Airdog X5, TPA Air Purification System
The HEPA-replacement biohackers underweight, washable plates that capture ultrafine particles 20x smaller than HEPA can.
The air you breathe is the supplement you skip, and the one with the highest peer-reviewed mortality reduction. Airdog's TPA tech is the one credible alternative to HEPA + subscription filters.
Indoor air quality is one of the few longevity interventions with both rigorous epidemiology and immediate symptom relief. PM2.5 exposure is causally linked to cardiovascular mortality, cognitive decline, and accelerated aging across multiple longitudinal cohorts. Most longevity readers obsess over NMN at micromolar doses while breathing 25-50 µg/m³ PM2.5 indoors every night. The leverage gap is real.
HEPA filtration is the standard answer, but the economics get ugly fast: $200-600 unit + $80-150/year in replacement filters, plus the unrelenting subscription nag. Most users skip replacements and the unit silently becomes a $400 fan moving polluted air.
Airdog's TPA® (Two-Pole Active) technology is the structural alternative. Instead of catching particles in a paper mesh, the unit charges particles with high voltage as they pass between metal plates, then captures them on oppositely-charged collection plates. The plates wash in the sink every 2-4 months and last indefinitely, no filter subscription, no nag, no behavioral collapse.
The X5 is the flagship home unit. 1,600 sq ft coverage handles most living rooms, master bedrooms, and small open-plans. The brand publishes lab data showing capture of particles down to 14.6 nm (HEPA only certifies down to 300 nm, which is why "20x smaller than HEPA" appears in the marketing, the underlying physics is real, the marketing copy is just stating it loud). Captures viruses, smog, VOCs, smoke, pollen.
Where it gives ground: ozone. Active ionization purifiers can generate trace ozone. Airdog publishes their ozone output as below CARB and FDA thresholds, but if you have asthma triggered by ozone specifically, a true-HEPA unit (Coway, Molekule) is the conservative pick. Also: the unit is visibly more "tech-y" than a Coway Mighty, which some readers won't love aesthetically, Cozeware (also in our affiliate portfolio) positions on premium aesthetic if that matters.
Where it wins specifically: total cost of ownership over a 5-year horizon. A Coway Mighty + replacement filters runs roughly $700-900 over 5 years. The X5 runs $649 once. Plus the behavioral compliance angle, readers who admit they forget to swap HEPA filters get a unit that doesn't need swaps. That alone moves long-term effective air quality more than the unit-level capture spec on day one.
Founders + healthspan-60 buyers who want set-it-and-forget-it environmental control without the HEPA subscription tax. Apartment biohackers running multiple supplements but ignoring the cheapest mortality-reducing intervention. Anyone in a wildfire-prone region (the no-filter-swap model means unit performance doesn't degrade silently during high-load events).
You have ozone-sensitive asthma (Coway Mighty or Molekule are the safe picks). Or you need a portable unit under $200 (the X3 model at $349 is closer to that price but still above commodity tier, for sub-$200 the IKEA STARKVIND or Levoit Core 300 are reasonable alternatives even though we don't affiliate-cover them).
Specifications
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Airdog USA Airdog X5 Home Air Purifier - buyer FAQ
Is the no-filter claim too good to be true?
The trade-off is real but different. HEPA captures via mechanical filtration (particles get physically trapped in fibers), which degrades as the filter loads. TPA captures via electrostatic precipitation (particles get charged + attracted to collection plates), which holds capacity until you clean the plates. You're not getting "free filtration", you're trading recurring filter cost for the small ongoing chore of plate-washing. For most readers that's a better trade.
How does ozone risk actually compare?
All ionization-based purifiers produce some ozone as a byproduct of the corona discharge. Airdog publishes their output as below 50 ppb (CARB threshold is 50 ppb; California requires labeling above that). For most healthy adults this is well below the level associated with respiratory symptoms. For confirmed ozone-sensitive asthmatics, a true-HEPA unit (no ionization) is the conservative call regardless.
How does it compare to Molekule?
Molekule uses PECO (photo-catalytic oxidation) - shines UV on a titanium-dioxide-coated nano-filter to break particles down chemically. The technology is interesting but Molekule has faced real testing-data controversy (Wirecutter pulled their endorsement after Consumer Reports failed to validate the brand's capture claims at advertised rates). Airdog has cleaner third-party validation on capture metrics, lower TCO over 5 years, and a longer track record of independent CADR testing. Molekule's aesthetic is still better; Airdog's economics + data are stronger.
What about CO2 + VOCs from cooking?
TPA + HEPA both work on particulate (PM2.5, viruses, smoke, dust mites, pollen). For VOCs and gaseous pollutants (CO2, formaldehyde from new furniture, propane combustion byproducts) you need activated carbon - which Airdog's X5 includes as a secondary stage. For high-CO2 indoor spaces specifically, no air purifier helps; you need ventilation (HRV/ERV or open windows). The X5 helps with the particulate + VOC layer but isn't a substitute for ventilation.
Does it actually run quiet enough for bedroom use?
Yes on the lowest fan setting (~25 dB, quieter than most refrigerators). Most users run it on auto mode which steps up only when PM sensors detect a spike. The auto behavior + plate-wash maintenance schedule makes this the rare bedroom purifier that survives the 6-month "fan noise gets annoying" abandonment cycle that takes out cheaper units.