How To Find The Best Carpet Vacuum
A woman’s work is never done, nor is her man’s when there are carpets to clean. If you have a house full of carpet or rugs, you need to know the best carpet vacuum to use to get them deep-down clean.
If you have pets or small children this can be equally challenging and difficult. Dirt, pet hair, crayon, food particles, mud and debris tracked in from outdoors, and all sorts of other interesting stuff gets impregnated into your carpets over time, and if they aren’t cleaned right, they can even be a health hazard, causing allergies and aggravating asthma. This is why you need the most amazing carpet vacuum on the market; the low-performance and weakly-powered vacuums just won’t do your home justice. 
The best carpet vacuum has one of these several traits, if not all of them:
- It will effectively clean large and small, unseen particles from your carpets, but also your furniture, your window hangings and curtains, and other things that collect dust. This includes hardwood floors, stairs and floorboards. Your carpet isn’t the only thing that needs to be kept clean.
- It will include a HEPA filter to reduce allergens in your home.
- It will have enough power to suck up particles into a bag or enclosed container, not just push them around on the floor.
- It will be so easy to push that your seven year old can vacuum the house for you. It shouldn’t feel like you are pushing a ten-ton rock up a mountain when you vacuum.
- The vacuum should maneuver well, not just forward and back, but if possible, around corners and into small spaces either with rotating wheels or attachments that allow you to get into smaller spaces like corners and closets.
- Ideally, it has adjustable suction so you can lower it when you don’t want to suck the hair right off your head. Sometimes less is more, but it should still be powerful enough to get larger pieces of debris like cereal or glitter and pet hair.
- It has an extra attachment specifically for dealing with pet hair if you have pets.
- If you are going to be dealing with concrete or wood floors, a wet/dry vac is a good idea, although not strictly necessary.
You can purchase a Dyson and pay more than $400 more than many of its competitors charge, but many reputable reviews say that you don’t need to spend that much unless you just want a carpet vacuum – the Ferrari of vacuums. The Miele Bolero is pretty great too, but it costs a whopping $800 @ retail, so unless you have a commercial space to clean, or your own cleaning business, you may want to look for high-powered vacuums that are cheaper.
Hoover Platinum Collection gets consistently good reviews and costs only $80. This bagless canister vacuum is light, but partly because it doesn’t come with on-board attachment tools. Hoover SteamVac Carpet Cleaner is around $115-$245 depending on where you shop. It adds the extra sanitation of steam when you clean. No matter what type of vacuum you purchase, the best carpet vacuum will have as many of the aforementioned traits as possible while staying within your budget.