

🔥 Heat your space, not your energy bill!
The Heat Storm Phoenix Infrared Space Heater delivers powerful 1500W heating with 5200 BTU output, featuring patented HMS technology for safe, oxygen-friendly warmth. Its compact design offers flexible wall or floor installation, controlled via an LED thermostat and remote. Perfect for small rooms and offices, it combines energy efficiency with quiet, safe operation.







| ASIN | B0771LZZT3 |
| Amperage | 12.5 Amps |
| Best Sellers Rank | #5,685 in Home & Kitchen ( See Top 100 in Home & Kitchen ) #38 in Indoor Space Heaters |
| Brand Name | Heat Storm |
| Color | White |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 16,228 Reviews |
| EU Spare Part Availability Duration | 2 Years |
| Form Factor | Cabinet |
| Fuel Type | Electric |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 00854271005444 |
| Heat Output | 5200 British Thermal Units |
| Heating Coverage | 150 ft² Primary, 750 ft² Secondary |
| Heating Element | Corded Electric |
| Heating Method | Infrared Quartz |
| Included Components | Heater, User Manual, Remote |
| Indoor Outdoor Usage | Indoor |
| Item Dimensions D x W x H | 18.75"D x 4.5"W x 12.75"H |
| Item Height | 12.75 inches |
| Item Type Name | Heater with Attachable Feet, Remote Control, Energy Efficient - 750-1500 Watts |
| Item Weight | 9 Pounds |
| Manufacturer | Heat Storm |
| Model Number | HS-1500-PHX |
| Mounting Type | Wall, Floor |
| Number of Speeds | 2 |
| Power Source | Corded Electric |
| Recommended Uses For Product | Bedroom, Garage, Home, House, Office |
| Room Type | Bedroom, living room, dining, kitchen, kids, nursery, home office, pets |
| Special Features | Child Lock, Tip Over Switch, Infrared Quartz |
| UPC | 854271005444 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
| Voltage | 120 Volts |
M**M
Highly recommend the Heat Storm
The heat storm is very efficient, looks great, and is a quality heater! very easy to install. All directions easy to follow. Also quiet. Heat output in my sunroom is excellent.(Room is 14X18 ft) I used to use a small rotating heater and the heat storm is so much better. It keeps the room comfortable. I haven't had to use the remote due to the automatic setting keeping the room at the temperature I want. Worth the money!
J**O
Want your wife to love you?
If so this will help. I mounted it to my bathroom wall in just a couple of minutes. I comes with all the parts you need including a built in level. It works great in our decently sized bathroom. And my our favorite thing about it is that it will connect to your home WiFi so you can use your phone to turn it on so that whatever you are heating up is nice and warm. It’s fairly quiet and doesn’t take up a lot of space. Definitely worth the $100 or whatever.
C**R
Works amazing
We purchased this heater for our laundry room. It seemed a bit colder than our other rooms so I thought we’d give this a try. It was so easy to hang on the wall. It came with a template. I love that it has a thermostat so it keeps the temperature at the set temp. It’s well made & the controls are easy to use. Even has a remote, but I love the WiFi functionality. For the price it was a great addition to our home.
D**J
PLEASE READ BEFORE PURCHASING!
Update 2025 (5 years old) - this device is still running. I unplug it in the summer and when the weather starts getting cooler in September I plug it in and set it to 68F. I’ve learned over the years not to try and turn it on when it’s already below 0 outside. If I start it when it’s in the 50’s then it is able to get it up to 68F and keep it generally +/- 3 degrees all winter. I should note: my garage is insulated R19 and the ceiling is double that. It is a 2+ garage attached to the house (not standalone) measuring 26x22 and 9 foot high ceiling. The door is also insulated but not sure how much. I realize this heater is only for 150sqft but it is doing a good job keeping the temp up. Even though I open the door a few times it can still catch up within the day. I wish it had a better blower but it works. Update 2022 - the device was defective and was replaced however the app still doesn’t work with the device. I set this to 68F and it runs and runs and runs. It does warm up the garage so that it isn’t freezing any longer. They said there was an update they would send me but I never received it. Okay so they are very slow to respond! I paid for another one and shipped the old one back once I learned the new one worked. I’ll try it and let you know. But as long as the app doesn’t work they will never get 5 stars. Original from 2020 First if you are buying this for the remote WiFi capability PLEASE try to download the app “Smart Life”, then attempt to open it on your device. If it works, then great you’re one of the few and continue on. If it crashes immediately and you’re using iOS then you now know WiFi will not function with this device so don’t buy it because of that. There is no ability to contact anyone because the app is made in China and nobody responds to emails for this heater because I tried to see if there’s something else I can use. So it’s waste of money because you cannot run this remotely or hook it to WiFi. I don’t even see the icon on the heater to attempt a connection/pair with anything else. Now for the functional issue: This device was mounted in my garage as many were stating they were using it for too. My garage is 47F and this ran for 6 hours on high and the temperature was 46F afterwards. It’s 16F outside so yes the garage is insulated and we kept the door closed the entire time. I don’t know if that means I have a defective machine because it doesn’t work at all. I tried contacting the seller but maybe they’re in China too and do not respond! I guess I wasted $150 and I bought it because the reviews were so good and I guess it’s all just fake reviews or I have a bad machine.
T**R
Nice heater
I purchased this heater for supplemental heat in a front room, that can get cold, as Primary heat source is wood burning stove at back of house. I had a few criteria buying a heater wall wall mounted, safety features and WiFi. This heater fit the bill and does the job at keeping front room from dropping too cold. It’s not too noisy . It’s simple to use the controls on the heater, remote or app. The app is really nice allowing me to turn on and control temp in room even when away. I love that it tells you temperature of room too. It was super simple to install on wall as it came with a template for holes that had level on it. Not that I expect it to fall but it has safety feature to shut off if it tips over, I tried it before installing and it works. Will be buying a few more for other areas of house and garage.
J**R
Heat Storm HS-1500-PHX Dynamo!
This review is for the Heat Storm HS-1500-PHX-WIFI Wifi Wall Mounted Heater. I bought one of these heaters when on a limited time deal and was very happy with it. I actually had a use for a 2nd one so checked the next day and there was a $5.00 coupon with the same limited time deal, so I bought another. These are replacing two Lasko high tech tower heaters, one of which has an odor that never went away and gives me a headache so I don’t use it at all, other than its excellent fan mode during the summer. *** Some key components to using any space heater for zone heating is first of all, don’t overestimate the unit’s capability. These are meant to be used as supplemental heat but in some situations, can be used as a primary source also, but again, be realistic. Secondly, and more important, isolate the space you are heating. Close the doors/windows/openings to other rooms, etc., and keep it as draft free as possible. This may not seem like a big thing, but it is. Also, an insulated space is a big plus when using the heater. The better insulated, the more heat will be realized and held longer. Common sense, but sometimes not so common. The above is important when comparing heater reviews. Also what is the outside temperature at the time of usage, and as mentioned above, how big a space is being heated, and what is the temperature expectation; are we trying to heat to 75 degrees, or a more realistic 65 - 68 +/- degrees. Both my Heat Storms are used in rectangular rooms in my semi-finished basement. The larger room is 23’ x 14’ with two unfinished outside walls and a drop ceiling. I heat this room to 64 - 65 degrees only when using it, playing pool or watching TV with my grandson. The other room is a 14’ x 10’ ManCave with one outside wall and a drop ceiling and is where I work out. I heat this room only when using it to 63 - 64 degrees. We use the Heat Storms as true zone heaters; as heating only when using the rooms they are in. Our house has a gas forced air HVAC system but the upstairs is heated pretty much by a ventless gas fireplace, other than the mornings when the furnace brings the house up to heat, so the Heat Storms may be considered as our primary heat for the basement. We live in Michigan and since I have had the heaters we have had temps anywhere from the low teens to the mid 30’s and the Heat Storms have done their job. The larger room will take anywhere from 15 - 40 minutes to achieve the above set temp, while the smaller only around 10 - 25 minutes or so. When on high, the unit hovers around 1500 watts +/-, and when on low, 750 +/- watts. The fan is fairly quiet in my estimation. In the past I have stayed away from the quartz element type heaters because of some bad experiences and my opinion of them not producing as much heat as other ceramic or PTC type heaters. But using Kasa energy smart plugs, which monitors many energy consumption areas, one thing I discovered is some of the PTC heaters although giving instant heat, does so at the cost of pulling upwards and a bit over 2000 watts while ramping up that instant heat. This is only for a very short period of time but can add to the usage cost and possible connection problems. If the outlet being used to plug any electric space heater has a loose fitting plug at all, it should not be used until replaced. This is the cause of most complaints of a burning plug or outlet. Any poor fitting plug to outlet generates heat from high resistance which if left unattended, will overheat and possibly burn. Good points: Has absolutely no odor when in operation, unlike some Ceramic/PTC units, which I have two of also. Keeps the temperature within one degree +/- of the set temperature. I have not come across an electric space heater that even comes close to this. If the temp is set at 64, it turns off when just touching 65, then back on again when touching 63. Can’t get any better than this. Has a 3 speed fan only mode also which I didn’t see mentioned in the advertising. This is great for a bit of summer cool when the AC is not required. Very easy to install using the included template with level and very light weight. Can be used with both Alexa and Google. I use Alexa voice commands and it works very well. This unit has two washable filters, one on each side and I think the way the unit inhales air has a lot to do with its even set temperature accuracy. The Wi-Fi works great. On both my heaters it was a simple setup that took only minutes using the Smart Life app. Bad Points, or I should say ‘Point’, as for my purposes, only one: Setting an on/off timer must be done on the heater itself, the remote control or an Alexa voice command. Although the app has all sorts of scheduling options, plus other features, I haven’t found a way to set an on/off timer using the app. If you want to turn it off in an hour, you have to set it to turn off an hour from the current time. The extended cool down can be offensive but doesn’t bother me since I am turning the heater(s) off and leaving the area. This is a great little heater and if used properly, within expectations and capabilities, should satisfy a lot of people. Limiting usage to a zone type heating should keep the electric bill in check. When I bought, the price was right also. Now, we will check its operational life although I think it should do well as Heat Storm appears to be a reputable company.
B**Y
You may need to calibrate its thermostat and re-do the wifi setup.
Update 2/12/2022: The heater died sometime during the night and when we woke up, the pump house was down to 36 F and it was 7 F outside. The heater was still online, but no longer producing heat. So, the only thing that was reliable on this unit ultimately failed. Fortunately, we are at the cottage and were able to replace the heater with another one that's not wifi controlled. After replacing the heater, I brought it inside intending to throw it away. I let it sit for a couple of hours to do other things when I decided that I might be able to salvage the controller and use it to operate another non wifi heater. I took the front cover off to troubleshoot it to see if it would be easy to reuse the controller and power circuit boards. I plugged the unit in laying it on its back side with the front cover off and laying upside down next to it. The unit connected to wifi but its tip sensor was activated, so I stood up the black plastic frame and rested the cover on a box that I set up behind it. I used my phone app to turn it on intending to troubleshoot the problem to see if it was worth salvaging the controller, and, after raising the setpoint to a few degrees above the indoor temperature, I heard a relay click and it started heating. One heating coil was glowing red and hot air was blowing. So it was working again. The heater has 2 separate heating coils (I think that's explained in the manual), each with its own relay connected to one end of its corresponding heat coil. The low setting turns on 1 heating coil and high setting turns on both heating coils. The other ends of the heating coils are connected together and go through a circuit board thats riveted to the heat duct. The circuit board contains a 117 deg C thermal cutoff switch and a bi-metallic overtemperature switch wired in series. Niether of these devices have feedback to the controller. Consequently, when either of them trips, the coils get disconnected and the heat shuts off. However, since there's no feedback to the controller regarding the status of these safety switches, the controller has no way of knowing that this happened, so it just keeps going as if nothing is wrong. From the datasheet for the thermal cutoff switch, when it opens, it cannot be reset and must be replaced. The bi-metallic overtemp switch will reset itself when it cools off to its reset point. Since letting the heater sit for a couple of hours allowed the heater to work again, I must conclude that the bi-metallic overtemp switch tripped and then cooled off enough to reset after I let it sit. The filter is perfectly clean as is the inside of the unit. There's not a single spot of dirt or dust anywhere, there are no airflow blockages, and there are no signs of animal activity in the pump house that may have blocked it. The unit is as clean as when it left the factory. It is unclear what caused the bi-metallic overtemp switch to trip I've had it running on the table for almost an hour now, and it's still producing heat, so the overtemp switch isn't tripping. It's hard for me to recommend this heater - especially if you need to rely on it to keep pumps and pipes from freezing. I can no longer say it's reliable. It can't tell you when the thermal cutoff switch or bi-metallic overtemp switch have tripped, it randomly loses wifi connectivity when the wifi signal is 3 bars or less, and it's wifi settings can't be remotely configured when connected via bluetooth. It started out as a promising heater, but turned into an unreliable unit. I intend to keep it since it's working again, but I'm not sure what I'm going to do with it. This will be my last update. Update 1/22/2022: Turns out that the heater was not connecting to the wifi range extender because the range extender altered the network name. The range extender split the wifi into 2 new and separate wifi networks, one for each frequency band. One had _5GEXT appended to the network name for tge 5Ghz band and one with _2.4GEXT appended for the 2.4Ghz band. The range extender's documentation didn't specify that you had to connect to one of those 2 new wifi networks to connect to the extended wifi. So, it wasn't the heater's fault that it wasn't connecting to the wifi range extender, it was my fault for not figuring that out sooner. At any rate, I still had to pull the heater out of the pump house because adding it using the auto detect via wifi or bluetooth would always fail and I didn't want to mess with it with pump house doors open to the 15 degree outside air. I brought the heater inside and did a manual add to get it to successfully add under the extender's 2.4Ghz connection. Then I put it back inside the pump house. What a pain! At any rate, the heater is no longer complaining about low wifi signal strength. We will see if the network connection remains stable. If so, I will restore a 3 star rating. However, I do want to emphasize that the heater did do its job and kept the pump house warm the whole time. Update 1/6/2022: Unit is offline - AGAIN! This time I'm at home and 2.5 hrs away from this POS heater. This is supposed to be one of the coldest nights of the year and this unit has gone offline yet again when I need it to be online. The wifi range extender should be giving it plenty of singal strength as its only 5 feet away on the other side of a wall with nothing but 3.5 inches of insulation and wood between the wifi extender and this POS heater. This unit is either ignoring the wifi extender, or its unstable wifi network software just eventually fails and needs to be power cycled to reset. At least my temperature monitor is telling me that the heater is still working. I'm going to try moving the internet modem/access point closer next time I get up there, but I can't move it very much as it's tethered to a phone line. I guess I'll need to get a longer phone line. However, I don't believe moving the access point will make any difference as I've connected reliably to my cottage wifi with my phone outside from 100 feet away through multiple walls. I suspect this heater's wifi software just sucks. I've got all kinds of wifi controlled things there from cameras to sensors to furnace thermostats, and NONE of those devices have ANY wifi issues like this POS heater does. Update12/10/2021: Reduced to 1 star. I tried moving the wifi range extender as close as possible to the pump house and the extender's signal strength was good. When the heater came back online, I thought everything was OK. However, when I moved a few feet away, the unit went offline again. When I moved closer, it came back online. I used my network scanner to determine that the heater had an IP address and I could ping it, so I knew it had a wifi connection, yet it would only connect when I was close enough. That's when I realized it was connecting via bluetooth to my phone and showing in the app as connected. When I shut off my bluetooth, the unit went offline again. The connection icon in the app should show how it's connected. It should either display a bluetooth icon or a wifi icon to let you know how it's connected. Next, there is no way to reset the wifi connection via bluetooth. Being connected via bluetooth is virtually useless, unless you like staying within a few feet of the heater at all times to remotely control it. I should have been able to fully reset and reconfigure the wifi connectiom using the bluetooth connection. That would've saved me a lot of work. I was forced to delete the heater from the app, unseal the pump house and attempt to re-add the heater. Fat lot of good that did! When I put it into pairing mode, the app couldn't find it! I was just connected to it via bluetooth, but now it can't find it??? I tried cycling power to no avail. I had to take it out of the pump house, bring it in, and try again. Success! I put it back in the pump house with my bluetooth off and it came back online. Then I had to re-seal up the pump house. Heat Storm, your network software is very unstable! Despite that unstable network software, I should have been able to reset the heater's wifi connection via the bluetooth connection. If I can connect to it via bluetooth, then I should be able to recover the device via bluetooth as well. I should not have needed to physically access the device to recover it. On a positive note, the heater itself never stopped working and kept my pump house warm. However the primary point of buying this heater was its remote control capability via wifi. I'm dropping the rating to 1 star because of the unstable network software. Update 12/4/2021: I downgraded to 3 stars after the unit went offline. I happened to be at the cottage when the unit started going offline repeatedly and was giving a low wifi signal strength warning. This happened just as we were leaving the cottage to return home. I immediately purchased a wifi extender and it seemed to solve the signal strength issue, but every time I opened the app, the unit would show up for 1/2 second as being offline, then would display normally. It did this every time I closed and then reopened the app. Note that I have the pump house sealed up, so getting inside requires some effort that I didn't have time for because we had to leave for home. Unfortunately, by the time we got home, the unit was offline and I no longer have access. Since the cottage is 2.5 hrs away, this is extremely inconvenient. At least my backup temperature sensor is still online and its readings indicate that the heater is still functioning, so I'm not concerned that the pipes will freeze, but losing remote access virtually eliminates the reason that I bought this heater in the first place. Now I will need to unseal the pump house the next time I go there and mess with this heater to get it back online. Very frustrating. Original review: Right out of the box, the heat output would stop with the displayed temperature about 8 degrees below the setpoint. I used a YoLink indoor temperature sensor to determine that the heater was shutting off the heat at the correct temperature, it was just the heater displaying the wrong temperature. I used the heater's thermostat calibration mode to adjust the displayed temperature to match the YoLink's reading and that got it pretty close. You could also use an instant read meat thermometer as a temperature sensor too. Note that when doing the calibration, you're not really chaging when the heater shuts off the heat, you're only adjusting what temperature the display reads. In my case, the YoLink temperature sensor read exactly the same before and after the calibration, it was just the heater's displayed temperature value that changed. To get the heater's displayed temperature to read very close to the actual heat on/off temperature signal that the heater is using to control the heat, refer to the last page in the manual. There you'll find descriptions of how each heat mode works and at what temperatures it will change the heating power. Put the heater in high mode and let it run until it feels like its blowing room temperature air. Enter calibration mode and set the temperature reading to be 2 degrees above the setpoint temperature. That will get the displayed reading to match closely with the temperature signal the unit is using to control the heat power. You don't have to mount this heater on the wall. It doesn't get hot to the touch except maybe directly on the outlet grill. When I was testing it, I had it standing on a 12" X 24" slate tile on top of an orange Home Depot bucket. I ran it on high for 24 hours that way as a test of the unit. The slate tile was only slightly warmer than room temperature directly in front of heat output register and it was basically room temperature everywhere else on the tile. The back of the unit never got hot, nor did the plastic front. In my case, I am using the Heat Storm heater to replace the dog house heater that I was using to heat my cottage's insulated well pump house. The dog house heater proved unable to keep up with the cold on a windy day. The pump house got down to 34.9 degrees F. That dog house heater didn't have wifi and only had a 300 watt output. This heater's low power mode is 700 watts and the wifi control allows me to control the pump house temperature remotely. I have the Heat Storm heater standing on the ground on top of that slate tile that I mentioned earlier in my review as the pump house is too small and tight to wall mount it. I have a YoLink indoor temperature sensor inside the well pump house that allows me to view the pump house temperature remotely as a backup temperture reading and I have it set to send a notification to my phone when the pump house temperature drops below 45 degrees F. That's how I found out that the dog house heater wasn't powerful enough to keep up. So far, the Heat Storm heater is easily able to keep up in low power mode and has been able to maintain the 55 degree F setpoint temperature in the well pump house without any problem. If it gets cold enough where it doesn't keep up, then I know that I can just increase the setpoint temperature without having to make an emergency trip to the cottage. And, if low power mode is not enough to keep up, I can switch the Heat Storm to high power mode. The only knock I have against the Heat Storm heater is that its cord is only about 2 or 3 feet long, so it needs to be close to an outlet. The mfg. doesn't approve of using an extension cord. This wasn't a problem for me, but it just barely reached the outlet in my pump house, so it might be a problem for you. I've only had this unit running for a few days, but so far it's been great and I'm thinking about getting another one for the cottage's bathroom.
J**Z
1 year later review
We're had this for a year now maybe 1.5 and its great. I love that its mounted on the wall and clothes cant get thrown on it. Im terrified of a space heater fire so the mount helped alot. Works perfectly, cant conplain at all. The temp of the room reading is very accurate and this really heats up a 700 squ ft room quickly(like 15-20 mins). Never hot, only warm or comfortable.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
2 months ago