Coway Airmega Mighty vs MOOKA B-D02L
Bottom line
In our view the Coway wins decisively. A coverage figure an outside lab has checked beats one the seller simply prints on the box. The MOOKA may still help you in a small room - just expect it to clear a far smaller space than the label promises.
If you are choosing between these two, the whole decision rides on one thing: whether you can trust the room-coverage number on the box. The Coway has its clean-air output checked by AHAM, an independent body that verifies how much air a purifier actually moves (CADR), so its room rating is honest and its HEPA is a true sealed filter. The MOOKA markets 'H13 True HEPA' and 1,076 sq ft, but we found no AHAM Verifide CADR listing to back that coverage. You can mostly ignore the marketing spec sheet - look at who verified it.
| 246 cfm (AHAM-verified) | CADR (independently verified?) | 135 cfm (mfr claim) |
| 10.0 | Verified Performance30% | 0.0 |
| 7.0 | Total Cost of Ownership25% | 2.5 |
| 10.0 | Certification15% | 0.0 |
| 5.0 | Safety15% | 8.0 |
| 10.0 | Practical Fit15% | 2.0 |
FAQ
- Is the Coway Airmega AP-1512HH Mighty better than the MOOKA Air Purifier B-D02L?
- In our scoring the Coway Airmega AP-1512HH Mighty rates 8.5/10 and the MOOKA Air Purifier B-D02L 2.1/10. In our view the Coway wins decisively. A coverage figure an outside lab has checked beats one the seller simply prints on the box. The MOOKA may still help you in a small room - just expect it to clear a far smaller space than the label promises.
- Does a missing AHAM listing mean the MOOKA does not work?
- No, and that is worth being clear about. It means we found no AHAM Verifide CADR - the independent measure of how much clean air a unit delivers - so we have nothing to confirm its coverage claim against and cannot credit it. When a unit's room-size claim is not backed by its own verified CADR, we score the honest number rather than the one on the box.