
Rated 5 Stars by 42,000 Reviews, Levoit Air Purifier Gets a Blazing Price Drop Before the Hot Season
An air purifier is vital in summer for capturing pollutants and protecting your health.
With the warm season looming, it is more important than ever to protect your house (and particularly your bedroom) from all types of airborne particles. One of the most effective means of doing so is through a good air purifier, and LEVOIT is the top brand on the market.
Their Core Mini-P is currently at an all-time low price on Amazon, dropping from $49 to a mere $39 which gives a discount of 20% that makes this great purifier extremely reasonably priced. As over 30,000 units have already sold within just a month, it is clear that this offer will be popular and stock can sell out quickly, so urgency is advisable.
See at Amazon
Why Is That Model So Popular?
The LEVOIT Core Mini-P air purifier is specifically designed for bedroom and home use for up to 257 square feet. Lightweight and portable at just 2.3 pounds, it is 6.5 inches wide and deep and 10.4 inches tall, so it will not take up a lot of room on a nightstand or desk. Its sleek white construction fits into any decor and the touch control gives it a modern and user-friendly interface.
Technically, the Core Mini-P boasts a sturdy 3-in-1 filter system that effectively captures pollutants from the air. The pre-filter and main filter work together to capture lint, hair, pet dander, fine airborne particles, and smoke, and significantly improves indoor air quality. It has a built-in activated carbon filter that will eliminate odors caused by smoke, pets, cooking, and other odors in the air, and leaves the air fresh and clean. It has a fragrance sponge that you can use to add your preferred essential oils for a relaxing aromatherapy experience that is ideal for improving sleep quality.
This air purifier is the ideal combination of price (!!), efficiency and ease. Don't miss this all-time low price and chance to breathe easy all summer.
See at Amazon

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Bloomberg
27 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
Zaslav Reverses Course on Merger That Lost $40 Billion in Value
Just three years after arguing that the best way to boost the value of Warner Media and Discovery Inc. was to combine their assets, Chief Executive Officer David Zaslav is now saying that the real key to unlocking their potential worth is to split them apart. The stock has declined about 60% since that merger was completed in April 2022, wiping out some $40 billion from the company's market value.


Bloomberg
36 minutes ago
- Bloomberg
S&P Downgrades Warner Bros. Bonds Deeper Into Junk Status
S&P Global Ratings cut Warner Bros. Discovery Inc. 's unsecured bond ratings deeper into junk status after the media company announced it was splitting up, and said that it's reviewing downgrading other ratings of the company. The bond grader said it downgraded Warner Bros. Discovery's unsecured notes to BB, the second-highest junk rating, from BB+, according to a statement Monday.


New York Times
37 minutes ago
- New York Times
Waymo Limits Service in San Francisco as Immigration Protests Spread
After protesters set fire to five Waymo robot taxis in Los Angeles on Sunday, the company on Monday began preemptively limiting rides to areas of San Francisco where people were expected to gather to show their opposition to President Trump's immigration policies. Waymo declined to say where in San Francisco it would suspend its service or for how long. Its robot taxis are popular in the city and have become a tourist attraction. The vehicles, which are electric Jaguar I-Paces and include dozens of cameras and sensors, cost around $100,000 each. 'We're aware of potential protests and will not be providing service in the areas protesters may be gathering out of abundance of caution,' a company spokeswoman said in a statement. The robot taxis have become a way for some protesters to display resistance to the tech industry's close ties to the Trump administration, said Elise Joshi, an activist in San Francisco who attended rallies on Monday. 'Waymos don't have human drivers, they're devoid of humanity,' she said. Destroyed robot taxis are 'symbolic of the attempts, throughout the history of this country, by the tech industry to strip us of community.' Waymo's actions in San Francisco followed the burning of its self-driving cars in Los Angeles on Sunday, where hundreds of people have demonstrated in recent days against the Trump administration's escalating immigration enforcement activity. Images of burned Waymos — including one protester with a Mexican flag posing for photos above the scorched cars — quickly spread online. Elon Musk and right-wing influencers then shared the image and others like it as emblems of the supposed dysfunction in Los Angeles. Waymo cut its service off in downtown Los Angeles on Sunday evening, in coordination with the Los Angeles Police Department, a company spokeswoman said. She said its vehicles were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time and added that the company did not know if the damaged vehicles were hailed by protesters with the intention of being destroyed, or if they were just dropping off riders in the area. Waymo announced in November that its service was 'open to all in Los Angeles.' In 2023, Mayor Karen Bass sent a letter to the California Public Utilities Commission highlighting several incidents with self-driving taxis and arguing that more testing was needed. Other groups, including disability rights organizations, have argued that autonomous taxis can help their constituents. In May, Waymo said it was providing more than 250,000 paid robot taxi rides a week in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Austin and Phoenix.