Standard vs Activated Carbon Cabin Filters — Which Is Better?

How They Work

Standard particle filters use layers of synthetic fibre to trap physical particles — pollen, dust, soot, and debris. They do not filter gases or odours.

Activated carbon filters add a layer of activated charcoal that absorbs harmful gases, exhaust fumes (NO2, ozone), and unpleasant odours. They trap everything a standard filter does, plus gaseous pollutants.

Comparison

Feature Standard Particle Activated Carbon
Pollen & Dust Yes Yes
Exhaust Gases (NO2) No Yes
Odours No Yes
Typical Price £6–12 £10–18
Lifespan 12,000–15,000 miles 12,000–15,000 miles
Best For Rural driving, budget Urban driving, hay fever, families

Our Recommendation

We recommend activated carbon filters for most UK drivers. The small price premium (£4-6 more) provides meaningful air quality improvement, especially in traffic. For urban drivers and anyone with allergies, activated carbon is well worth it.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I upgrade from standard to activated carbon?

Yes — they’re the same size and fit the same housing. It’s a straight swap.

Does an activated carbon filter restrict airflow more?

Marginally, but modern activated carbon filters are designed to match the airflow of standard filters. You won’t notice any difference in heater or AC performance.

How do I know which type my car has?

Pull out the existing filter and look at it. If it has a dark grey or black layer, it’s activated carbon. If it’s pure white or light green, it’s standard particle.

Recommended Products

Bosch Cabin Filters

Bosch Cabin Filters

Premium activated carbon cabin filters

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Mann Cabin Filters

Mann Cabin Filters

OEM-quality cabin air filtration

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