triangle frames, some are winged, and some have covers – but they’re basically all clothes horses that you plug in. I had to find clear distinctions between them, and this chiefly meant devising fair, quantifiable tests to measure how quickly, evenly and cheaply each airer dried clothes.

The key test was a half-hourly laundry weigh-in to measure how quickly each airer dried an identical load. Actually, two identical loads – one small (4kg) and one big (8kg) – 13 times, once for every airer. I removed and weighed the clothes every 30 minutes to see how much moisture had evaporated until the fabric was dry, and this gave me an overall drying time. Room temperature remained at a steady 19-20C throughout. For more behind-the-scenes insights into weighing knickers, check out the Filter’s newsletter.

I took other measurements too, not least to give me something (anything) to do while the laundry dried, such as the dimensions of each airer and the length of its heated bars. I used an infrared thermometer to take the bars’ temperature every 30 seconds to compare heat-up times, and a wattage meter to check power usage. I then used the January 2025 default tariff (24.86p a kWh, but rounded up to 25p here) to work out running costs an hour.

Some brands didn’t want the airers I’d tested returned, so those were donated to two organisations that do important work in and around Southampton. The first is Scratch, which provides services and furniture for families and individuals experiencing poverty, and the other is Stop Domestic Abuse, a charity offering support for victims and survivors of abuse and stalking.

Here’s my guide to the 10 best heated clothes airers based on my tests.


The best heated clothes airers in 2025

Soon Deluxe 3-tier heated clothes airer in a ochre room with a wooden floor. A tan and white cat walks past the airer
‘The most efficient barred airer I tested’: the Lakeland Dry:Soon Deluxe 3-tier heated airer. Photograph: Jane Hoskyn

Best overall:
Lakeland Dry:Soon Deluxe 3-tier heated airer and cover

Lakeland Deluxe 3-Tier Heated Airer

This airer is for anyone who’s fed up with choosing between the expense of a noisy tumble dryer, the mess of clothes on radiators, and the rank stink of laundry slowly drying on a conventional clothes horse. With its ventilated heat-retaining cover in place, it’s the most efficient barred airer I tested.

Why we love it
Lakeland’s Dry:Soon Deluxe 3-tier heated airer arrives ready to use. It took me only two minutes to unfold the tiers, position the cover, plug in the cable and switch it on. The airer is a handsome chrome rack on its own, but the light grey embroidered cover makes the whole thing look rather gorgeous.

The bars warmed up faster than most of its rivals, reaching 27C within 30 seconds before maxing out at 50C. When I laid a 4kg load of damp T-shirts across them and closed the cover, the lot was dry in two hours. That’s no faster than a tumble dryer, but it’s much more energy-efficient, costing about 8p an hour compared with 50p for my tumble dryer.

The Dry:Soon Deluxe has some excellent user-friendly details. In particular, a timer lets you set it to switch off in hourly increments up to 12 hours ahead, which is handy for leaving it on overnight without the risk of forgetting it in the morning. All Lakeland’s airers come with a three-year warranty compared with the basic statutory guarantees for most heated airers.

It’s a shame that … this airer costs almost as much as a tumble dryer. Deluxe by name, deluxe by price. But it’s many times cheaper to run, and with energy costs recently rising, £200+ may be worth spending to keep your bills down.

Suitable for: families who want to give up their expensive tumble dryer habit
Available drying space: 21m (up to 36 hanging T-shirts)
Dimensions (open): 73 x 75 x 137cm (DWH)
Dimensions (folded): 10 x 75 x 137cm (DWH)
Max capacity: 15kg
Time to dry small load: 2 hours
Running cost: 8p/hour

£194.98 at Lakeland
£149.99 without cover at Amazon


Best budget:
Dunelm heated airer with wings

Dunelm Heated Airer with Wings

Dunelm’s lightweight airer gets plenty of press attention, thanks to its bargain price and reported ability to dry large loads despite its dinky dimensions. In truth, you can’t dry a full load on this airer without significant help from the sun because it’s slightly less powerful than the other airers I tested. But at £28, it costs little more than a standard clothes horse, and my test results suggest it’s excellent value for money.

Why we love it
The Dunelm winged airer has the smallest footprint of all those I tested. It takes up just 46cm x 46cm on its beam supports, but its ironing board-style shape means it boasts a capacity of 10kg when unfolded. It warmed up to 42C in its hottest spots and dried my small load of T-shirts in four hours, about average for small heated airers but with a much smaller price tag.

I like that you can fold in the wings to double the heat when drying thicker garments, albeit not very large ones, and that the dryer is so light I can move it around using one hand.

It’s a shame that … the limited surface area meant 4kg of washing took four hours to dry.

Suitable for: solo households and small living spaces
Available drying space: 11m (up to 20 hanging T-shirts)
Dimensions (open): 54 x 146 x 91cm (DWH)
Dimensions (folded, including folded stand): 54 x 94 x 18cm (DWH)
Max capacity: 10kg
Time to dry small load: 4 hours
Running cost: 7p/hour

£28 at Dunelm


Best for fast drying:
Minky SureDri heat pod drying system

Minky SureDri Heat Pod Drying System

Heat pods turn your old unheated airer into a heated version. This one has a waterproof cover that fits a standard three-tier clothes horse, plus an electric heater that sits underneath to fill the space with hot air.

Why we love it
Minky’s pod system is a damp-blitzing machine. Even on its lowest 360W setting, it was one of the fastest dryers in my tests, because the heater and cover combo kept in the hot air. I measured the highest setting as using 915W, which cost 23p an hour, and it dried a large 8kg load within three hours. That’s as fast as a tumble dryer, but with less damage to your electric bill, or indeed to your clothes.

At £90 the Minky isn’t quite a bargain buy, but I love that it brings hot new life to your existing clothes horse. If the cover doesn’t fit yours, you can use a sheet with the Minky heater unit to much the same effect.

It’s a shame that … drying clothes with the Minky is more of a faff than with barred heated airers. First, you have to set up the pod, then you have to put up with the noise. The cover also makes it fiddly to check your clothes while they’re drying.

Suitable for: work clothes and school uniforms that need a fast laundry turnaround
Available drying space: about 18m, depending on your clothes horse
Dimensions (heat pod unit): 28 x 17 x 33cm (DWH)
Max capacity: about 10kg
Time to dry small load:
1 hour 40 minutes (setting 1); 45mins (setting 3)
Running cost: 9p/hour (setting 1); 23p/hour (setting 3)

£90 at Amazon
£90 at Argos


The best of the rest

A Dunelm XL 3-tier square heated airer with clothes draped on it in a ochre room with a wooden floor
‘Ten T-shirts dried in two hours’: the Dunelm XL 3-tier square heated airer. Photograph: Jane Hoskyn

Dunelm XL 3-tier square heated airer

The Dunelm XL 3 Tier Square Heated Airer with two towels hung on the bars to dry

Best for: a never-ending cycle of laundry that needs constant access

This huge, uncovered airer lets you get at your washing as it dries, so you can check, rearrange and replace items easily. It’s so big that I could lay an entire 4kg load of 10 T-shirts across the bars, and they dried in two hours at a cost of less than 20p. To save space, you can fold down half of the airer while it’s drying.

It didn’t make the final cut because … this airer will be too big for many homes to accommodate.

Available drying space: 25m; dimensions (open): 73 x 85 x 136cm (DWH); dimensions (folded): 10 x 85 x 136cm (DWH); max capacity: 25kg; time to dry small load: 2 hours; running cost: 9p/hour

£125 at Dunelm


Daewoo 3-tier heated airer with cover

Laundry dries on Daewoo 3 Tier Heated Airer with grey/blue Cover

Best for: drying small loads fast without the noise of a heat pod

This small, almost perfectly formed airer has a ventilated coat to fast-track drying times. The bars heat up fairly quickly to a maximum of 40C, which is just hot enough to dry damp hand towels and socks in a couple of hours, and its small 60 x 62cm footprint means you may not need to put it away at all.

It didn’t make the final cut because … the airer isn’t especially powerful, and its blue plasticky cover makes it look a bit like a cheap tent.

Heated drying space: 11m; dimensions (open): 60 x 62 x 112cm (DWH); dimensions (folded): 12 x 62 x 112cm (DWH); max capacity: 15kg; time to dry small load: 2 hours 30 minutes; running cost: 6p/hour

£79.99 at Robert Dyas

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Dunelm 3-tier A-frame heated airer

The white/light grey Dunelm 3-Tier A-Frame Heated Airer empty and on a white background

Best for: runners and dog walkers who need to dry soggy shoes and socks

Heated shoe stands are a simple addition and work well on this airer, drying my thick walking socks faster than if I’d laid them across the bars. The A-frame design also makes this among the sturdiest smaller airers I tested, and it stood firm even when I threw a large load of washing at the top tier.

It didn’t make the final cut because … my small 4kg load needed an unusually long five hours, even after I’d moved things around and flipped them over. I also hated risking my fingers in the metal-hinged supports each time I folded and unfolded the airer.

Available drying space: 17m, including shoe stands; dimensions (open): 54 x 91 x 146cm (DWH); dimensions (folded): 18 x 91 x 146cm (DWH); max capacity: 15kg; time to dry small load: 4 hours; running cost: 8p/hour

£100 at Dunelm


Argos Home 3-tier heated airer

Argos 3-Tier Heated Airer

Best for: solo households and small living spaces

Argos’s three-tier airer took several minutes to heat up and maxed out at a reasonable 45C – hot enough to dry my small load in four and a half hours (after a bit of rearranging). The pivoted frame makes it feel less sturdy than airers with feet at each corner, but it’s a breeze to fold and unfold.

It didn’t make the final cut because … the Argos Home airer feels less robust than similarly priced rivals.

Available drying space: 17m; dimensions (open): 73 x 70 x 144cm (DWH); dimensions (folded): 13 x 70 x 144cm (DWH); max capacity: 15kg; time to dry small load: 4 hours 20 minutes; running cost: 8p/hour

£105 at Argos


Black+Decker heated winged clothes airer

An empty white and dark grey Black + Decker Heated Winged Clothes Airer

Best for: drying light fabrics and underwear

The Black+Decker doesn’t get particularly hot, which helps if you have curious toddlers and delicate clothes. It still managed to dry my small load in a few hours, and at £46.99 to buy and a 6p-an-hour running cost, it’s a decent budget buy. It’s also one of the easiest airers to fold down and slip under the sofa when not in use.

It didn’t make the final cut because … it warmed up slowly and failed to get hotter than 33C even after three hours. That’s great for delicates, but it’s not hot enough to dry thick fabrics.

Available drying space: 11m; dimensions (open): 54 x 148 x 93cm (DWH); dimensions (folded): approx 54 x 100 x 20cm (DWH); max capacity: 10kg; time to dry small load: 4 hours 15 minutes; running cost: 6p/hour

£46.99 at Amazon


JML DriBuddi indoor clothes airer

A white JML DriBuddi heated airer with a cylindrical blue cover, which is done up

Best for: drying shirts and dresses

The DriBuddi uses an electric heater to blast your clothes inside a tent-like structure, with hooks for clothes hangers rather than bars. Its highest power settings dried my clothes quickly and helped remove wrinkles, but it wasn’t as efficient as the Minky, perhaps because air circulates better when clothes are laid across tiered bars rather than hanging in a bundle.

It didn’t make the final cut because … it’s quite noisy, and there’s no way to lay items flat for drying. You can dismantle the heater stand if you want, but it doesn’t fold down in the way other airers do.

Available drying space: holds up to 18 garments on hangers; dimensions: 60 x 60 x 160cm (DWH); max capacity: 10kg; time to dry small load: 2 hours 20 minutes; running cost: 30p/hour

£79 at Argos
£79.99 at Amazon


GlamHaus digital electric clothes airer

GlamHaus Heated Digital Clothes Airer Electric Dryer Rack- 4 Tier

Best for: sizeable wardrobes that contain delicate fabrics

This is one of the biggest and most feature-rich airers I tested, with a ventilated cover, timer and digital temperature controls that I found fairly easy to use. The top setting reached nowhere near the claimed 70C but did manage 52C in places, and I love having the lower-temperature settings for drying flimsy fabrics on the bars. You can attach peg hangers to dangle your smalls in the heat, but they don’t allow much dangle room. As with all the airers I tested, you get a much quicker dry if you lay items across the bars.

It didn’t make the final cut because … it doesn’t dry clothes quite as fast as the Dry:Soon Deluxe, and it’s a right old jigsaw to put together the first time you use it. After that, though, I found it easy to open and close.

Available drying space: 30m; dimensions (open): 73 x 70 x 147cm (DWH); dimensions (folded): 15 x 70 x 147cm (DWH); max capacity: 25kg; time to dry small load: 3 hours 30 minutes; running cost: 8p/hour

£144.45 at Amazon
£144.99 at Robert Dyas


What you need to know

A Dunelm 3-tier A-frame heated airer with clothes draped on it in a ochre room with a wooden floor
Photograph: Jane Hoskyn

Heated clothes airers are such a simple and smart idea that it’s weird they haven’t been around longer. They’re wildly popular, too: I haven’t tested Aldi’s winged heated airer yet because there were none left in the warehouse within days of it going on sale. But do they deserve the hype – and how can you get the best out of yours?

How much do heated airers cost to run?

Minimal running cost is the biggest selling point of heated airers. Their packaging bears promises that they’ll dry your clothes for as little as 6p an hour, dramatically undercutting all rival methods other than blazing sunshine. Really? Yes, in some cases, at least until recent jumps in energy prices piled on the pennies.

The latest rise in the energy price cap came into force on 1 January 2025, hard on the heels of a 10% increase in October. Both price hikes happened after I tested most of the airers – and even then, 6p an hour was a little optimistic. Standard barred airers, running at about 320W, worked out at 7p an hour in September 2024 and 8p an hour now.

Most heated airers take a full afternoon or more to dry a load of washing, and those 8p hours will add up. Airers that dry clothes faster, such as the fan-heater-based Minky SureDri and JML DriBuddi, cost more to run. At 1,200W, the DriBuddi now costs about 30p an hour, adding up to more than 60p to dry a load.

That’s still significantly cheaper than running a tumble dryer or, indeed, a washing machine. Under January 2025 energy prices, a tumble dryer running at 3kW costs 75p an hour to run, and it can cost even more to switch on the central heating.

Can you leave them on all night?

An hour or two on a heated airer won’t make a dent in the dampness of your jumpers or thick towels. Overnight would do it – but is it safe? The good news is that a 300W airer uses about the same amount of electricity as a fridge freezer, so yes, you can leave your clothes to dry while you snooze. Gentle warmth in the room is a lovely bonus.

But while barred airers are safe to leave on overnight, as confirmed by brands including John Lewis, Lakeland and retailer Direct365, be more cautious with the fan heater type. The 1,200W JML packs about half the wattage (and noise) of a tumble dryer, and I certainly wouldn’t leave one of those on overnight or while I’m out. “Tumble dryer blamed for inferno” is not a headline I want my name anywhere near.

How can you make clothes dry faster?

There are ways you can speed up the drying process. My best tip is to ignore the marketing photos that show airers draped like Christmas trees, with clothes hung from every bar. As I discovered while running this test, your clothes simply won’t dry that way unless it’s a warm day, which rather defeats the point.

Covered airers cut drying times by almost half, but you can achieve a similar result by throwing a fitted sheet over the top, as long as there’s a gap for moist air to escape. Whatever cover you use, I’d recommend removing it as soon as your clothes are dry. Covers are vented to avoid condensation, but I found that some moisture crept back in if I left my clothes inside.

However powerful your airer, always spin your clothes to remove as much water as possible before laying them on it. Wet clothes won’t dry, and water and electricity are not a happy combination.

On that note, don’t use a heated airer in the bathroom. Electric peril aside, bathroom air is notoriously damp. I had the best results when using my test airers in the bedroom with the window ajar – and the faint fabric softener scent was a sweet bedtime bonus.


Jane Hoskyn is a freelance consumer journalist and WFH pioneer with three decades of experience in rearranging bookshelves and “testing” coffee machines while deadlines loom. Her work has made her a low-key expert in all manner of consumables, from sports watches to solar panels. She would always rather be in the woods

This article was originally published on 18 October 2024. Reviews published in the Filter may be periodically updated to reflect new products and at the editor’s discretion. The date of an article’s most recent update can be found in the timestamp at the top of the page. This article was updated on 10 January 2025; energy costs were updated to reflect the latest price cap change and the GlamHaus heater was added.

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