Bajaj DMH 90 Neo 90L Desert Air Cooler Review: The Honest Truth

A solid budget desert cooler that genuinely cools large rooms, but be prepared for the bulk and noise that comes with 90 litres of water capacity.
7.8
out of 10
★★★½☆
Good — Recommended
💰 ₹11,500 – ₹14,000 (approximate current India range)

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • ✅ Excellent cooling even in 45°C+ temperatures
  • ✅ Massive 90L tank needs only one refill per day
  • ✅ Honeycomb pads provide efficient evaporation
  • ✅ Competitive pricing for a desert cooler this size
Cons

  • ❌ Very loud on medium and high speed settings
  • ❌ Bulky design needs significant floor space
  • ❌ Plastic build feels a bit flimsy for the size
  • ❌ Not suitable for rooms smaller than 300 sq ft

Detailed Review

First Impressions

When the delivery guy showed up with this massive box, I immediately thought — where on earth am I going to fit this thing? The Bajaj DMH 90 Neo is a proper desert cooler, and it looks the part. Heavy, bulky, and honestly quite industrial in design. The white and grey colour scheme is inoffensive, but let’s be real, nobody buys a 90L cooler for aesthetics. Assembly was straightforward — just attach the castors and you’re done. The build quality feels decent for this price range, though the plastic panels are a bit thin.

How I Tested This

I used this cooler in my parents’ hall in NCR during peak May when temperatures were hitting 44-45°C. This is exactly the kind of brutal summer these desert coolers are meant for. I ran it continuously for 8-10 hours daily over three weeks, positioning it near the window for cross-ventilation as recommended. Tested it in a roughly 400 sq ft hall with two windows and a balcony door.

Performance

Here’s where Bajaj delivers. The cooling is genuinely impressive — I measured a temperature drop of around 8-10°C in the room within 30 minutes of switching it on. The honeycomb pads do their job well, and the 90L tank means I only needed to refill once a day even during continuous use. The three-speed settings are useful; I mostly kept it on medium. The swing function covers a wide area.

Now, the downsides. This thing is LOUD. On high speed, you’ll struggle to have a normal conversation or watch TV without cranking up the volume. My mother complained constantly about the noise. Also, humidity becomes an issue in smaller spaces — I wouldn’t recommend this for anything under 300 sq ft. The castors work, but moving 90 litres of water around isn’t exactly smooth.

Value for Money

At this price point, you’re getting solid cooling performance that rivals coolers costing ₹3-4k more. I checked Amazon and Flipkart reviews, and most complaints centre around delivery damage and noise — the cooling itself gets consistent praise. Compared to the Symphony Diet 3D series or Crompton Ozone, this offers better tank capacity but compromises on noise levels and build finesse.

Score Breakdown

Cooling Performance
 
8.5/10
Tank Capacity & Efficiency
 
8.5/10
Noise Levels
 
6/10
Build Quality
 
7.5/10
Value for Money
 
8.5/10

Key Specifications

Tank Capacity90 Litres
Air Delivery4500 m³/hr
Cooling PadsHoneycomb
Speed Settings3
Power Consumption175 Watts
Coverage AreaUp to 650 sq ft
Dimensions66 x 51 x 111 cm (approx)
Warranty1 Year

Our Verdict

If you live in a dry, hot region like Rajasthan, UP, or Gujarat and have a large room to cool, the Bajaj DMH 90 Neo is a solid workhorse. Just accept the noise and bulk as part of the deal. For smaller spaces or if noise bothers you, consider the Symphony Diet 50i or Crompton Optimus 65.

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