
For allergy homes: a sealed multi-layer HEPA and a station that empties into a bag, so the dust it captures never re-enters your air.
Samsung Bespoke AI Jet
Samsung
The allergy pick. Strong 280AW cleaning in a light body, but you buy it for the Clean Station that empties the bin into a sealed bag, the one moment other vacuums dump dust back into the room. Pricey, and the bags recur, so it is a specialist, not the value play.
Most cordless vacuums undo part of their own work at the bin. You clean the floor, then tip a cup of fine dust into the trash and breathe a cloud of it. The Bespoke AI Jet's answer is the All-in-One Clean Station: dock it and the base uses Air Pulse and Air Spin technology to empty the bin completely in seconds and seal its cover shut, so for the household that actually cares about dust, the dirtiest step of vacuuming disappears. Behind that, the machine is a sealed multi-layer HEPA system that Samsung rates to capture 99.999% of fine dust and allergens, and owners with dust allergies consistently report no pre-filter air leaks, which is the failure mode that matters. If your reason for buying a vacuum is a person in the house who reacts to dust, this is the one built around that problem. It cleans hard, too. The HexaJet motor delivers 280 air watts, more than a comparable Dyson, and AI Cleaning Mode 2.0 reads the surface and adjusts suction and brush speed on its own, though reviewers find that adjustment less consistent than the dirt-based systems on Dyson and Shark. Yet at about 6 pounds it stays light and one-handed, with a telescoping wand that suits taller users and click-in tools you can swap without bending down. The catch is money. At $899.99 it is a premium buy, the sealed bags are a recurring cost the bagless vacuums avoid, and real runtime in the smart mode lands around 30 minutes. If you do not have allergies, cheaper vacuums clean just as well for less. But if you do, the sealed-bag Clean Station is a genuine health feature, not a gimmick, and that is what earns it a place here.
$899.99
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Last reviewed Jul 8, 2026
What we like
- ✓All-in-One Clean Station empties the bin into a sealed bag, eliminating the dust cloud most vacuums create
- ✓Sealed multi-layer HEPA rated to capture 99.999% of fine dust and allergens, with no pre-filter leaks in owner reports
- ✓280 air watts from the HexaJet motor, more suction than a comparable Dyson
- ✓AI Cleaning Mode 2.0 reads the floor and adjusts suction and brush speed automatically
- ✓Light at about 6 pounds and one-handed, with a telescoping wand and click-in tools
- ✓Quiet for its power, and a swappable battery with spares available
Trade-offs
- −Expensive at $899.99, and hard to justify over cheaper models on cleaning alone
- −The sealed Clean Station bags are a recurring cost bagless vacuums avoid
- −Real runtime in the smart AI mode lands around 30 minutes
- −AI floor detection is less reliable than Dyson's or Shark's dirt-based automation
- −The base and accessory cradle need extra floor and shelf space
Best for
someone in the home reacts to dust or allergens and you want a sealed system that empties into a bag without a dust cloud
Avoid if
you do not have allergies and want the most cleaning per dollar, since cheaper vacuums clean just as well
Score breakdown
- filtration9.3/10
- cleaning power8.9/10
- maintenance8.7/10
- handling8.3/10
- battery7.8/10
- value6.5/10
Specs
- app
- SmartThings (status, diagnostics)
- dock
- All-in-One Clean Station (auto-empties into a sealed replaceable bag)
- head
- Active Dual Brush, anti-tangle
- wand
- Telescoping (retractable)
- modes
- 5 (AI, Min, Mid, Max, Jet)
- weight
- Approx 6 lb (2.7 kg)
- battery
- Removable / swappable (spares available)
- runtime
- Approx 30 min real-world AI mode (longer in low modes)
- included
- Dual-brush head, anti-tangle pet tool, combination tool, crevice tool, Clean Station bags
- filtration
- Sealed multi-layer HEPA, 99.999% of fine dust/allergens (Samsung claim)
- smart tech
- AI Cleaning Mode 2.0 (auto-adjusts suction and brush speed)
- suction air watts
- 280 AW (HexaJet motor)
How we know
High confidenceLast checkedThe Bespoke Jet line's allergy credentials are well documented. Apartment Therapy's dust-allergic reviewer singled out the All-in-One Clean Station, which uses Air Pulse and Air Spin technology to empty the bin completely in seconds and seal its cover shut so no dust escapes; Vacuum Wars scored the 280AW Bespoke Jet excellent in their carpet deep-clean test, with ample airflow, reasonable noise, an included spare battery, and a head you never change between floors. Specs are Samsung's published figures for this 280-air-watt configuration: a HexaJet motor, AI Cleaning Mode 2.0 that auto-adjusts to the surface, the All-in-One Clean Station, a sealed multi-layer HEPA rated to 99.999% capture, roughly 6-pound weight, a telescoping wand, and a swappable battery, with real-world AI-mode runtime near 30 minutes. The consistent criticisms set the scores: a high price (this configuration lists at $899.99, and earlier 280AW models ran higher), recurring cost for the Clean Station bags, and a modest real runtime; reviewers also find the AI suction adjustment less reliable than Dyson's or Shark's dirt-based automation. We score its filtration and maintenance highly, dock its value, and land it as the allergy and filtration specialist.
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YouTube — Samsung Bespoke Jet AI Review: Ultimate Cordless Vacuum?
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