The Shark BlastBoss uses blasts of air to clean spots a vacuum cant. I keep finding new ways to use it.

Table of Contents

In terms of physics, the Shark BlastBoss is kind of the antithesis of a vacuum: It’s still a cordless cleaning tool, but it blows instead of sucks. I swear I wanted to try it for more reasons than the fact that it comes in pink. Upon the BlastBoss’s debut in March 2026, I immediately thought of all the dust and crumbs I encounter regularly that don’t really budge from the suction power of a robot or stick vacuum.

The Shark BlastBoss is marketed for a huge range of indoor and outdoor use. Since I don’t have any outdoor space at my apartment, I also took it on a trip to my parents’ house to test its versatility in a garage and a basement and on a porch. I found several ways to use the BlastBoss just in the past month, and there are countless possibilities beyond that. TL;DR? Use the table of contents to skip down to the testing tea for usage inside, outside, and in the car.

What does the Shark BlastBoss do?

The Shark BlastBoss is a handheld cordless blower that uses high-velocity air to clean dirty spots where it doesn’t make sense to use a vacuum.

Shark BlastBoss and attachments on hardwood floor near rug

BlastBoss air is stronger than air being sucked the opposite way from a vacuum.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Shark BlastBoss on hardwood floor

The BlastBoss weighs less than 1.5 pounds.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

The reach of suction power has a much more limited radius than air being blown out the other direction. And often, stubborn household dust or debris lodged in tiny cracks only responds to the positive pressure of a quick blow (rather than the negative pressure of vacuum suction). I won’t pretend to understand the science behind it further than that — all I know is that people my age were born knowing to blow on an uncooperative N64 cartridge, not try to vacuum it.

The BlastBoss is really just an intense embodiment of blowing the dust off, with power up to 190 MPH that can be controlled through attachments like an extender wand, broom, and precision nozzle. Battery life depends on which of the three settings you’re using: It can last between five and seven minutes on boost mode, up to 10 minutes on outdoor mode, and nearly an hour on indoor mode.

The BlastBoss comes in five colors: classic gray or white, plus blue, green, or pink. (Cosmo and Wanda, you ain’t slick.)

Using the Shark BlastBoss indoors

A lot of BlastBoss advertising shows it being used outside or in a car, so I initially wasn’t sure how much use I’d get out of it inside my apartment. My first order of business was to blow the dust and cat hair off my MacBook keyboard, which was borderline ASMR to watch. Then it hit me: This thing is literally a power duster.

I’ve been using the BlastBoss to sweep off any items that attract that sticky layer of dust: knick-knacks on the TV stand, picture frames, faux plant leaves, the top of the record player, high-up shelves that I can’t see but I know are covered in gray fluff. I try to wipe most of these down with an actual cloth from time to time, but the BlastBoss is a great way to make dusting a once-a-week chore instead of a once-or-twice-per-year chore.

Dusting off the bar shelves on my kitchen island was a breeze — the BlastBoss’s indoor setting is gentle enough to blow off fragile items without knocking them over. My handheld Dyson feels too big and awkward to sneak in between each glass, and can’t suck up the super-fine debris that’s smaller than a cat hair.

Leah using Shark BlastBoss to dust glasses on shelf

If you weren’t particularly passionate about dusting before, you are now.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Shelf with decor and bar stools in kitchen area

These shelves get disgustingly dusty, and cat toys always get lost underneath.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

I also realized that the BlastBoss is really good at getting small items out from under furniture, as long as there’s room for it to blow out the other side. One of my cats constantly loses stuff under the bottom shelf of that same kitchen island, so I pointed the BlastBoss down there to see what happens. A handful of bobby pins, a crinkle ball, and her beloved spider ring “toy” shot out the other side, as well as a ton of crumbs and hair tumbleweeds.

As a professional robot vacuum reviewer, I’m constantly down on the floor to inspect a vacuum’s cleaning performance. That also means that I’m constantly face-to-face with all of the fallen food particles wedged under the fridge and oven. The BlastBoss was able to blow some of those out into the middle of the floor. And that perfectly aligns with the whole ethos of my job: Make a mess and let a robot vacuum deal with it.

Using the Shark BlastBoss outdoors

The BlastBoss is an instant staple tool for anyone with a porch, deck or patio, or even just a garage.

You’ll get around 26 inches of reach with both extender attachments clicked on, and it’s lightweight enough to comfortable hold up with one hand. My mom was more than happy for me to blow down the spider webs and remnants from an old bird nest from the lanterns on the side of her house.

Leah using Shark BlastBoss to blow spiderwebs off of lamp on side of house

This is so much better than getting spiderwebs stuck on broom bristles.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Leah using Shark BlastBoss to clean porch furniture

Outdoor mode is very effective on dirty cushions, even in the cracks.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

It’s also much easier to blow leaves off of patio furniture cushions than it is to try to brush them off (or suck them up with a stick vacuum, if you really wanted to bring it outside).

When the broom attachment is clicked on, it’s a bad day to be a pile of leaves in the yard or a layer of pine needles on the porch. I was able to clear the 15+ foot long concrete patio of lawnmower clippings and a mess of seeds from the bird feeder in a minute or two — much faster (and less of a workout) than doing it all with a manual broom.

Shark BlastBoss with broom attachment on sidewalk near grass

Shark calls this a “BlastBroom.”
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Shark BlastBoss with broom attachment on sidewalk near grass

Your typical sweeping motion goes a lot further with a massive gush of air behind it.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

I think you’d get your money’s worth out of the BlastBoss in a single fall season alone. I mean, it’s basically a leaf blower — but a cute, compact one that wouldn’t feel like it has to be stored outside. Back to my parents’ house, I can already picture how convenient it’ll be to grab the BlastBoss out of a closet near a door for quick sidewalk and patio upkeep (rather than going all the way to a storage shelf in the garage).

Using the Shark BlastBoss in the car

Regardless of your spot on the “religiously” to “never” scale of vacuuming out your car, the BlastBoss is awesome to have on hand for quick seat and trunk refreshes.

I can hit my car interior with my handheld Dyson all I want, but there are always some little specks that won’t budge. The jet of air from the BlastBoss takes care of them in a snap. For specks in seat cushion cracks, I just open the closest door and blow them right off the side. For specks stuck in the ridges of the rubber mat in my trunk, I get in my back carseat and blow them out the back. Parents on TikTok and YouTube do the same thing with snack spills in car seats.

Leah using Shark BlastBoss to blow debris off of car floor under driver's seat

Even if I don’t eat in the car, crumbs seem to spawn under here.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Leah using Shark BlastBoss to blow debris out of car trunk

Boost mode got the sticky pieces that don’t come off when I shake the mat upside down.
Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

I also use the BlastBoss to blow dirt, rocks, and leaves out from under the two front seats, where my handheld vacuum won’t fit. I still have to vacuum that debris up, but the BlastBoss at least gets it to a spot where the vacuum can reach it.

One of my first thoughts was that the BlastBoss would rock for getting pesky-ass sand out of the car. My second thought was that you could theoretically just blow legs and shoes off before anyone even gets in the car. If you’re a frequent beachgoer or otherwise outdoorsy person, you could just keep the BlastBoss in the car and grab it whenever you need it — it doesn’t die just sitting there, as a lot of cordless vacuums do. Mine has only needed to be charged twice in the month that I’ve had it, and there was a day or two when I was using it way more intensely than normal for testing purposes.

The internet has filled me in on multiple hacks that I would have never thought up on my own. Apparently, you can use the BlastBoss to blow dry your car after washing it to prevent streaks and water spots, or use the precision nozzle to blow up an inflatable mattress.

Is the Shark BlastBoss worth it?

The Shark BlastBoss has proven to be super handy in small spaces and larger homes, plus outdoor spaces and the car. If you know you should be dusting or sweeping out your car more often than you do, I think the BlastBoss makes the job quick and easy enough that you’ll have the motivation to do it.

Not that there are many other cute and casual air blasters for comparison, but the $149.99 price tag seems pretty practical for a tool with so many uses. Plus, the compact handle and removable attachments should be out of the way in storage.


Source: mashable.com…

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