Consumer Reports

The Best Window Air Conditioners on the Market

Tame that summer heat with a quality window air conditioner

Consumer Reports groups air conditioners into three main sizes based on BTUs and the size of the room needing cooling, which you’ll also find listed on most air conditioners.

Small units are best for rooms that are 100 to 300 square feet, medium units are for 250 to 400 square feet and large units should cool rooms of 350 to 650 square feet.

But, none of that matters if the air conditioner doesn’t perform well.

That's why, in Consumer Reports’ special lab, window air conditioners must lower the temperature inside to a set point of 75 degrees. It sounds easy, but testers challenge the air conditioners to cool a room that’s 90 degrees with nearly 60 percent humidity.

Another factor in CR’s scoring: an accurate thermostat. How accurate it is saves you money. If the air conditioner is thinking that it’s still trying to hit 75 degrees even though it’s actually at a room temperature of 71 degrees, it’s running longer than it needs to and wasting electricity.

The best air conditioners in Consumer Reports’ tests can cool a room in about 15 minutes or less, keep the temperature consistent and—the best part—don’t necessarily cost more money, either.

For small rooms, consider the Amana AMAP061BW for $200. For a medium-sized room, Consumer Reports recommends the GE AHS08LX for $250, available at Lowe’s. And for rooms at least 350 to 650 square feet, the LG LW1216ER for $350 is a winner.

Consumer Reports says to consider a unit with a programmable setting or timer, or one that’s WiFi-enabled so you can come home to a cool house. And remember, whether you’re buying a new air conditioner this year or maintaining an older one, be sure to clean the filter once a month. The cleaner the filter, the less work the unit has to do and the longer it will run, which will save you money. 

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