Shark’s ChillPill fan gets first discount ahead of Prime Day
SharkNinja’s ChillPill fell to about $99 to $100 ahead of Prime Day, its first cut from a $149.99 launch price. The personal cooler adds mist and a cooling plate, but it is built for one person, not a whole room.

SharkNinja’s ChillPill personal cooling system got its first discount in June 2026, slipping to about $99 to $100 ahead of Amazon Prime Day after launching at $149.99, or about $150.
The price break matters because the ChillPill is not a basic handheld fan. SharkNinja launched it in 2026 from its headquarters in Needham, Massachusetts, as a 3-in-1 device that combines a high-speed fan, dry-touch evaporative mist and an InstaChill cooling plate. SharkNinja says the unit is designed to be worn, carried or set down for hands-free use, which makes it more flexible than a standard desk or handheld fan when heat follows users from a patio to a car to a crowded room.
That flexibility comes with a premium. Official support materials say the ChillPill offers 10 fan speed levels and two mist modes, Constant and Interval Mist. Product and retail listings say the fan can move air up to 25 feet per second, while the cooling plate can lower skin temperature by up to 16 degrees Fahrenheit on contact. Retail listings and launch coverage initially put it on Amazon, and later listings appeared at Best Buy, Costco, Crate & Barrel and SharkNinja’s own store.
The question for shoppers is whether those extras justify the cost. For people who want only a small, cheap way to move air, the ChillPill still sits above the price of many ordinary portable fans. A window air conditioner will cool an entire room, while SharkNinja’s device is aimed at the person using it, not the space around them. That makes it a better fit for commutes, porch work, travel and outdoor events than for cooling a bedroom or living room.

Review coverage has leaned into that tradeoff. Anna Gragert of CNET said the ChillPill stood out from handheld fans from Dyson, Jisulife and Blueair because of its two extra attachments. Freakin’ Reviews tested battery life, mist runtime and cooling performance outdoors in Las Vegas and in a hot car, underscoring how the device is meant for real heat, not just desk use.

The first discount improves the case for buyers who will use the mist and cooling plate regularly. At full price, it reads like a specialty gadget; near $100, it starts to look more like a practical summer buy for people who want more than a fan blade and less than a window unit.
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