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Portable Air Conditioners,Grelife 8000BTU 4-in-1 AC Unit with Fan&Dehumidifier,Powerful Cooling up to 350 sq.ft,Portable AC with Smart/Sleep Mode,LED Display,Remote Control,48dB Quiet,24H Timer

  • Based on 72 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by TY Appliance Store

Arrives Nov 27 – Nov 30
Order within 13 hours and 4 minutes
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Features

  • Powerful Cooling :Grelife 8,000 BTU portable air conditioners are suitable for rooms up to 350 Sq.Ft to provide you stable/fast/ effective cooling. Its 24hrs adjustable timer can cool a room to the temperature 61F(61- 86F)for you in this summer.Perfectly suits for dorms, apartments, cabins, campers, offices, bedrooms or living rooms.
  • Multi-Functional Portable AC:Not just a powerful cooling, but you get to choose from 4 modes.A built-in dehumidifier, fan mode with 2 speed settings, the AC mode. Cooling(8,000 BTU) function can quick cool down your room & stay cool and comfortable in the hot summer,Switching between these modes is super easy with the remote controller.
  • Sleep Mode & Low Noise:Our portable ac unit is equipped with sleep mode and a 2024 generation of high-efficiency compressor,which achieves low noise(48dB) level to ensure no interference in this summer night, enjoy the cool comfort quietly as you do in a library.
  • Easy to Install & Move:Grelife Portable AC to the preferred cooling area, attach the hose and adjustable window brackets.Turn the unit on and let your cooling begin! No extra tools are needed, Grelife portable AC can be set up easily within minutes, and can be done by anyone.Easy to move the free-standing air conditioner from room-to-room with caster wheels, making them an ideal solution for renters or homeowners who don't want to install a traditional AC.
  • Easy to Clean Washable Filter: We recommend cleaning the appliances removable filter weekly to ensure consistent cooling performance,keep your dehumidifier working efficiently.
  • LED Panel&Full-Function Remote:Our portable ac unit is fully equipped with an easy-to-read LED panel, full-function remote control and 24h timer switch for you to change the modes or temp in your room simply; Plus, the remote control distance is as far as 23 ft, allowing you to easily control the ac unit through the remote control anywhere in the room.

Brand: Grelife


Mounting Type: Window Mount


Special Feature: Adjustable Speed, Portable, Digital Display, Auto Shut-Off, Timer


Color: White


Air Flow Capacity: 350 Cubic Feet Per Minute


Controls Type: Remote


Model Name: Portable Air Conditioners


Recommended Uses For Product: Residential


Included Components: Grelife Portable Air Conditioners *1,Remote Control*1,User Manual*1


Noise Level: 48 dB


Brand: ‎Grelife


Mounting Type: ‎Window Mount


Special Feature: ‎Adjustable Speed, Portable, Digital Display, Auto Shut-Off, Timer


Color: ‎White


Air Flow Capacity: ‎350 Cubic Feet Per Minute


Controls Type: ‎Remote


Model Name: ‎Portable Air Conditioners


Recommended Uses For Product: ‎Residential


Included Components: ‎Grelife Portable Air Conditioners *1,Remote Control*1,User Manual*1


Noise Level: ‎48 dB


Number of Speeds: ‎2


Product Dimensions: ‎14.75"D x 34"W x 14.25"H


Voltage: ‎120 Volts (AC)


Manufacturer: ‎Portable Air Conditioners


Brand Name: ‎Grelife


Model Info: ‎LE-PAC003


Item Weight: ‎49 pounds


Item model number: ‎LE-PAC003


Annual Energy Consumption: ‎1000 Watts


Installation Type: ‎Window


Part Number: ‎PAC003


Special Features: ‎Adjustable Speed, Portable, Digital Display, Auto Shut-Off, Timer


Material Type: ‎Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene (ABS)


Batteries Included?: ‎Yes


Batteries Required?: ‎No


Date First Available: March 11, 2024


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Nov 27 – Nov 30

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Works great.
I am impressed works great. It is super quiet and easy to fill and empty the tank. Prefect for a small room, living room and office. Great for indoor plants as well. I love this
Reviewed in the United States on June 10, 2023 by Tutu

  • Exactly what I needed to help my child through the night
My kid needed a humidifier to help with his flem from the dry cold air. We needed a sizable humidifier that can last a few nights without having to refill. This is a?great size and we can run it for several nights without having to refill it constantly. I also like how it has a knob to adjust the spray from the humidifier. The spray is good to control the humidity in a large sized room. Sound is fairly quiet and didnt affect my kids sleep or wake him up. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 12, 2023 by Looking glass

  • Works well easy setup!
After receiving, i went ahead to try it out asap due to the needed cooling and dry humid weather. After piecing it together and reading the instructions the setup was finally done! The build quality is decent for the price point and the system works great
Reviewed in the United States on May 26, 2023 by Gio

  • Nice humidifier
The media could not be loaded. I am very happy about this humidifier for my home office. It’s fills the water from the top which makes filling water a lot easier. Because of this, this allows for more water volume. I would recommend it!
Reviewed in the United States on April 18, 2023 by MASON

  • Nice humidifier with no sound at all
I had a humidifier before which was big in size, producing lots of noise with water leaking while in operation, so I was looking another one which works fine and does not disturb while sleeping. I found this product and bought it. I used in my room for a day for testing and finally moved to my son’s room. It working as expected and no sound at all. I like this product as it is small, producing no sound while operating and no water leakage. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 25, 2023 by Ramesh Shrestha

  • Great product, As described A+
This product is overall a great buy for the money. You get exactly what you pay for. Very easy to use, just simply fill and plug it into wall and you're good to go. Makes very thick steam so great for dry rooms.
Reviewed in the United States on April 17, 2023 by Paul

  • Collected about 2 1/2 gallons of water in a bucket from the unit
Better have a bucket for the upper drain line.
Reviewed in the United States on July 2, 2024 by Stephen J Traweek

  • Lifesaver! (But annoying drainage needs in dehumidifier mode)
Size: 8000BTU
My office/craft room is upstairs in the converted attic of our 1940s house. It gets hotter than Hades up there, even with the central AC vents open. We have a window AC for use during the hot summer days, but it can't be used while I'm waiting for the windows and window trim to be repaired/replaced, so this portable unit is exactly what I was looking for. Set up is very simple. It's pretty heavy, so it's nice if you have a second person to help if you need to transport it up a stairwell, but it can be done by one person if necessary. Once you have it in your room, you can move it around as needed—the casters roll very well, even on thick carpeting. Connect the hose to the two adapters. They twist on (the adapters are threaded a little like a screw). Attach the unit end to the unit by sliding it onto the exhaust port. Extend the window piece to the width of the window (cut if it's longer than your window is wide. See the picture—it cut fairly easily with my craft cutting tool) and then you're supposed to screw the small screw on with the included washer (but it's too short, so you'll need to get a longer screw. Fortunately, hubs seems to hoard screws, so I was able to easily locate one of the same but longer), slide the other piece on and attach the screw (I didn't do this part lol), attach the foam, set it in and close the window. The only confusing part is the drain hose. Unless I missed it, the manual doesn't say what to do with the open end of the hose during normal use. It does say to drain the unit at the end of the season before storing it, and it does say to use it when your unit is on "Dry" mode (dehumidifier). Since it's still cool spring at my house, I have no idea if condensation will drip out during normal use, so for now, I have the open end sitting in a plastic container. If I discover it will continually drip, I guess I'll have hubs drill a round hole in the window extender so it'll drip outside (the window is close to the floor, so the water wouldn't have to travel far up against gravity). It's not a silent machine, but I can't imagine anyone would expect it to be. It's quieter than the window air unit it's replacing. I can hear the actual unit's noise a bit, but most of the noise is air flow. It's about as loud as a box fan, and it blows almost as powerfully when on High. Unlike the window unit, I can program this with the buttons on top of the unit or by remote. During the spring and fall, when the outside temp is not ridiculously high, the hot air from the house still rises into my attic office/craft room, so I like the fan setting that will draw the hot air out through the window, even when the cooling feature isn't set on. I can't wait to see if the dehumidifier (dry mode) works well in the middle of the humid Kansas summer (the humidity is often so high and the temperature so hot in Kansas that it's like trying to breathe through a hot wet towel). I love that it has a timer, so I won't accidentally leave it on when nobody is in the room. I love that the filter is washable—no buying replacement filters. The manual recommends cleaning the filter once a week. I have no idea as yet what the impact on my electricity bill will be. The energy rating sticker has it listed at about the midrange. We shall see. Update 1: today was the first hot day, 91 degrees. It's sweltering hot up in my office/craft room! This AC cannot cool the entire room at all. Just can't keep up. I'm not taking any stars off, because it was an impossible dream, as my office is in a cheaply converted attic, and because I am pretty cool and comfie sitting at my desk with the AC blowing on me. The rest of the room is still unbearably hot, but the cold air blowing directly on me is enough to allow me to work at my desk. Now, it remains to be seen whether that will be the case when it's over 100 outside in the summer months. I'll update as needed. Update 2: After yesterday's hot day, my office was still very warm this morning (I did not leave the AC running when I left the room), and it felt humid, so I decided to try the "Dry" mode (dehumidifier). After running on Dry mode for approximately 90 minutes, the unit shut off and displayed the Full light. Strange, I had the drainage hose attached since I got the unit, but no water was in the container into which I'd put the other end of the hose. After shaking the hose around a bit, just a few drops of water came out. I consulted the manual and noticed something I hadn't at first: there are two drainage holes: the "continuous drainage hole" (the upper one, to the left of the air vent) and the "drainage hole" (the lower one, at the very bottom of the unit, by the wheels). Ugh. This came with only one hose, so I struggled to disconnect it from the upper continuous drainage hole (tight fit is necessary, of course). Then I had to unscrew the drainage hole (the lower one) nut and remove the plug so that I could attach the hose. Welp, the water came running out before I could attach the hose, of course, so I quickly, with adrenaline-fueled super strength, hefted the entire unit up and over the small container in which I'd originally set the drainage hose (connected to the upper continuous drainage hole). Quite a bit of water spilled on the floor before and during my maneuvering. I need—and you will, too—to buy a second length of drainage hose. Seems to me that I'll need one left in each of the two drainage holes, because while I'm assuming the continuous drainage hole will eventually exude water, I know for a fact it is not wise to try to attach a hose to the lower drainage hole only when it needs to be emptied. The good news? This thing pulls a LOT of moisture out of the air! Update 3: I hadn't planned to move the unit around much in day-to-day use, but as it happens, I have had to (see Update 2). And each time I've moved it around, the exhaust hose has popped off the exhaust vent. It's "threaded" a little like a screw, but only a little. It doesn't hold the hose securely on. So I went down to the utility room for duct tape. Fortunately, we had some white duct tape, so at least it won't look quite like the redneck fix it is. Update 4: I'm adjusting my review from 5 stars to 4 because of the drain problem. Let me explain. It hasn't been overly hot outside, but it's been really humid, so I've been running the unit on Dry mode while I'm in my office. As a dehumidifier, this unit scores a 10 out of 5! It's pulling about a half-gallon of moisture from the air every couple of hours, and exhausting warm air while it's doing so—the increased comfort is noticeable and greatly appreciated. However, the drain. Ugh. It (the drain for dehumidifying, not the "continuous drainage" drain that hasn't yet produced any water) is at the very bottom of the unit. I learned my lesson and have left the hose in this bottom drain (see Update 2), but gravity prevents it from draining, which causes a "Full" error, shutting off the unit until drained. Here's the problem: the only way to actually drain it is to lift the entire unit up high so gravity will allow the water to flow through the hose. Even the one foot of height of the wall of the container I've set the hose into is too high to allow the flow to start. And with every jostle as I lift the unit (if its position is even slightly unlevel), water—a lot of it—spills out of the bottom of the unit (not from the drain hole) and onto my leg/my shoes/the floor. Desperation inspired me to try keeping the entire unit sitting on my sewing desk (not the desk I use every single day, thank goodness) with the drain hose left to dangle off the desk and into the container on the floor (I changed to a heavy glass wide-bottom jar so it doesn't accidentally get knocked over). Obviously, this is not ideal... it takes up workspace on my sewing desk, it is now not "portable," and idk what I would have done if I didn't have a spare desk right there beside the window... but it does work, and the benefit is that the dehumidifier liquid continuously drains, which means no more "Full" shut offs. I wish the two drainage holes were reversed, with the "continuous drainage" (which has yet to produce a drop) at the bottom and the one that produces many, many, many drops when in dehumidifier mode at the top. I am considering whether to ask hubs to build some sort of stand to hold the unit up high enough, perhaps with a built-in holder for the water container below and casters on the bottom to restore portability. But what would have been best is if the design allowed drainage as the unit sits on the floor, preventing the need to hoist it up or permanently store it on a desk or stand. Update 5: It's now the end of May. Not even the height of summer heat and humidity yet, but my attic/craft room would already be unusable by this point without this portable AC unit. I am still miffed about having to use the unit setting atop my sewing desk, but I have mitigated the problems caused by leaking by placing a silicone mini-fridge mat beneath it. It keeps spilled water off my desk and floor, and its slight walls would hold a lot of water, so even if I were to accidentally dislodge the drainage hose (that bane of my existence—see previous updates—my desk and floor would be protected. Please get a mini-fridge mat for yourself. I may still be salty about the drainage problems, but I am also still pleased as punch about this unit's ability to dehumidify the air. In the mornings, I am able to cool the room quite noticeably with only the dehumidifier mode, although I have been forced to rotate two large containers, swapping them out when I empty the full one. But this does not upset me because, wow, this unit sometimes pulls 2 liters of water from the air in just over an hour! Plus, all the running up and down the stairs can only benefit my health haha. And all this for, I failed to mention previously, quite an attractive price. This unit, despite its peccadilloes, is a budget-friendly powerhouse. Edit 6: Ugh. It's now the middle of June. It's been near the 100-degree mark, and the humidity has been very, very high. This portable AC's "Dry" mode has been a miracle worker. But, as always, the drainage is a big, big problem. I got another portable AC, a different brand, for my bedroom downstairs, and use the same hose-in-a-container setup. The other unit stops when the container is full (how does it know? no idea.), but I now have accidental knowledge that this one does not stop... Yesterday morning, in the amount of time it took to clean and refill my hummingbird feeders and clean my hummingbird bath fountains and sit on the porch swing with the dog (maybe an hour and a half), this unit filled and overflowed the drainage container I'd set up. So. Much. Water. All over the floor. So I was inspired. I'm pretty proud of my Macgyvering: I used my wood burning tool to melt a hole in the window bracket (the part that holds the exhaust hose in the window) the exact size of the drainage tube. I attached a longer length of tubing and now it goes through the bracket and drains into the guttering at the roofline just below the window (remember, my office/craft room is in a converted attic). Sounds perfect, no? Well, I thought so. That is, until I moved the unit... I'm normally only up here working in the morning hours, but I needed to be up here in the afternoon. It was super hot out, which means it was super-duper hot up here. I'd had the unit faced away from me all these weeks I've been using it on Dry mode, but I needed the fan blowing on me, so I turned it around. I didn't notice it, but just that difference unbalanced it a teensy bit, which caused a leak. Not from the drainage hose but from the bottom of the unit itself. Again. And it was an hour before I noticed, at which time the mini-fridge mat under the unit was overflowing. Water all over my desk and floor. Again. However... I got it resituated in its original position (well, not the original position on the floor but up on my sewing desk. ugh.), turned it back on in Dry mode, and moved on with my life. But I forgot to turn it off or set the timer to auto turn off and accidentally left it on all night. When I came up this morning, the first thing I noticed, way over in the stairwell on the way up, was the lack of the normal blast of hot air. You guys. It was actually quite cool and comfortable up here! I almost can't wait to see if leaving it on Dry mode continuously over the weeks of 110+ degree summer temps will be enough, or if I'll eventually have to actually use the cooling mode. I'll let you know. I give this portable AC unit zero stars for portability. And maybe negative five stars for the leaking problems and the wholly idiotic placement of the drainage hole (see Update 2). However, I give it 15 out of 5 stars for its ability to make a previously unusable room comfortable using only Dry mode, for a total of 4 out of 5 stars. Don't question my math. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on April 10, 2024 by Merideth Baker Merideth Baker

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