10 Best Rangehoods in NZ

The best rangehood in NZ overall is the Midea 90cm T-Shape Rangehood, which pairs strong 1080 m3/h extraction with a 110-degree steam self-clean and an automatic smoke sensor, so it clears a busy kitchen and largely cleans itself. A rangehood pulls steam, grease and cooking smells away from your cooktop, either ducting them outside or filtering and recirculating the air. The right one comes down to your kitchen layout, how hard you cook and how much noise you will accept.

This guide ranks 10 rangehoods available in New Zealand across every common style, from wall canopies and T-shape chimneys to island hoods and hidden undermount powerpacks. If you are fitting out a whole kitchen, it is worth pairing your hood choice with the cooking gear in the best air fryers and best electric frypans guides.

Quick comparison

ProductBest forType / WidthAirflowWarranty
Midea 90cm T-Shape RangehoodBest overallT-shape 90cm1080 m3/h3 years
Midea 90cm T-Shape Island RangehoodIsland benchesT-shape island 90cm1100 m3/h3 years
Parmco Island Rangehood 900mmLow-profile islandLow-profile island 90cm1000 m3/h7 years
Parmco Canopy Rangehood 600mmSmall kitchensCanopy 60cm500 m3/h7 years
Parmco Curved Glass Rangehood 600mmStatement designCurved glass 60cm1000 m3/h7 years
Parmco Box Rangehood 900mmHeavy cookingBox canopy 90cm1000 m3/h7 years
Midea 60cm RangehoodBudget pickBuilt-in 60cm180 m3/h3 years
Parmco Turbo Pak Plus 520mmConcealed powerpackSlide-out 52cm1000 m3/h7 years
Midea 60cm T-Shape RangehoodValue T-shapeT-shape 60cm800 m3/h2 years
Midea 70cm PowerpackUndermountUndermount 70cm750 m3/h2 years

1. Midea T-Shape Rangehood – Best Overall

Midea 90cm T-shape rangehood in stainless steel and black glass

Best for households that want one rangehood to do everything, including clean itself. This 90cm T-shape chimney hood is the most capable all-rounder here, pulling 1080 m3/h on its standard top speed and boosting to 1320 m3/h when a pan flares up, which is ample for a busy family kitchen or open-plan layout. The headline trick is a 110-degree steam self-clean that sprays the internals so you skip the worst of the degreasing, paired with an iSmoke sensor that detects smoke and automatically ramps the fan.

It is finished in stainless steel with a black glass front and runs touch controls plus hand-wave gesture control, so greasy fingers never need to touch the panel. Two 1.5W lights sit over the cooktop and the cabinet measures 896mm wide with an extendable chimney from 672mm to 973mm to suit most ceiling heights. The trade-off is noise: at 68dB on full power it is the loudest unit in this guide, the price you pay for that extraction and the steam-clean hardware. After a big cook it pairs well with the kitchen tidy-up gear in the best waste disposal units guide.

Pros

  • Strong 1080 m3/h extraction with a 1320 m3/h boost
  • Steam self-clean and iSmoke auto-detection do the hard work
  • Touch and hand-wave gesture control, plus a tidy stainless and glass look

Cons

  • Loudest unit here at 68dB on full power
  • Premium features sit at the top of the value range

Key specs: Model E88, T-shape chimney, 896mm (90cm) wide, 1080 m3/h (boost 1320), 68dB, 4 speeds, touch and gesture control, steam self-clean, 2 x 1.5W lights, 896 x 494 x 672-973mm, stainless steel and black glass, 3-year warranty.

2. Midea T-Shape Island Rangehood – Best for Island Benches

Midea 90cm T-shape island rangehood in stainless steel

Best for cooktops set into an island bench, where the hood hangs from the ceiling and is seen from every angle. This 898mm island unit is the quietest high-power pick here at just 57dB, yet still moves 1100 m3/h, so it clears steam from a central hob without dominating the conversation around it. It can be ducted up through the ceiling using the included 150mm kit, or run in recirculating mode where ducting is not possible.

A stainless steel washable grease filter slides out for cleaning rather than being thrown away, touch controls with a digital display sit on the canopy face, and a 3-minute run-on keeps clearing residual smoke and oil after the burners are off. The extendable chimney covers 650mm to 1240mm for higher island ceilings. The trade-off is installation: a ceiling-mounted island hood is more involved and more expensive to fit than a wall canopy, and you need a clear duct path or a recirculating setup. If the island doubles as a frying station, also see the best deep fryers guide.

Pros

  • Quietest strong performer here at 57dB with 1100 m3/h
  • Designed to be seen from all sides on an island
  • Washable stainless filter and a 3-minute run-on cycle

Cons

  • Ceiling install is more complex and costly than a wall canopy
  • Needs a clear duct path or a recirculating conversion

Key specs: Model 90M83, T-shape island, 898mm (90cm) wide, 1100 m3/h, 57dB, 3 speeds, touch control with digital display, washable stainless steel filter, ducted (150mm kit included) or recirculating, extendable chimney 650-1240mm, stainless steel, 3-year warranty.

3. Parmco Island Rangehood – Best Low-Profile Island

Parmco 900mm low-profile island rangehood in stainless steel

Best for an island that wants strong extraction without a tall chimney stealing the sightline. This Parmco is a low-profile box-style island hood, 900mm wide and rated at 1000 m3/h through three push-button speeds, and it carries Parmco’s standout 7-year warranty that none of the Midea units match. Full-width removable aluminium grease filters span the underside and pull out for cleaning, and LED lighting throws an even wash over the cooktop below.

It is built to duct out through a 150mm outlet, the configuration that vents heat and moisture properly from a central bench. A New Zealand owner on Geekzone who fitted a Parmco island hood in 2019 said it simply works and beats letting the kitchen fill with steam and cooking smells. The trade-off is the same owner’s note that it gets noisy on the top fan speed, and the quieter remote-motor option Parmco offers is currently listed as unavailable, so you are committed to the onboard motor. Pair a clean-running island with the benchtop cooking picks in the best electric frypans guide.

Pros

  • 7-year Parmco warranty, the longest in this guide
  • Low-profile design keeps an island sightline clear
  • 1000 m3/h with full-width washable aluminium filters

Cons

  • Noisy on the top fan-speed setting
  • Quieter remote-motor option currently unavailable

Key specs: Model T4-12LOW-9IS, low-profile island, 900mm wide, 1000 m3/h, 62dB, 3 speeds, push-button control, LED lighting, full-width aluminium filters, ducted (150mm), stainless steel, 7-year warranty.

4. Parmco Canopy Rangehood – Best for Small Kitchens

Parmco 600mm canopy rangehood in black

Best for compact kitchens and lighter cooking, where a slim 600mm canopy in matte black makes a tidy match over a four-burner cooktop. It is the gentlest extractor here at 500 m3/h across three push-button speeds, which is enough for everyday boiling, simmering and the occasional fry without the roar of a high-output hood. Removable aluminium mesh filters lift out for a soak, and LED lighting keeps the cooktop lit.

It ducts out through a standard 150mm outlet and can also be set up to recirculate where venting outside is not an option, making it flexible for rentals and smaller homes. New Zealand retailers describe it as high suction for its class with low running noise and easy-clean filters, and like the rest of the Parmco range it is backed by the 7-year warranty. The trade-off is straightforward: at 500 m3/h it is underpowered for heavy wok work, chargrilling or a large open-plan space, so keen cooks should size up. For more compact-kitchen appliances, browse the best air fryers guide.

Pros

  • Compact 600mm black canopy suits small kitchens
  • Quiet, low-fuss operation with easy-clean mesh filters
  • 7-year warranty and flexible ducted or recirculating fit

Cons

  • Weakest extractor here at 500 m3/h
  • Underpowered for heavy frying, wok or chargrill cooking

Key specs: Model RC6B500, fixed wall canopy, 600mm wide, 500 m3/h, 3 speeds, push-button control, LED lighting, removable aluminium mesh filters, ducted (150mm) or recirculating, black, 7-year warranty.

5. Parmco Curved Glass Rangehood – Best Statement Design

Parmco 600mm curved glass rangehood in stainless steel

Best for buyers who want a design feature over the cooktop without dropping power. This 600mm canopy frames a sweep of curved glass on a stainless body, and unlike most good-looking compact hoods it still pulls a full 1000 m3/h through three push-button speeds. That makes it a rare combination of statement looks and genuine extraction in a narrow 600mm footprint.

The full-width aluminium filters are dishwasher safe and lift out easily, LED lights cover the cooktop, and it can be ducted through a 150mm outlet or run recirculating. It carries the 7-year Parmco warranty. The trade-offs are worth weighing: at 63dB it is audibly louder than the quiet Midea island, the curved glass shows grease marks and fingerprints more than plain steel so it needs wiping to stay sharp, and the noise-reducing remote-motor option is currently unavailable. Keen home cooks fitting out a kitchen may also like the best pizza ovens guide.

Pros

  • Curved-glass design with a full 1000 m3/h in a 600mm size
  • Dishwasher-safe aluminium filters
  • 7-year warranty

Cons

  • 63dB is louder than the quieter island units
  • Glass shows grease and fingerprints, so needs regular wiping

Key specs: Model T4-11GLA-6, curved glass canopy, 600mm wide, 1000 m3/h, 63dB, 3 speeds, push-button control, LED lighting, dishwasher-safe aluminium filters, ducted (150mm) or recirculating, stainless steel with curved glass, 7-year warranty.

6. Parmco Box Rangehood – Best for Heavy Cooking

Parmco 900mm box rangehood in black glass

Best for serious cooks who want wide coverage and strong pull over a big cooktop. This 900mm low-profile box hood finishes in black glass and shifts 1000 m3/h across three speeds through touch controls with a digital display, with a timer so it can keep running after you plate up. The wide 900mm mouth captures steam and grease across the full span of a large or multi-zone cooktop better than a 600mm canopy can.

Full-width removable aluminium filters make degreasing simple, LED lighting covers the surface, and it ducts out through a 150mm outlet or recirculates. The 7-year Parmco warranty applies. A New Zealand Parmco owner on Geekzone summed up the type well, noting it is noisy on the top fan-speed setting but a lot better than letting the kitchen fill with steam, smoke and cooking smells. The trade-offs: that top-speed noise, and Parmco lists the full product dimensions only in a spec image rather than as text, so measure the cabinet gap carefully before buying.

Pros

  • Wide 900mm capture with a strong 1000 m3/h pull
  • Touch control, digital display and a run-on timer
  • Black glass low-profile look with a 7-year warranty

Cons

  • Noticeably loud on the top speed setting
  • Full dimensions only published in a spec image, so measure carefully

Key specs: Model RB9G1000, low-profile box canopy, 900mm wide, 1000 m3/h, 62dB, 3 speeds, touch control with digital display and timer, LED lighting, full-width aluminium filters, ducted (150mm) or recirculating, black glass, 7-year warranty.

7. Midea 60cm Rangehood – Best Budget Pick

Midea 60cm built-in stainless steel rangehood

Best for the smallest budget and the smallest kitchen, where the job is simply to clear everyday steam and odours. This 595mm stainless built-in slots under a cabinet or shelf and keeps things basic with two push-button speeds and an eye-level control. It is the most affordable pick in this guide by a clear margin, so it is a sensible fit for a rental, a bach or a tidy-up of a galley kitchen.

Midea quotes a quiet, energy-efficient motor, LED lighting and a slim 595 x 308 x 175mm body, and it can be set up to duct outside or recirculate. The honest trade-off is power: at 180 m3/h it is by far the lightest extractor here and only has two speeds, so it handles light cooking, boiling and reheating rather than heavy frying or wok sessions. Anyone who cooks hard should step up to one of the T-shape or canopy picks above. For other compact appliances that suit a small kitchen, see the best air fryers guide.

Pros

  • Cheapest pick here and genuinely compact
  • Quiet, energy-efficient motor with LED lighting
  • Ducted or recirculating to suit rentals and small homes

Cons

  • Very low 180 m3/h airflow, light cooking only
  • Just two fan speeds

Key specs: Model 60L03, built-in semi-concealed, 595mm (60cm) wide, 180 m3/h, 65dB, 2 speeds, push-button control, LED lighting, ducted or recirculating, 595 x 308 x 175mm, stainless steel, 3-year warranty.

8. Parmco Turbo Pak Plus Black Glass – Best Concealed Powerpack

Parmco Turbo Pak Plus 520mm black glass slide-out rangehood

Best for a clean, hidden look where the rangehood disappears into the cabinetry. This Parmco slide-out powerpack tucks inside an overhead cupboard at just 520mm wide, yet it punches well above its size with 1000 m3/h of extraction across four touch-button speeds. Pull the front out to cook, slide it back when you are done, and the kitchen keeps its uncluttered lines.

It is finished in black glass, lit by LED, and ducts out through a 150mm outlet, with the 7-year Parmco warranty behind it. New Zealand retailers position it as one of the most cost-effective, easy-to-clean ways to add serious ventilation without a visible hood. The trade-offs: as an integrated unit its performance depends on being correctly ducted and concealed inside a properly sized cabinet, so the install matters, and because it hides away it adds no visual feature to the kitchen. If you like the concealed-appliance approach, the best waste disposal units guide covers another tidy under-bench upgrade.

Pros

  • Strong 1000 m3/h from a compact 520mm slide-out body
  • Hides inside cabinetry for a clean, uncluttered kitchen
  • Four speeds, touch control and a 7-year warranty

Cons

  • Performance depends on correct ducting and a properly sized cabinet
  • No standalone visual presence by design

Key specs: Model RT52G1000, integrated slide-out powerpack, 520mm wide, 1000 m3/h, 63dB, 4 speeds, touch control, LED lighting, ducted (150mm), black glass, 7-year warranty.

9. Midea 60cm T-Shape Rangehood – Best Value T-Shape

Midea 60cm T-shape rangehood in black glass and stainless steel

Best for shoppers who want the look and pull of a T-shape chimney hood in a 60cm size without paying for a 90cm flagship. It moves a genuine 800 m3/h on its standard top speed, which is strong for a compact wall hood, through three touch-controlled speeds with a digital display. Two washable five-layer aluminium mesh filters and twin LED lights handle the everyday work, and a 3-minute run-on keeps clearing fumes after the burners go off.

The black glass and stainless body gives it a more premium face than a basic slide-out, and it can be ducted outside or run recirculating to suit the kitchen. The trade-offs: on full power it climbs toward 74dB, so it is loud at maximum, and TSB notes the delivered unit uses a centre power-stage control rather than the timer shown in the product photo, worth knowing before you buy. It is a strong everyday performer that pairs nicely with the benchtop cooking gear in the best electric frypans roundup.

Pros

  • Real 800 m3/h pull in a 60cm T-shape
  • Touch control, digital display and a 3-minute run-on
  • Washable five-layer filters and a smart black-glass look

Cons

  • Loud at full power, up to around 74dB
  • Control layout differs from the photo (power-stage dial, not a timer)

Key specs: Model 60M77, T-shape chimney, 60cm wide, 800 m3/h (1150 unrestricted), 62-74dB, 3 speeds, touch control with digital display, 2 x washable 5-layer aluminium mesh filters, ducted or recirculating, 60 x 50 x 63-119cm, black glass and stainless steel, 2-year warranty.

10. Midea Rangehood Integrated Powerpack – Best Undermount

Midea 70cm integrated powerpack rangehood in stainless steel

Best for a discreet undermount install in a mid-size kitchen, where a 70cm powerpack hides under a cabinet and still delivers real extraction. It pulls 750 m3/h on its standard top speed through three push-button speeds at eye level, enough to clear a busy weeknight cooktop without a visible chimney. Twin LED lights and washable five-layer aluminium mesh filters keep maintenance simple.

The stainless body measures a slim 70 x 28.4 x 29.9cm to sit neatly inside cabinetry, and it ducts out through a 150mm outlet. The trade-offs are practical: the ducting kit is not included, so budget for that and the install, and at around 72dB it is loud at full speed. As a built-in it also adds no standalone style to the room, which is exactly the point for buyers who want the hood out of sight. For more behind-the-scenes kitchen upgrades, see the best deep fryers guide.

Pros

  • Discreet 70cm undermount with a solid 750 m3/h pull
  • Simple push-button control and washable filters
  • Slim stainless body tucks neatly into cabinetry

Cons

  • Ducting kit not included, so factor in the extra
  • Loud at full power, around 72dB

Key specs: Model 70T01, integrated undermount powerpack, 70cm wide, 750 m3/h (1150 unrestricted), 72dB, 3 speeds, push-button control, 2 x LED lights, washable 5-layer aluminium mesh filters, ducted (150mm, kit not included), 70 x 28.4 x 29.9cm, stainless steel, 2-year warranty.

How to choose a rangehood in NZ

Pick the type that fits your cooktop. Wall canopies and T-shape chimneys suit hobs against a wall, island hoods hang from the ceiling over a central bench, and slide-out or undermount powerpacks hide inside cabinetry for a clean look. Match or exceed your cooktop width, so a 90cm cooktop wants a 90cm hood.

Size the extraction to how you cook. Multiply your kitchen’s cubic metres by 10 for a target air-change rate. Light cooking is fine on 300 to 500 m3/h, but frequent frying, wok or chargrill cooking calls for 700 m3/h or more, like the 1000 m3/h Parmco and Midea picks above.

Duct outside if you can. Ducted hoods vent moisture and heat right out of the home and run quieter and more efficiently than recirculating, which filters the air and returns it warm and damp. Most picks here do both, so check whether your kitchen has an external wall or ceiling duct path. A clean-running kitchen also pairs well with an under-bench best waste disposal units.

Mind the noise and the upkeep. Quoted noise here runs from 57 to 72dB and climbs with fan speed, so a more powerful hood used on a lower setting is often quieter day to day. Plan to wash aluminium mesh filters monthly, and weigh warranty too, where the Parmco models lead with 7 years.

Verdict

For most NZ kitchens the Midea 90cm T-Shape Rangehood is the best overall, combining strong extraction with steam self-cleaning. Choose the Midea 90cm Island for a quiet ceiling-mounted hood over an island, a Parmco canopy or curved-glass model for a 7-year warranty and a statement look, the Parmco Turbo Pak Plus or Midea 70cm powerpack for a hidden install, and the Midea 60cm as the budget pick for a small kitchen. Match the width to your cooktop, size the airflow to how hard you cook, and duct outside wherever you can.

Related guides: best air fryers, best deep fryers, best pizza ovens.

FAQs

Is a ducted or recirculating rangehood better?

Ducted is better wherever it is possible. It vents steam, heat and odours outside, runs more efficiently and is generally quieter. A recirculating hood filters the air through charcoal and returns it to the room, needs filter changes every few months, and suits apartments or kitchens with no external wall.

What extraction rate (m3/h) do I need for a rangehood?

Aim for at least 10 air changes an hour, found by multiplying your kitchen’s cubic metres by 10. Standard kitchens are well served by 300 to 500 m3/h, while keen cooks who fry, wok or chargrill should choose 700 m3/h or more for fast, effective clearing.

How loud is a rangehood and what noise level is good?

Budget hoods sit near 60dB, which is noticeable, while a quiet model runs under about 55dB measured a metre away. The units here range from 57 to 72dB, and noise rises with fan speed, so a higher-airflow hood used on a lower setting often runs quieter day to day.

Do rangehoods have to be vented outside?

No. Ducted models vent outside and perform best, but any recirculating-capable hood can instead filter the air through charcoal and return it to the room. Recirculating suits apartments and inner kitchens with no external wall, though it clears moisture and heat less effectively than ducting does.

How often should you clean a rangehood filter?

Wash aluminium mesh or baffle grease filters at least once a month, more often with frequent oil, garlic and spice cooking, by soaking in hot soapy water then scrubbing. Charcoal filters used in recirculating mode cannot be washed and need replacing every two to four months to keep performance up.

What width rangehood should I get for my cooktop?

Match or exceed the cooktop width so the hood captures rising steam and grease. A 60cm cooktop pairs with a 60cm hood, while 90cm cooktops and open-plan kitchens benefit from a 90cm canopy. Going one size wider improves capture over the front burners where most steam escapes.