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World of Software > Gadget > Prime Day Is Next Week, but 61 Great Early Deals Are Already Here
Gadget

Prime Day Is Next Week, but 61 Great Early Deals Are Already Here

News Room
Last updated: 2025/07/03 at 5:18 PM
News Room Published 3 July 2025
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Amazon Prime Day 2025 is fast approaching, and the sale is already underway on some items. To help you find the best early Prime Day deals, we’ve scoured Amazon for deals on the tech we love. As always, every deal we recommend here is on a product our reviewers have personally tested and approved—you won’t find any shoddy dupes or mystery brands here.

This year Prime Day runs for four days, July 8-11, rather than the usual two. That means there’s twice as long to suffer save. Twice as long to score a great deal on a new Amazon Fire Tablet, some AirPods, or a KitchenAid stand mixer.

Be sure to read our explainer on all the Amazon Prime perks you should be taking advantage of.

Updated Thursday, July 3, 2025: We’ve add deals on Amazon’s Kindle Essentials Bundle, Echo Spot, an Arlo security cam, two Tapo cams, the Jackery Explorer 300 power station, the Glimpse Sleep Mask, Brooklinen’s organic sheets, and more.


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Amazon Device Deals

Amazon

Kindle Essentials Bundle including Kindle (2024), Black Fabric Cover, and Power Adapter

If you’re looking to get a new Kindle and want a case, then snag this handy essentials kit while it’s on sale for Prime Day. It includes the latest basic Kindle, a fabric cover, and a power adapter (which is also handy since Kindles only come with a charging cord, no adapter). The bundle only comes with a black Kindle, but you can choose from a couple of cover colors. —Nena Farrell

  • Photograph: Nena Farrell

  • Courtesy of Amazon

Amazon’s Echo Spot (7/10, WIRED Recommends) sits somewhere in between being a smart speaker and a smart display. There’s now a small screen on the top half of the device that shows the weather and your calendar or the song you’re playing, but skips other features that smart displays pack. But if you just want a little visual assistance without a full-on recipe guide, I think you’ll actually love this one. —Nena Farrell

Photograph: Simon Hill

Amazon’s Eero Pro 6E (7/10, WIRED Recommends) is a tri-band mesh that adds the 6-GHz band to the familiar 2.4-GHz and 5-GHz bands. If you have a 1 Gbps or faster connection and lots of devices, this is a great mesh system for you. It performed extremely well in our tests, though the 6-Ghz band is short-range.

Photograph: Amazon

This deal is for the Fire Max 11 (5/10, WIRED Review) bundle, with keyboard. The Fire Max 11 is Amazon’s nicest Fire tablet, but if you’re thinking of doing work, keep in mind that Google’s various office apps won’t work. If you don’t need those, this is a serviceable tablet. The screen is bright and sharp enough, the speakers aren’t bad, and the cameras are 1080p.

Photograph: Michael Melia/Alamy

Easily the best audiobook service, Amazon’s Audible Premium Plus gives you access to a library of Audible Originals, audiobooks, and podcasts, one credit per month to use on any audiobook title you fancy, and regular exclusive deals and discounts. Prime members can have three months for free right now (one month for non-Prime members), after which it costs $15 per month.

It may not be the best music streaming service, but Amazon Music Unlimited earned an honorable mention in our guide. Four months of free service for Prime members (three months for non-Prime members) will be enough to tempt some folks to try it.

Apple Prime Day Deals

  • Photograph: Apple

  • Photograph: Brenda Stolyar

The iPad (A16) (8/10, WIRED Recommends) has a USB-C port, a Touch ID sensor integrated into the power button, a 12-megapixel rear camera, and a 12-MP selfie camera in landscape mode (with support for Center Stage). You also get 5G on the cellular model. The A16 chip is the same one in the iPhone 14 Pro, iPhone 15, and iPhone 15 Plus. It’s plenty powerful, but there’s not enough RAM to support Apple Intelligence, making it the only iPad in the lineup without access to Apple’s artificial intelligence features (possibly a feature depending on your stance on AI).

Photograph: Luke Larsen

Apple

MacBook Air (M4, 2025)

Would it surprise you to know that this is the laptop I am typing on right now? Probably not. The Air is one of the most popular laptops around, and for good reason. You get a powerful, portable laptop with outstanding battery life for under a grand. If your workload is graphics-intensive, you might want to go for the 14- or 16-inch MacBook Pro, but for the rest of us, the Air is the Apple laptop to get.

Photograph: Christopher Null

Apple

AirPods Pro 2 (With USB-C)

Apple’s latest AirPods Pro (8/10, WIRED Recommends) are ubiquitous for good reason. They’ve now got USB-C in the charging case, and this latest version sounds better than ever before. They have an IP54 sweat- and dust-resistance rating, and the noise-canceling is top-tier. Pair that with six hours of juice and a case with a speaker to help use Apple’s “Find My” feature, and you have a winning combo.

Photograph: Apple

The Watch Series 10 (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is the best Apple Watch for most people. It does not have blood oxygen sensing, which is truly preposterous given that almost every other fitness tracker on the planet has it, but it can tell if you have sleep apnea, which otherwise requires a disruptive sleep test to diagnose. The Series 10 is thinner and lighter, so it’s more comfortable to wear while sleeping, and it has fast charging, so it can track more of your activities during the day.

Photograph: Apple

The gateway drug of Apple Watches, the entry-level SE is a compelling deal. It doesn’t have the latest standout health features, but it’s compatible with watchOS 11, so you’ll be able to take advantage of the new Vitals app, and it has the S8 chip, which offers support for features like Crash Detection. It remains the best Apple Watch for the money.

Photograph: Beats 

The Beats Flex are the best headphones for Apple users under $100. They feature quick pairing, easy access to Siri, and seamless Apple Music integration, thanks to Apple’s W1 chip, which ensures a rock-solid wireless connection to iOS devices. We were able to get 12-hour-plus battery life, which is good enough for a few workdays of tunes between trips to the wall charger.

Photograph: Amazon

The Beat Solo 4 headphones offer clear and buttery-smooth sound, with good instrumental separation. As you’d expect, there’s hands-free Siri and Apple Spatial Audio support, and they come with a compact carrying case for easy packing. Note that there’s no noise canceling or transparency mode, no auto pause feature, or water-resistance rating.

Photograph: Simon Hill

Anker

MagGo Power Bank for Apple Watch

For those overnight trips it’s nice to have a power bank capable of charging up your Apple Watch. This Anker power bank has a handy pop-up Apple Watch charger that can deliver 5 watts and supports Nightstand mode. It also has a built-in USB-C cable and a USB-C port, so you can deliver up to 30 watts to your phone or another small device.

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

Our top pick watch for Samsung fans, the Galaxy Watch7 features a nice rounded design—the accented 20-mm straps add a nice touch—though it is a little plain. This model infuses artificial intelligence algorithms to improve your health tracking data, like the Energy Score and updated sleep tracking capabilities.

Tech Deals

  • Photograph: Microsoft

  • Photograph: Brenda Stolyar

Microsoft

Surface Laptop Copilot+ PC (7th Edition, 2024)

The Surface Laptop (7th Edition) is the best Surface device for most people. If you’re looking for a lightweight and reliable Windows PC with good battery life, look no further. This deal is on the higher-end 13-inch model, with a Snapdragon X Elite processor, 16-GB RAM, and a 1-TB SSD. Performance was excellent in our testing, although this is not a machine for graphics-intensive tasks like video editing or gaming.

Photograph: Dan Thorp-Lancaster

The Acer Aspire Go 14 (7/10, WIRED recommends) won’t win any style or performance awards, but it holds up well as an incredibly affordable Windows laptop. The one major thing it has going for it is fantastic battery life. I was able to hit upwards of 14 hours on a charge, which could make this a great budget option for students who need something that’ll last a whole day on campus. —Luke Larsen

Photograph: Julian Chokkattu

HP’s Chromebook Plus x360 is a good 2-in-1 Chromebook. Its design is nondescript, but the Intel Core i3 chip is plenty speedy for Chromebook workloads, it’s lightweight, and the 2-in-1 design means you can watch movies in tent mode. The speakers sound decent and get surprisingly loud, and the 1,920 X 1,200-pixel resolution is sharp on this 14-inch IPS LCD panel.

Photograph: Linksys

This Wi-Fi 7 mesh router offers expansive coverage and is very fast on all bands. You get a good selection of multi-gig Ethernet ports and it’s easy to set up and use. The downside is the price, but this deal helps out with that. You’ll need a HomeShield Pro subscription for online protection and full parental controls.

Photograph: Philips

Philips Hue

Gradient Smart Lightstrip

With impressive brightness and rich colors, this light strip is easily configurable via the Hue app. There are countless animated scenes to choose from, and it syncs with music or your TV screen when paired with a Play HDMI Sync Box. You can extend or cut this versatile light strip to fit any space, but it’s best tucked away in a recessed spot to reflect light. However, it doesn’t look terrible if you do get a glimpse, thanks to the diffuser. —Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill

TP-Link

Tapo Wire-Free MagCam (Battery)

This outdoor camera records video at up to 2K and 30 frames per second, has a 150-degree field of view, and connects directly to your Wi-Fi. The Tapo app detects motion (person, pet, vehicle) and enables you to set activity zones and privacy zones. Slip a microSD card in for local recording or subscribe to Tapo Care for 30-day video cloud storage. It lacks HDR but is still a top camera and runner-up in our best outdoor security cameras guide. —Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill

Baseus

Mini Retractable USB-C Cable

Avoid tangles with this smart retractable cable from Baseus. It’s one of the best USB-C cables you can get, comes in a few fun colors, and has a flat cable rolled up inside a circular case. Pull the USB-C ends and you can fix it at preset lengths (1.1, 1.9, 2.7, or 3.3 feet). When you’re done, just pull and release and it coils back up neatly inside the case. It’s good for charging at up to 100 watts. —Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill

This little power bank has a 25,000-mAh capacity and can deliver up to 165 watts to two devices (it tops out at 100 watts for a single device connected via USB-C). The retractable cable is nice, and the clever braided 1-foot USB-C cable doubles as a carry loop. It has a display to show the remaining battery, charging rate in and out, battery temperature, and health.

Photograph: Ugreen

Ugreen’s 145-watt charger, with 25,000-mAh battery, is surprisingly compact for the power it provides. There are two USB-C ports and one USB-A port. What sets the Ugreen apart is that you can actually draw 145 watts while charging. That works out to one USB-C port at 100 W and the other at 45 W.

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

LaCie’s padded drives are great for travel. They’ll stand up to considerable abuse in your bag, and the SSD versions like this one are plenty fast enough for backups on the go. This drive has been supplanted by the new LaCie Rugged SSD Pro5, which is quite a bit faster, but this version is still great and a steal at this price.

Photograph: Western Digital

Western Digital

SN850X NVMe Solid State Drive

The best deal here is the 8-TB version of this blazing-fast drive. Western Digital claims up to 7,300 MB/s read speeds, and in benchmark tests, this drive’s results came very close. To take full advantage of the speed, you’ll need a system that supports the PCIe 4.0 SSD standard, but this is a great drive if you want to upgrade a gaming system.

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

Lexar

128GB Professional 2000x SDXC Memory Card

I’ve been shooting with Lexar’s Professional 2000x SDXC Memory Cards for eight years now, and the very first one I ever bought is still going strong. It’s also still one of the fastest cards I have. The UHS-II (U3) speeds go up to (and sometimes over) Lexar’s claimed 300MB/s, and it has no trouble with 5.2K video.

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

Nikon

Z6III Mirrorless Camera

The Nikon Z6 III (8/10, WIRED Recommends) features Nikon’s 24-megapixel partially stacked CMOS sensor, a very fast and accurate 3D subject-tracking system, and ProRes encoding for video—making it one of the best hybrid, photo/video cameras on the market. It’s our favorite Nikon mirrorless camera.

TV and Soundbar Deals

Photograph: Ryan Waniata

Samsung’s flagship S95D OLED TV (8/10, WIRED Recommends) stands out among the best TVs due to its matte-like screen. This can make black levels look less dramatic in some lighting, but it does wonders for bright rooms, dissipating even direct reflections. The TV matches that with searing brightness, deep and vivid colors, excellent picture processing, and tons of features like a built-in hub for cloud gaming. Now near its lowest price ever, it’s a great buy. —Ryan Waniata

Photograph: Amazon

Sony’s Theater Quad system (8/10, WIRED Recommends) is a unique soundbar-style solution, offering some of the best single-box 3D immersion you can buy in a discreet profile designed to disappear on your wall. Each of the four iconspicuous rectangles harbors four drivers, filling your room with cinematic sound. It’s a tough ask at full price, but if you want thrilling cinematics from a system no one sees coming, now’s the time to pounce. —Ryan Waniata

Sony’s slick and capable Bravia Theater 9 soundbar is an also-ran on our best soundbars list due to a price that stretches beyond its spoils compared to top rivals. At a sizable discount, then, the Theater 9 goes from a yellow light to green, offering slick, single-bar Dolby Atmos and surround sound performance, intuitive control, and a spare HDMI 2.1 input for a game console. —Ryan Waniata

Outdoor Deals

Courtesy of Birdfy

Netvue

Birdfy Plastic Smart Bird Feeder

I’ve been testing smart bird feeders daily for almost a year now, and I can say definitively that no smart feeder is perfect. However, if you want something at the intersection of reliability, features, and affordability, this feeder, the top pick in our guide to the Best Smart Bird Feeders, is your best bet. This model is especially appealing as it comes with both a lifetime subscription and a solar panel to keep it charged. —Kat Merck

Photograph: Dick’s Sporting Goods 

Hydro Flask

Standard Mouth Water Bottle

Hydro Flask has several types of bottles and caps available in a bunch of fun color options. You can choose one color for the bottle, another for the lid, and depending on which one you’re getting, yet another for the strap or straw. In our years of testing, this has proved the most durable water bottle. —Boutayna Chokrane

Photograph: Adrienne So

Ninja

8-in-1 Woodfire Outdoor Oven

Ninja’s cute and compact outdoor oven (7/10, WIRED Review) is temperature accurate, versatile, and adds a touch of smokiness without you needing to mess with the complexity (or size) of a full smoker. It’s idiot-proof and affordable; we love it for decks and those with limited outdoor cooking space, since you can do a lot of things with it. —Adrienne So

Yeti reinvented the cooler, and we thank them for it. The roto-molded Tundra is built like a tank with 3-inch-thick insulated walls, and in our testing it kept ice frozen for six days in blazing 90-degree-Fahrenehit heat while stored in direct sunlight on WIRED reviewer Adrienne So’s deck. I managed to get five days out of it in the insane humidity of Florida in the spring. A Yeti hard-sided cooler is the best cooler around. Note that this deal is only on the one, wine-colored Tundra. —Scott Gilbertson

Photograph: Ryan Waniata

I like this Yeti for the wide mouth and heavy zipper that never sticks. It’s free-standing, and at 14.25 inches wide, it’s the perfect size for bungeeing to the top of a paddleboard or bike rack. It has both a grab handle on top and a shoulder strap, which provide plenty of points to carabiner a small dry bag or pair of flip-flops. As with the above deal, this is limited to a single color: “Key Lime.” —Ryan Waniata

Photograph: Weber

Of all the portable charcoal grills I’ve tested, the Weber Jumbo Joe remains my favorite. It strikes the best balance of affordability, features, and ease of use. It’s big enough (18.5 inches in diameter) to smoke two racks of ribs or to fit burgers and corn for six people (admittedly, this was crowded), but small enough that you’ll still have room in the trunk for a cooler and camping supplies. —Scott Gilbertson

Photograph: Biolite

BioLite

FirePit+ Smokeless Portable FirePit

Biolite’s FirePit+ is a sleek, portable, mesh box with removable legs, a hibachi-style grill, and an ash bin. It has a rechargeable 10,400 mAh battery that can power 51 air jets for up to 26 hours. This allows you to precisely control the flame, and to some extent, the heat of the fire. The FirePit+ can burn charcoal or wood and, thanks to the fans, you don’t need a charcoal chimney and you’ll never struggle to get a fire burning. —Scott Gilbertson

Photograph: Simon Hill

Jackery

Explorer 2000 Plus

Our favorite portable power station, the Explorer 2000 Plus, has everything you need. It’s got plenty of ports, supports fast charging, and the 2,042-watt-hour capacity will keep you running for days. You can charge it speedily from your AC outlet, but it also works with solar panels, like Jackery’s SolarSaga 200-W Solar Panel. Just be aware that it weighs a hefty 62 pounds. —Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill

Cute and compact, this portable battery has a fold-out handle, a 288-WH capacity, and weighs 8.3 pounds. It has two USB-C ports (18 W and 100 W), one USB-A (15 W), a car port (120 W), and an AC outlet (300 W, 600 W surge). That’s enough to keep your small gadgets going, and when the power runs out, simply unfurl the book-sized 40-watt solar panel. It took me around eight hours to charge it from the sun. —Simon Hill

Photograph: Scott Gilbertson

Sawyer

Squeeze Water Filter

When I’m not testing something else, this is the backpacking water filtration system I use, and it’s never let me down. It’s our top pick for ultralight hikers and backpackers. It weighs just 3 ounces and has a filtration level of 0.1 microns (which gets rid of E. coli, salmonella, giardia, cryptosporidium, and other common problems). The Squeeze also connects to any 28-mm diameter soda bottle (your basic 20-ounce Coke bottle, for example). —Scott Gilbertson

Photograph: Kieran Alger

I have yet to do a trip with a satellite communicator, but I do understand why people use them. If I were to bring one along, this is the one I’d get. It’s tiny, light (3.5 ounces), and easily stashable. It utilizes the super-fast Iridium satellite network, so you can send a rapid SOS from pretty much anywhere. There are extra features like waypoints and interval tracking, and it plays nice with compatible Garmin watches. —Scott Gilbertson

Best Home Deals

Photograph: Amazon

KitchenAid

Artisan Series 5 Quart Stand Mixer

The Artisan is a design classic, but it doesn’t just look great, it performs as well. It’s got plenty of power, and the tilt head lifts smoothly so you can change attachments. You get four attachments in total, including a dough hook, a wire whip, a pastry beater, and a flex edge beater that manages to get right up to the sides of the bowl so no cake mixture is left behind. —Kat Merck

Photograph: Matthew Korfhage

Instant Pot

Instant Vortex 9-quart Air Fryer with VersaZone Technology

The Instant Vortex Air Fryer is great for large families, and it’s the best-performing dual-zone basket fryer we’ve tested. The operation is intuitive—hard to come by among dual-basket devices whose recipes sometimes require very strange math or irritating button-presses. —Matthew Korfhage

Courtesy of Dyson

The best budget Dyson vac, the Digital Slim is basic, but powerful. It lacks some of the features on newer models. For example, instead of a single power button, it still has a trigger you have to hold down while vacuuming. You’ll do get a Motorbar cleaner head, a combination tool, and a crevice tool in the box. It’s not compatible with fancier accessories like the Laser Slim Fluffy cleaner head that shoots out a green laser to spot microscopic dust. We have seen the price dip lower on sale, but this is still a solid deal. —Nena Farrell

  • Courtesy of Brooklinen

  • Photograph: Nena Farrell

Brooklinen

Organic Cotton Sheets

If you want to switch to organic bedding on a budget, our favorite organic sheets from Brooklinen are on sale right now for Prime Day, along with the rest of Brooklinen’s Amazon storefront. These sheets are light and crisp, and just a touch softer than Brooklinen’s non-organic percale sheets. You’re getting the best of everything in one set. —Nena Farrell

Photograph: Buffy

I keep this blanket on my bed all year long. It’s an honorable mention in our down comforter buying guide. The down alternative comforter’s shell and fill are made with eucalyptus, which makes it nice and cooling in the summer, but the blanket itself is heavy and warm enough that it works well in winter too. It’s basically perfect. It also has loops for a duvet. —Louryn Strampe

Photograph: Lisa Wood Shapiro

Shark

NeverChange Air Purifier

As seen in our guide to the Best Air Purifiers, Shark’s NeverChange doesn’t sport a filter you never have to change, but it does last up to five years. WIRED reviewer Lisa Wood Shapiro found that this is only true in very small rooms, but it’s still a great deal on a decent air purifier, which now comes in fun colors like green and lavender. (Those ones aren’t on sale, though.) —Kat Merck

  • Photograph: Petkit

  • Photograph: Molly Higgins

This automatic litter box (8/10 WIRED Recommends) uses a camera and AI technology to monitor litter box usage, and actually lets you see your cat’s stool to help more closely monitor their health. The connected app logs and monitors usage, including the number of times used and the average duration. At $750, this usually pricey upgrade is the lowest we’ll probably see this year. —Molly Higgins

  • Photograph: Molly Higgins

  • Courtesy of Petcube

I love this pet camera from Petcube—it’s already super-affordable before the APD discount, and it has 360 PTZ rotation capabilities, 1080p HD resolution, 8X digital zoom, two-way audio, and night vision. The camera feed rotates smoothly, and the wide fish-eye-like lens and panning abilities allow you to see pretty much the entire room. For a little over 50 bucks, this is the best pet camera you can buy at this price point. —Molly Higgins

  • Photograph: Molly Higgins

  • Photography: Imilab

Imilab

C30 Dual Security Camera

This dual camera has 3K high definition, with 360-degree rotation up top, and a stationary camera below for even more coverage (plus it can be mounted upside down). There’s also live view and two-way chat, night vision, and 6X zoom. AI detection alerts to things like barks, meows, loud noises, and fire, so you can receive notifications for anything alarming. I love that the dual cameras let me keep an eye on my pets (and everything else) while away. At $60, this is a great deal for a super nice pet cam. —Molly Higgins

Photograph: Simon Hill

Folks with a Ring doorbell seeking security inside the home can keep everything in one app with this camera. The Ring Indoor Cam (2nd Gen) records crisp 1080p footage at 24 frames per second, boasts color night vision, and has a privacy shutter you can swivel around. You get motion alerts and two-way audio, the pre-roll captures a few seconds before each event, and there’s even a built-in siren. It’s two for the price of one with this deal! —Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill

Arlo

Essential Indoor Security Camera (2nd Gen)

Offering everything you want, including crisp 2K video at 24 frames per second, two-way audio, and a compact design that includes a privacy shutter, this is the upgrade pick in our best indoor security cameras guide and it’s no wonder. The Arlo app is swift to load, offers excellent notifications, and supports two-factor authentication, so you can log in with your fingerprint or face, phone permitting. We’ve seen discounts before but never this low. The only catch is the pricey subscription. —Simon Hill

Photograph: Simon Hill

Compact and affordable, with an IP66 rating, this security camera can be used indoors or out, though it does have to be plugged in. The starlight sensor enables color night vision. It also offers smart detection (people, pets, and vehicles), up to 2K resolution, and slightly laggy two-way audio. You can record locally on a microSD card or subscribe for cloud storage. This versatile device also has a magnetic mount and tiny dual spotlights. —Simon Hill

Photograph: Amazon

AirTags can be a bit divisive, but they’re the best way to keep tabs on your stuff if you have an iPhone. Set up with the Find My app, and you’ll always know where everything is.

Photograph: Louryn Strampe

This is the best sleep mask overall. It’s affordable and stylish, with many different colors to choose from. It’s also soft, lightweight, and breathable thanks to its mulberry silk construction. The elastic band isn’t too tight, and the mask does a solid job at blocking out most light. And I like that it comes with a drawstring case, so I don’t misplace it easily. —Louryn Strampe

Photograph: Louryn Strampe

Bellissima

Italia Diffon Supreme Ionic XL

This is the best diffuser for curly hair. I reach for it all the time. The hourglass design makes it easy to hold and maneuver around your noggin, and it’s easy to store, too, thanks to its compact design. It doesn’t dry your hair super-fast compared to other dryers—it added about 10 minutes to my normal drying time—but the sleek, frizz-free curls are worth it. —Louryn Strampe

Photograph: Louryn Strampe

This awesome sleep mask has an outer flap that lets you peer into the outside world. It still does a good job of blocking out light, but when you need to check the time or want to figure out what that weird airplane noise was, you don’t have to completely remove the eye mask to do it. It also comes with earplugs and a carrying case, and the mask has a silky, cooling exterior that puts me right to sleep. —Louryn Strampe

Photograph: Amazon

GHD has something of a cult following due to its reliability and unique features like a single temperature setting (365 degrees Fahrenheit) and fun little chime to let you know it’s heated up. We tout it as a more affordable alternative to the popular GHD Chronos (7/10, WIRED Review) in our guide to the Best Hair Straighteners, and at $73 off, it’s about as good a deal as you’re going to find on a GHD. —Kat Merck

Photograph: Amazon

Waterpik

Cordless Advanced 2.0 Water Flosser

This cordless powerhouse is compact, waterproof (yes, you can use it in the shower), and charges fast in four hours. It offers three pressure settings, four tips, and a 360-degree rotating handle that gets into every nook of your mouth. The water reservoir runs for about 45 seconds per fill, just enough for a thorough clean. It also comes with a microfiber travel bag, tip case, water plug, and universal voltage. It’s ideal for neat freaks or frequent travelers. —Boutayna Chokrane

Photograph: Philips

Philips

Philips Sonicare 4100 Electric Toothbrush

There are countless Philips Sonicare electric toothbrushes to choose from, but I keep coming back to the trusty 4100. Its gentle vibrations are easier on gums than the more aggressive oscillating brushes. You get a two-minute timer, two intensity settings, and a pressure sensor to protect your enamel. Battery life is excellent, lasting about two weeks per charge, and the built-in BrushSync tech lets you know when it’s time to replace the head. It’s simple, smart, and under $50. —Boutayna Chokrane

  • Courtesy of Revlon

  • Photograph: Nena Farrell

  • Photograph: Nena Farrell

Revlon

Revlon One-Step Volumizer Plus

We’ve loved the Revlon One-Step Volumizer Plus (8/10, WIRED Recommends) for a while. It dries and styles in one go with a 2-inch oval barrel and four heat modes (including a cool setting). The detachable head makes it easy to pack or stash in a drawer, and the ceramic titanium tech reduces heat exposure by 50 percent. It’s a smarter (and safer) upgrade from the original version—which had recall issues overseas—and a cheaper alternative to Drybar tools. —Boutayna Chokrane

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