The Dreame Miracle Pro finally gives my scalp and hair the attention they deserve

The Dreame Miracle Pro is so much more than a regular hair dryer, even if some of its features triggered me

Dreame Miracle Pro hair dryer in gold and tan design lying on a quartz surface, showing the barrel and handle with the anti-frizz attachment
The Dreame Miracle Pro stands out with its gold finish and leather-textured handle and comes with five attachments including the anti-frizz nozzle (pictured) (Image credit: © Future)

TechRadar Verdict

The Dreame Miracle Pro High-Speed Hair Dryer is a premium dryer that goes well beyond drying hair. It mists your hair with essence, protects your scalp with red and near-infrared light, and adjusts its heat based on how close it is to your head. In testing, it dried fast and the finish was consistently smooth despite some small, irritating flaws when it comes to fluctuating noise. It's best suited to anyone who takes their hair health seriously and is willing to pay for it.

Pros

  • +

    Takes hair health seriously

  • +

    Essence delivers real results

  • +

    Premium design and feel

  • +

    Four attachments included in price

  • +

    Quiet for its power output

Cons

  • -

    AI features can lag

  • -

    Constant changes in the adjustable airflow is irritating

  • -

    Red light hard to judge properly

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Dreame Miracle Pro: two-minute review

The Dreame Miracle Pro is a premium dryer that does a lot more than just dry your hair. Alongside six modes — Cool, Scalp, Essence, Comfort, Quick Dry, AI Smart — it comes with a built-in essence mister, a ring of red and near-infrared light therapy around the barrel, and a distance sensor that automatically adjusts heat and airflow depending on how close the dryer is to your head.

During my tests, the main drying performance was strong. Using Comfort mode on high speed, my mid-length, fine hair went from wet to dry in around under five minutes with a smooth, frizz-free finish. Quick Dry mode got there faster, but the result wasn't quite as polished. Not bad, just not as smooth as on Comfort mode. The essence mister – activated in Essence mode for the final minute or two of a drying session – left my hair noticeably softer and smelling great. It's one of those features that sounds gimmicky until you've used it and seen how great it is.

The distance-sensing heat adjustment works well for rough drying but responds slower than I'd like and the constant change in sound as it switches between each speed just ends up being irritating. For more precise and less annoying styling one of the fixed modes tends to give more predictable results. The red and near-infrared light therapy ring is harder to evaluate in the short term, because any real benefit to scalp health takes months to show up, but it's a nice addition. It's also worth noting that fitting an attachment blocks most of the light, so getting the full benefit requires using the dryer without a nozzle.

At $399.99 / £399, the Miracle Pro sits at the same price point as the best hair dryers on the market. If you want a dryer that treats hair health as seriously as drying speed, it makes a compelling case. Keep reading to learn more in my Dreame Miracle Pro review.

Dreame Miracle Pro: price & availability

  • List price: $399.99 / £399
  • Availability: US / UK
  • Launch: 2025

The Dreame Miracle Pro is available directly from Dreame and from Best Buy in the US. In the UK, it's stocked at Dreame's own site and Boots.

At $399.99 / £399 (about AU$560), the Miracle Pro sits towards the top end of the price scale. That's approaching the same price bracket as the $549.99 / £399.99 / AU$749 Dyson Supersonic Nural which, for a brand that has historically positioned itself as a more accessible alternative to its luxury rival, is a notable shift.

The Miracle Pro's drying performance is strong, but strong drying alone doesn't justify $400. What you're really paying for is the smart heat regulation, a built-in essence mister and the red light ring. There isn't another dryer on the market that offers this combination of features, making it stand out.

Dreame Miracle Pro attachments shown inside the tan leather storage case

The Miracle Pro comes in a faux-leather storage case complete with a diffuser (pictured right), two styling nozzles (bottom left and bottom centre), an anti-frizz attachment (top center) and Dreame Boca Essence (top left) (Image credit: Future)

The essence capsule ships with one 30ml bottle of Dreame's own Boca formula, and replacing the essence will be an ongoing cost. It's not currently possible to buy the Boca essence on its own but the cartridge is refillable so you can spend as much or as little as you want on an alternative essence.

Four attachments are included in the box — a styling nozzle, smoothing nozzle, anti-frizz nozzle and diffuser. This is generous (albeit an expectation at this price) and compares well to the Nural, which ships with five attachments. The Miracle Pro also comes in a velvet-lined gift box, which adds to the premium feel.

At this price, the most obvious comparison is the Dyson Supersonic Nural, which is the benchmark for premium hair dryers and the closest rival in terms of smart heat technology. The L'Oreal AirLight Pro, at $475, is also worth considering if light-based technology appeals — it uses infrared rather than red light therapy, with the focus on faster drying rather than scalp health, and comes with an app for precise heat and airflow controls. In the UK, the GHD Speed at £299 is a strong alternative if pure drying performance is the priority — its halo airflow tech keeps the barrel cool to the touch and delivers super fast results, though it doesn't attempt any of the Miracle Pro's more advanced, smart features.

Whether it's good value for money or not is that it's complicated. If the scalp light and essence mist appeal to you, and you'd use them consistently, you will be able to justify the price. If you're only really after the fastest, most powerful dryer, you can spend less on the likes of the GHD Speed to get there.

  • Value score: 3.5 / 5

Dreame Miracle Pro: specs

Swipe to scroll horizontally

Model:

Dreame Miracle Pro

Wattage:

1,600W

Weight (without cord, approx):

0.9lbs / 420g

Size (H x W x L, approx):

10.4 x 3.4 x 3.2in / 26.3 x 8.6 x 8.2cm

Airflow settings:

2

Temperature settings:

6

Extra modes:

Auto-pause (gravity sensor), attachment recognition

Noise level:

64dB average

Cord length:

9.2ft / 2.8m

Dreame Miracle Pro review: design

  • Faux-leather handle and matte gold finish
  • Six modes, illuminated display, four magnetic attachments
  • Red light and essence mister built into the barrel

Dreame Miracle Pro laid out with all included attachments and Boca essence bottle on a quartz surface

For the price, you get the Miracle Pro dryer, four attachments — a styling nozzle, smoothing nozzle, anti-frizz nozzle and diffuser — and a bottle of Boca essence (pictured) (Image credit: Future)

There was a time when a tall, rather than wide, hair dryer was rare, but the ubiquity of Dyson's Supersonic shape has not only made the design more common, it also makes all rivals look high-end by association.

The Miracle Pro has the same barrel-over-handle shape as most has added a couple of features to make it look noticeably different. The handle is covered in textured faux leather, the barrel and attachments come in a matte gold, and the whole thing arrives in a velvet-lined box.

It's a bold look that won't suit everyone but it does feel genuinely premium. In testing, the leather grip felt solid and comfortable — even if it left my hand feeling clammy after long periods — but it's unclear yet how well it will hold up to daily use over many months.

Front view of the Dreame Miracle Pro barrel showing the circular opening and the built-in essence cartridge

The front barrel (pictured) has a built-in slot for the essence cartridge. When Essence mode is enable, the airflow diffuses the essence gently onto the hair (Image credit: Future)

At 0.9lb / 420g, it's light for a dryer with this much going on inside, and it's well balanced. Most of the weight sits in the handle, which makes it easy to move around your head without your wrist getting tired. The filter sits at the bottom of the handle and is a feature I generally dislike in hair dryers because it's easy to block with your hand mid-drying. However, Dreame has made the handle long enough on the Miracle Pro to prevent this happening, and without throwing the balance out of sync in the process.

The barrel is on the smaller side, which is useful for getting close to the roots and working around the hairline. Yet this is a slightly moot point because the built-in AI Smart mode uses a distance sensor to automatically adjust the heat and airflow depending on how close the dryer is to your head anyway.

Close-up of Dreame Miracle Pro handle showing control buttons, including power slider and AI mode button

The controls include a sliding switch on the handle to turn the Miracle Pro on and off and flip between the two speed settings – High (72 m/s) and Low (50 m/s) (Image credit: Future)

The controls are simple enough. A sliding switch on the handle turns the Miracle Pro on and off and flips between the two speed settings — High (72 m/s) and Low (50 m/s.)

While two speeds are fewer than most rivals — the Dyson Supersonic Nural offers three, for example — it's the default on Dreame dryers and has never proved a problem for my mid-length, thin hair. Thicker or natural hair styles may need more options but, on the Pro particularly, the range of modes and the way AI Smart mode adjusts airflow in real time means you're unlikely to feel the gap.

A single button on the handle cycles through the Pro's six modes — Smart, Essence, Cool, Comfort, Quick Dry, or Scalp.

Top view of the Dreame Miracle Pro rear display showing Scalp mode

A single button on the handle cycles through the Pro's six modes – Smart, Essence, Cool, Comfort, Quick Dry, or Scalp (pictured) – and the selected mode appears on the display on the rear of the dryer (Image credit: Future)

The six modes cover a good range.

  • Cool: 86 F / 30 C
  • Scalp: 100 F / 38 C
  • Essence: 122 F / 50 C
  • Comfort: 140 F / 60 C
  • Quick Dry: 176 F / 80 C
  • AI Smart: Adjusts in real time based on distance from scalp

Cool runs at 86 F / 30 C and is mainly for finishing. Scalp mode sits at 100 F / 38 C and is intended for anyone with a sensitive scalp. Essence mode runs at 122 F / 50 C, which is warm enough to activate the mist, but not so hot it defeats the point.

As 140 F / 60 C, Comfort is the most practical everyday setting, and Quick Dry goes up to 176 F / 80 C for when you need speed. AI Smart mode works across all of these, using a distance sensor to adjust the heat and airflow depending on how close the dryer is to your head, and every time you switch the dryer on, it starts in AI Smart mode by default.

A small screen on the rear of the barrel shows which mode you're in and this is much easier to read than the tiny color-coded LED ring on the Dreame Gleam, for instance.

The same sensor used by the AI Smart mode also feeds into the auto-pause feature, which recognizes when you've put the dryer down and dials back the heat and airflow automatically. It's a sensible safety feature, to avoid items on your desk being blown around every time you place it down, but I found it really irritating. The constant changes in noise as you pick it up and put it down was not an enjoyable sensory experience.

Dreame Miracle Pro with red light ring around the barrel

Around the front of the barrel is a ring of red lights (pictured) that Dreame calls "dual red light therapy" and is designed to stimulate scalp circulation and boost hair health over time (Image credit: Future)

Around the front of the barrel is a ring of red lights that cover two wavelengths at 633nm and 1064nm. Dreame calls it "dual red light therapy," although the 1064nm wavelength is technically near-infrared.

The idea is that red light/infrared light stimulates scalp circulation during drying to support hair strength over time. It's visible in use but not distracting, and worth knowing that fitting an attachment blocks most of it so if scalp health is the main draw, you'll want to spend some time using the dryer without a nozzle attached.

Speaking of nozzles, Pro ships with four magnetic attachments by default:

  • Styling nozzle: Directed airflow for sectioning and precise blow-drying
  • Smoothing nozzle: Concentrated airflow for a smooth finish
  • Anti-frizz nozzle: Neutralizes static and smooths frizzy hair
  • Diffuser: Distributes airflow evenly for curls and volume

Each one clicks on and off easily, and the dryer recognizes which one is attached, automatically recalling your last-used settings for that specific nozzle.

It's a small touch but it means you're not manually resetting your preferences every time you switch between drying and diffusing, for example. The filter at the base of the handle is magnetic too, so it pulls off easily for cleaning.

  • Design score: 5 out of 5

Dreame Miracle Pro review: performance

  • Fast drying, smooth results
  • Essence mister is a genuine highlight
  • Red light benefits hard to assess short-term

The Miracle Pro is a strong everyday dryer. Using it most mornings on my long, fine hair, I found the Comfort mode on High speed to be the best setting for a regular wash-day routine. My hair went from wet to dry in just under five minutes, with a smooth, frizz-free finish that I'd normally need a separate serum to achieve.

Quick Dry mode gets there faster, in under three minutes, but the result is noticeably less polished. Scalp mode is the gentlest option and while it adds time to the overall dry, the finish is noticeably softer.

Essence mode – which activates the built-in mister – is the feature I didn't expect to care about and ended up using every time. It runs at a moderate heat and is designed to be used for the last couple of minutes of your routine, rather than the full session.

Switching into it at the end left my hair noticeably softer, smooth and smelling great. It's a small thing that adds up over time and was a genuine highlight for me.

Close-up of the amber essence cartridge shown between fingers with the Miracle Pro hair dryer behind it

The essence cartridge (pictured) is small and simple, designed to slot conspicuously into the barrel (Image credit: Future)

AI Smart mode is the headline feature, and it largely delivers. The dryer adjusts heat and airflow as you move it closer to and further from your head, which takes some getting used to. There's a slight lag between changing your distance and feeling the adjustment, which the Dyson Supersonic Nural handles more quickly, and you'll notice the airflow change before you notice the temperature shift.

In practice, this works well for rough drying where you're moving quickly and not thinking too hard about distance. For precision styling, I tended to switch to a fixed mode where the output was more predictable. Plus, like with the constant changes in noise with the auto-pause feature, the fluctuations soon became irritating.

Dreame Miracle Pro with essence cartridge inside the front barrel

You remove the cartridge by pressing the front until it clicks and pops out (pictured) (Image credit: Future)

The red light therapy ring is harder to evaluate over a relatively short period. Dreame's claims – improved scalp circulation and stronger hair over time – are plausible, but any real difference would take months to show up. What I can say is that using the dryer without an attachment, which is required for the red light to reach the scalp unobstructed, feels slightly counterintuitive mid-routine.

Noise-wise, the Miracle Pro is genuinely quiet for its power output. Dreame claims 56.6 dB but it's not clear if that's just the lowest reading – on Cool – or an average. In my tests, the average readings for each of the modes were:

  • Cool: 58 dB
  • Scalp: 60 dB
  • Essence: 62 dB
  • Comfort (low speed): 63 dB
  • Comfort (high speed): 68 dB
  • Quick Dry (low speed): 65 dB
  • Quick Dry (high speed): 72 dB
  • Performance score: 4 out of 5

How I tested the Dreame Miracle Pro

I used the Dreame Miracle Pro as my main hair dryer for four weeks, replacing my usual dryer for daily morning use on my mid-length hair.

I worked through each of the six modes, both speed settings and the attachments systematically in the first week, then settled into more natural everyday use to get a realistic sense of how it performs over time.

I timed dry sessions across the different modes and speeds, and tracked decibels using the DecibelX app. I also compared the results to other dryers I've tested at similar and higher price points.

Read more about how we test

  • First reviewed March 2026
TOPICS
Victoria Woollaston

Victoria Woollaston is a freelance science and technology journalist with more than a decade’s experience writing for Wired UK, Alphr, Expert Reviews, TechRadar, Shortlist and the Sunday Times. She has a keen interest in next-generation technology and its potential to revolutionise how we live and work.

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