The Which? top 50 products of the year 2021 – Which? News

2021-12-23 01:50:31 By : Mr. Victor Luo

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How do you whittle 4,500 tested products to 50? Well, it’s not easy. But the staggering expertise of our product testing team help narrow it down and then all 50 go through several rounds of voting to give us a final order.

The diversity of devices is always exciting as we see everything from garden strimmers to folding e-bikes, and in 2021 the product at the top spot is one no one expected.

You could skip straight to it, but you’d be missing out on 49 other devices that represent some of the best, most innovative, and eco-friendly products we’ve tested all year.

If you like your fitness tracker to look more like an attractive piece of jewellery than something Batman would wear, then the Luxe is for you. It’s not just a pretty face though. There’s some clever, accurate trackers under that gold-trimmed glass. The step tracking for walking and running is spot on, and it’s light and comfortable enough to keep wearing while you’re sleeping. With more than a week’s battery life, you won’t need, or want, to take it off much at all. Read the Fitbit Luxe review.

The Indego M+ 700 was already a stellar robot lawnmower, but Bosch saw room for improvement with this model. Messing with a close-to-perfect mower could have been disastrous, but it’s better on slopes, doesn’t struggle as much with long grass and, as its position on this list proves, with or without tweaks there aren’t many products better at making long grass short. Read the Bosch Indego M+ 700 review.

Few things help get you where you’re going better than a satnav and few brands make them better than TomTom. The Go Discover 7 has a crisp and enormous 7-inch display, clear instructions and straightforward setup. Controlling it with your voice works excellently, too, meaning you can keep your eyes on the road. Read the TomTom GO Discover 7 review.

A printer always wants something from you. It’s either thirsty for ink or hungry for paper. Or it loses wi-fi or refuses to print for seemingly no reason – more like a needy child than a helpful home office tool. This one is different. It’s a simple, intuitive printer that lets you print straight from your smartphone. You can also plug in a micro-SD card if you want to print photos from a digital camera.

It costs £348 more than the average ink tank model, but for that you get the best available and there are no cartridges. You fill the ink reservoirs from a bottle and can look in to see how full they are, so there’s no more taking it on faith that a cartridge is empty.

Much of the high initial cost can be recouped over the printer’s life anyway. If you print 30 pages a month (20 black and white, and 10 colour) it would cost just £2.28 a year. Some cartridge models cost more than £100 in ink to do the same. And these are excellent prints, especially photos which are precise and richly coloured.

Such high-quality prints take time, almost six minutes for a vivid photo. Printing documents is quicker: five pages in 28 seconds. Whatever you print the results make the wait worthwhile. Read our Epson Ecotank ET-8500 review.

You get the impression some brands spend a lot of time thinking about what devices in the home can be connected to the internet next. The Thermo is one of their better ideas. It screws on to your radiator valve to give iOS (but not Android) control of the temperature. Setup is simple, and temperature accurate. You don’t need a hub or smart thermostat either, so it’s a cheaper way of starting out with smart heating. Read our Eve Thermo review.

Few of us would really claim to love ironing, so anything that makes the job easier is welcome. The powerful Pro Express, with its 120g of steam per minute, flattens clothes like a steamroller. Read our Tefal GV9230GO Pro Express review.

There are plenty of robot lawnmowers to automate the task, but sometimes you want the smell of fresh cut grass and the feel of a powerful mower in your hands. The RMA excels on dry and damp grass and cuts for 37 minutes on one charge. Read our Stihl RMA 443 VC review.

This trimmer is heavy but its blades slice through grass like a pair of giant scalpels. The 56V battery ensures it has more than enough power even for long grass. You get close to 20 minutes of cutting time, which isn’t ages, but it takes just 50 minutes to recharge. Read our Ego ST1401E-ST review.

The shining Jura would look at home in a café and creates coffees of comparable quality. It’s quiet enough not to wake anyone when you sneak downstairs at 6am for your first cup, but it can make two at once if you need to appease a grumpy family member. Read our Jura E8 Chrome (EB) 15363 review.

This monolithic fridge freezer is as sleek as it is efficient. It’s one of our first Eco Buys, which means it uses less energy than most of its peers. Less really is more with this unit as it takes food to subzero temperatures in no time and can keep those temperatures stable even during a cold snap or heatwave. What’s more LG has as much confidence in this device as we do, it has a 20-year warranty. Read our LG GBB92MCBAP review.

The Infinite is an exceptional oven that costs more to buy than most but costs less to run than similar-sized ovens. Its energy efficiency is what makes it an Eco Buy, and the outstanding heat dispersion, temperature accuracy and self-cleaning is what make it excellent.

It’s stuffed with extra cooking modes, while the sizeable interior means you can stuff it with plenty of food. You can even split the space in half to create two ovens with independent temperatures. It can all be controlled with an app, which may not seem useful until you’re halfway to the pub and can’t remember if you turned it off. Read our Samsung Infinite NV75T8579RK review.

The Fire HD 10 is staggering for the price. It’s not a Best Buy, but to get a tablet with a 10-inch screen you’d need to spend almost £200 more – that’s why this one is in our top 50. Don’t expect the sharpest screen, but it’s supremely simple to use and capable. Read our Amazon Fire HD10 review.

None of us would be happy if a room in our home had no electricity or heating, but patchy internet is something many of us do put up with. Mesh changes that. By dotting nodes around your home, the internet goes as far as you want it to. Enter the Asus XT8. Judges were impressed by both speed and coverage, including when multiple devices are connected. Read our Asus ZenWiFi AX (XT8) review.

You wouldn’t expect a machine that makes clothes so hot the water evaporates from them to be among the most efficient, but this one is. As an Eco Buy, it uses less energy than the majority of tumble dryers, without compromising on drying. Read our Zanussi ZDH87B4PW review.

A smart plug is as simple as smart devices get. Simple, but so useful. The P100 is one of the cheapest smart plugs, but you can still set timers and routines so devices come on and off automatically. Making anything in your home a bit smarter for £8 is invaluable. Read our TP-Link Tapo P100 review.

Huawei isn’t known for its audio devices, but a sure way of getting your headphones onto shortlists is to undercut the popular competition. These truly wireless, in-ear headphones are less than a third of the price of the Apple AirPods Pro, which were number one in our 50 best products last year. Even if the FreeBuds don’t sound quite as good as those AirPods, the price is remarkable in a typically expensive category and you’re sacrificing little.  Read our Huawei Freebuds 4i review.

We thought Ninjas were the sneaky blenders, but here comes Swan with a sleek, black stealth option of its own. To be honest, while it is at the quieter end of the spectrum, there are quieter blenders. But when it comes to blitzing fruit and veg, it’s one of our favourites. It’s cheap, too. Read our Swan Steal Personal Blender SP39040BLKN review.

Cylinder vacs tend to do better in our tests, but Shark holds steadfast with a slew of upright models standing tall, proud and resolute. Staggering suction is the order of the day. If the opening was big enough it could probably inhale a whole tennis ball. Dust and debris buried deep in carpet fibres are sucked away like Dorothy being taken to Oz. It doesn’t just shine on carpets – anything trapped between floorboards won’t be that way for long and whatever the Shark inhales stays there. This means people with allergies can relax knowing that if they’re sneezing it’s not because their vac jettisoned any dust around the room.

It’s not perfect – some models have longer cords and are better on laminate, but the strengths far outweigh the negatives. Read our Shark NV602UKT review.

Whatever you like to listen to, whether it’s a soaring symphony on Classic FM, distorted guitars and pounding snares on Planet Rock or the sedate gibberish of the shipping forecast on Radio 4, the Aria II will do them all justice. The diminutive wood-effect box doesn’t look like much, but the gubbins behind that circular panel of mesh know how to balance bass, mid-range and treble to beautiful effect.  The Bluetooth connection means that you can play from apps or the storage on your phone, and there’s an alarm clock, so it really is at home whichever room you pop it in. Read our John Lewis Aria II review.

If you told us last year that Philips – maker of lovely electric toothbrushes and irons – would release an OLED TV for less than £1,000 and it would be one of the best products of the year, we’d have smiled politely and walked to the other side of the room. But the 55OLED705/12 is real. The HD picture is sharp enough to cut glass, putting to shame TVs that cost double the price. HDR enhances the already superb contrast (something OLED displays are known for). Dark parts of the picture suck in light, but brighter parts have the strength to pierce gloom like a lighthouse on a foggy night. It’s not the simplest to use, but any quirks weren’t nearly enough to sully the wonderful TV. Read our Philips 55OLED705/12 review.

If you buy wine faster than you can drink it (what’s your secret?) and you’re running out of room for food, a wine cooler could be the next fixture for your kitchen. This one has room for 34 bottles and will chill them to the perfect temperature in no time. Read our Russell Hobbs RH34WC1 review.

Given the type of product this is, it’s appropriate that Ninja’s OP100UK handled the pressure no matter what we cooked in it. Risotto was no problem, beef stew was child’s play and fresh veg was effortless. All absolutely delectable. Read our Ninja OP100UK review.

The Find X3 Lite is the kind of phone with the kind of features you’d expect to pay more for. It’s a cutting edge device that can make the most of lightning-fast 5G network speeds. The Oppo lasts ages on a single charge and the 32 hours of juice is even better considering the dazzling screen. 5G phones this good, at this price, don’t come around often. Read our Oppo Find X3 Lite 5G review.

Triple A describes the battery size, but could just as easily mean the quality of these power-packed lithium wonders. They will keep even a demanding device such as a baby monitor going for three and a half hours before they need charging again. Plus, they’re good for 1,500 charges. That’s a lot of disposable batteries you don’t need to buy. Read our GP ReCkyo Pro 800mAh AAA review.

Steam powered the industrial revolution. Its use here is more humble, but in the SC2, it can make your floors sparkle. Fresh spills are no match for this accomplished cleaner and it’s easy to fill the removable tank. Read our Karcher SC2 Upright EasyFix review.

Nothing ruins a day like a bad night’s sleep. The right mattress is key to transforming a night of tossing and turning into deep, restful slumber. The Emma Smart Hybrid is durable and has superb back support whether you curl up in a ball or sleep like a starfish. Read our Emma Smart Hybrid review.

Fujifilm has capitalised on mirrorless technology to create a small camera that focuses fast and easily handles dim conditions. It’s so light, you can take it anywhere and it can capture enchanting images wherever you end up. Read our Fujifilm X-E4 review.

The Instant Vortex might sound like something that would give a ship captain nightmares, but in fact this inconspicuous black box is a champion air fryer that will make some of the best chips you’d ever had. It does little wrong. Read our Instant Vortex 4-in-1 review.

The Eovolt City One is one of the lightest e-bikes we’ve tested. If the idea of lugging around a bulky folding e-bike has put you off until now, then the Eovolt City One is definitely one to consider. Turning the cat’s cradle of bars, wires and spokes into something you can leap on to and ride into the sunset takes just 18 seconds with no engineering degree required.

The power can be uneven, however the wide wheels mean it can handle bumpy terrain (we’re talking potholes rather than mountain paths and BMX trails) that bit more easily. It’s on our list because it fills a niche you’d expect all folding e-bikes to fill: it’s truly compact. At 15.7kg and measuring 52cm x 38cm x 69cm when folded, it’s one of the few e-bikes that you can realistically carry around with you – most others are simply too heavy. Read our Eovolt City One review.

Ever the innovator, Dyson has added a laser to its cordless vacuum cleaners. This illuminates hidden dust, so you can make sure that your floors are truly spotless. It can even analyse the amount and size of dust particles it’s collecting and give you a report. More importantly, it lasts up to 85 minutes on a single charge. Read our Dyson V15 Detect Absolute review.

The Yaris deservedly inches its way into our top 20. Its hybrid engine means it costs more than some rival models, but it’s a bargain to run thanks to great fuel efficiency and low CO2 emissions. There’s plenty of safety features as standard and lots of room upfront. Read our Toyota Yaris review.

The KSV36NWEPG may be a hard name to memorise, but it’s not hard to remember that it’s an phenomenal fridge. It chills quickly, keeps a steady temperature regardless of fluctuations in the room – and whatever degree you set it to, you can be confident it’s accurate. It does all this while using less energy than almost any other fridge we’ve tested and with a 286 litre capacity you can squeeze in 15 bags worth of shopping. Read our Bosch KSV36NWEPG review.

If your goal is purely to make your TV sound incredible, Samsung’s soundbar with sub woofer is stunning value. It’s a no-fuss model that isn’t stuffed with extra features. The most notable omission is Dolby Atmos that sends sound overhead, but it’s far from essential. A simple interface and setup with impressive audio is all you really need, and it’s here that the HW-A550 excels. Read our Samsung HW-A550 review.

Since Sonos revolutionised wireless speakers more than a decade ago with the Play:5, people have been clamouring for a battery-powered option. Sonos changed the game with speakers capable of linking up and playing the same song around your home or different tunes in every room. The Sonos Roam links in with that multiroom ethos seamlessly, but, when you go out, it can come with you.

Sound is best when you’re at home on wi-fi, but with Bluetooth you’re still treated to warm, natural music. You need to charge it more than most, but it’s ideal for those knee deep in Sonos speakers or as a starting point for those who aren’t. Read our Sonos Roam review.

With the full five stars in each of our six maneuverability tests, the Finiti is like guiding an F1 car around lampposts, kerbs, vehicles that think they own the pavement and piles of mud. It’s nimble, light, easy to fold, comfortable and safe for your little one. Read our Joie Finiti review.

What does the beep of a finished dishwasher cycle mean to you? A rush of hot steam, the sweet smell of cleanliness and sparkling dishes, or the steam dissipating to reveal mucky, dull dishes half of which need dregs of yesterday’s tea rinsing off. These tablets give your dishwasher the best chance of succeeding. Read our Fairy Platinum All in One Lemon review.

Phone, keys, purse, face mask. In 2020, we all added a new item to the checklist of items we needed to have before leaving the house and a thin piece of cloth became one of the most important things we own. Hundreds of brands sprung up to meet demand for face coverings, but our tests found many were about as good at filtering microscopic particles as a string vest.

The Airpop Pocket Mask really stood out above all others. Its three layers of spunbound polyester and nylon filter 99.9% of particles, an incredible figure that even after a few washes only drops to 94%. The extra layers don’t affect comfort and we found it easy to breathe in them. They’re recyclable, too. Read our face mask reviews.

Way back at number 47, we showed off a £629 printer. Well, here’s the other side of the coin. The G1520 is £140 cheaper than the average printer, but can still print crisp text and a decent photo. There’s no wi-fi, but it’s one of the cheapest inkjets to run. Read our Canon Pixma G1520 review.

The Protect Alert Kit puts smart devices all over your home to warn you if there’s an intruder. An alarm that screws to the wall outside your home, motion detectors for corridors and contact sensors that alert you when doors or windows are opened. These all link to an app on your phone so you know instantly if something’s wrong. Everything is battery powered, which means it’s easy to install yourself giving you peace of mind in no time. Read our ERA Protect Alarm Kit review.

Few devices are consistently as excellent as the iPhone. The latest big-screen model is impressed, unless your hands are too small for the mammoth screen. You get more than 50 hours battery on one charge. Read our Apple iPhone 13 Pro Max Review.

Small tablets aren’t supposed to be like this. It’s 10-inch models and above that are supposed to get diamond-sharp displays and processors with more muscle than Eddie Hall. Apple thought differently. The iPad mini has an A15 chip, the same one you’ll find in the 12.9-inch iPad Pro. It’s like putting a jet engine in a go-kart (a beautifully designed go-kart). It’s rare you’ll wait more than a second for anything to load. Demanding apps are no problem and you can switch between several you have on the go quick as a flash.

The iOS iPad operating system has been honed to near perfection and the mini is incredibly intuitive. And that screen – 8.3 inches of searing colour and sumptuous detail. It’s a delight to look at and even takes decent pictures, a rarity on tablets. Read our Apple iPad Mini review.

This marries the best bits of a fitness tracker and smartwatch to create an effective hybrid wearable, and for over £100 less than average smartwatch. It’s comfy, light, has a three-week battery and is laden with useful features. Read our Garmin Forerunner 55 review.

This dishwasher cleans brilliantly with hardly a watermark when you come to unload. This would be good enough alone for a spot in our list, but the fact it uses less water and electricity than the majority of models cements its top 10 spot. Read our Bosch SMV6ZCX01G review.

Do not adjust your sets, Ikea’s minimalist Tillreda really does cost just £49, far less than the average £80 price of a microwave. Low prices and high quality rarely go hand-in-hand, but the Tillreda gets the job done with the professionalism and thoroughness of a Michelin starred chef – even if it is short on flair. Food heats evenly and it does a great job steaming vegetables and fish. Read our Ikea Tillreda review.

With millions of us boiling water for tea, coffee or for cooking, you want something that will do it quickly and efficiently. The Russell Hobbs Classic Glass Kettle might make a racket, but it boils enough water for four drinks in just three minutes. Few rivals are as quick, and if the body wasn’t see-through we might think there was some kind of volcanic activity going on to get the water bubbling so swiftly.

You can also choose to boil only enough water for one cup if you want to, which saves on energy and means this kettle is our joint top-scoring Eco Buy. Read our Russell Hobbs Classic Glass Kettle review.

It’s difficult to know where to start with a product as accomplished as the LG OLED55G16LA. It’s so exquisite in so many ways that in describing it you end up with a list of superlatives far longer than the space we’ve got here. So we’ll pick one: exemplary. From its vantage point in your room, the G1 will shower you with picture quality that leaves you slack-jawed and sound that cradles you in sumptuous, well-balanced acoustic heaven. Read our LG OLED55G16LA review.

An eco-friendly laundry detergent is a noble goal and one we applaud, but there hasn’t been one good enough to recommend – until now. The Method plant-based detergent is the result of tireless efforts and formula tweaking. It shifts grass, food and mud, and doesn’t dull the colours on favourite garments. With the environment at the forefront of our minds more than ever there’s finally a Best Buy detergent that does its best to protect it. Read our Method Laundry Detergent wild lavender review.

The M1 chip powering this laptop is more a smartphone processor than a laptop one, which had people concerned. But Apple has learnt a thing or two in the decades it’s spent at the top of the tech pyramid. Complex, demanding tasks are handled effortlessly, and even with all that power and a vibrant screen, the battery can last more than 16 hours. It feels like magic. Read our Apple MacBook Pro M1 review.

We’ve tested washing machines for more than 60 years and we’re always delighted to find one as good as the ZWF843A2DG. It scores higher than the average washer, but costs almost £200 less. Clothes come out spotless and the whirlwind spin means they’re fairly dry, too. It’s not bare bones, either, with 14 programs and sensors that adjust the wash based on load size. Accomplished, impressive and affordable. Read our Zanussi ZWF843A2DG review.

Some products perfectly encapsulate why Which? exists. Our testing covers thousands of devices – from appliances you would find on a kitchen worktop or grooming devices in bathroom cabinets to tech providing entertainment and things you keep in your garden shed. This means we can offer a recommendation for almost anything you would want to buy for your home. And, because we approach everything we test with the same rigour and attention to detail, you can always be 100% confident in our recommendation whether you’re buying a kettle or a car.

Our approach and scale means that sometimes we unearth treasure where you might not expect to. That is definitely the case here. To say the Clarity Soup Maker is good would be like saying Usain Bolt is good at sprinting or world number one Magnus Carlsen is good at playing chess. It’s a superlative that doesn’t go far enough. The Clarity is so far ahead of every other soup maker we’ve tested that they may as well not exist.

It couldn’t be simpler. Chop the vegetables, pour them in and watch through the clear plastic body as the Clarity turns raw ingredients into something delicious. That window into your soup isn’t just a gimmick to let you gawp at the chemical wonders turning rabbit food into sumptuous soup, it’s an easy way to check the consistency. If you think the mixture is looking a little chunky, you can press a button to blend the vegetables down further for a smoother experience. Silky, lump-free soup is ready in just 21 minutes and if you prefer something to chew on then a thicker one only takes seven minutes longer.

Morphy Richards hasn’t reinvented the wheel. It didn’t need to. Nevertheless, everything we test should take a leaf out of the Clarity’s book. It’s a device that does its fundamental job so extraordinarily well that it’s near perfect; something every product should aspire to. Read our Morphy Richards Clarity Soup Maker 501050 review.