Looking for an affordable way to beat the heat? Based on customer feedback, AiraBreeze doesn't appear to deliver the cooling performance it promises. Here's what we found.
In a Nutshell
AiraBreeze describes itself as an online retailer focused on providing innovative and affordable personal cooling solutions designed to improve everyday comfort. The pitch is simple: a small, portable unit that cools a room without the bulk or cost of an air conditioner. The customer reviews tell a different story.
AiraBreeze isn't sold from a single storefront. Among the sites we've found are Getairabreeze.com, registered on 18 June 2025, and Airabreeze.com, registered nearly a year earlier on 13 June 2024.
Selling the same product through multiple, separately registered domains is a pattern worth noticing. It makes it harder for customers to compare experiences and easier for sellers to launch new storefronts if complaints build up on older ones. It also suggests AiraBreeze may be a dropshipping product, with different sellers marketing the same device under separate websites. In these cases, each seller often uses increasingly bold claims and flashy ads to stand out, sometimes exaggerating what the product can actually do.
On Trustpilot, AiraBreeze sits at a 1.9 star rating, and the complaints follow a consistent theme. Customers describe the unit as ineffective, not performing as advertised, and closer to a basic desktop fan than an actual cooling unit.
One buyer described ordering two fans and being charged for four, with doubled postage and warranty fees added on, then being told the order couldn't be cancelled because it had already shipped.
Another warned that the checkout process adds extra items without a clear order review, layers on hard-to-skip "special offers," and sets up a recurring payment, all while contact emails bounce back.
A third reported that two units burned out and melted the on/off switch within 24 hours of use, raising real safety concerns rather than just a question of value for money.
AiraBreeze isn't an isolated case. ScamAdviser has covered an influx of cooler products that don't live up to their advertised standards, including the WellaCooler review and the review of EpiCooler.com. With Europe heading into another hot summer, expect more of these "hot deals" to surface, often using nearly identical marketing language and the same overcharging tactics.
Before ordering any cooling gadget you've seen advertised through social media or a YouTube ad, check the domain's registration date and look up its Trustpilot reviews directly. A brand-new domain selling a product that claims to outperform an air conditioner is a signal to slow down, not speed up.
If you've already been charged incorrectly or can't get a response from customer service, you can file a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission, and you can check a site's standing using ScamAdviser's website checker before placing any future order.
AiraBreeze's own customers describe a product that underperforms, a checkout process that adds unwanted charges, and in at least one case, a unit that overheated and melted. Multiple domains selling the same fan under different names is a dropshipping pattern, not a sign of a growing, trustworthy brand. If you're looking for real cooling this summer, an actual air conditioner or a well-reviewed fan from an established retailer will serve you better than a slickly marketed gadget with a sub-2-star rating.
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This article has been written by a scam fighter volunteer. If you believe the article above contains inaccuracies or needs to include relevant information, please contact ScamAdviser.com using this form.
Adam Collins is a cybersecurity researcher at ScamAdviser who operates under a pseudonym for privacy and security. With over four years on the digital frontlines, he specialises in translating complex threats into actionable advice. His mission: exposing red flags so you can navigate the web with confidence.