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Results for  Wall Heaters

With a wide range of wall heaters, VEVOR can meet the needs of any room, environment, or installation situation with reliable, efficient heat. You can find electric wall heaters that are easy to plug in and precisely control the temperature, gas wall heaters or propane wall heaters for high-output heating in larger spaces, infrared wall heaters for targeted radiant warmth, convection wall heaters for even ambient heating, baseboard wall heaters for low-profile perimeter installation, smart wall heaters for app-controlled comfort, or bathroom wall heaters that are safe to use in wet areas.


VEVOR Wall Heaters: Efficient, Space-Saving Heating Solutions Built 


Are you looking for a wall heater that evenly heats your room without taking up much floor space? Every room type needs a different kind of wall heater, from small bathrooms and bedrooms to large open-plan living rooms, garages, and business offices. Our collection includes electric, infrared, and smart wall heaters so that every customer can find the right heating technology, power capacity, and control features for their space.


Understanding Power Type (Electric, Gas, Propane) & Heating Method


The two most important things to look at before buying a wall heater are its power source and how it heats the room. Together, they determine how to place the heater, how much it will cost to run, how much heat it can produce, and which rooms it will work best in. If you make the right choices about both, your heating will be safe, efficient, and comfortable from the start.


Electric Wall Heaters: Clean, Versatile Heating for Any Room Without Gas Lines


Electric wall heaters are the easiest and a very common type of wall heating. They only need a good electrical circuit and don't need a gas source, flue, or combustion venting. These features make them ideal for almost any room in a house or business building, even ones that can't or shouldn't have gas. Standard electric wall heaters convert electricity directly into heat at the point of use, so they lose very little heat through a flue or exhaust system, unlike combustion-based heaters.


Electric wall heaters with built-in thermostats offer an improvement from basic models because they let users set an exact temperature goal and have the heater turn on and off automatically to keep it at that level. The thermostat-controlled operation helps prevent overheating, reduces energy use, and eliminates the need to physically adjust the heater as the weather changes during the day and night. Electric wall heaters with thermostat controls are a very comfortable and energy-efficient way to heat bedrooms, home offices, and living rooms where background warmth is more important than quick heat-up.


Gas Wall Heaters and Propane Wall Heaters: High-Output Heating for Larger Spaces


The combustion-based heating principles of gas and propane wall heaters enable them to deliver higher heat output than many electric options. This makes them the best choice for larger rooms, garages, workshops, and cold-weather areas where fast, powerful heating is necessary. In places where natural gas prices are lower than electricity prices, like many places in North America and Europe, natural gas wall heaters can be a cost-effective way to heat a home. They connect directly to the existing gas line.


Propane wall heaters offer the same high-output combustion heating as natural gas models, but they get their power from a portable propane tank rather than a fixed supply line. This makes them perfect for homes that aren't connected to the mains gas grid, cabins, barns, and other buildings where running a gas line would be too expensive.


Infrared Wall Heaters, Targeted Radiant Warmth for Instant, Energy-Efficient Comfort


These wall heaters work very differently from convective models in how they heat. Instead of warming the air in a room, infrared wall heaters heat objects, surfaces, and people directly in their line of sight. It's almost instantaneous to feel the heat from this radiant heating system after turning it on, rather than waiting for the entire room's air volume to heat. This also means that infrared wall heaters work even in rooms with poor insulation or whose doors are often open. Warm air would quickly leave these rooms, but radiant heat would still provide warmth to people inside.


For places that don't need to be heated all the time, like sheds, workshops, covered patios, and utility rooms, where people come and go and heating the whole room would be wasteful, infrared wall heaters can help reduce energy use by heating only the affected areas. Ceiling- or high-wall-mounted infrared panels direct heat downward into the occupied area. This keeps the upper parts of tall rooms from losing too much heat.


Convection Wall Heaters and Baseboard Wall Heaters, Even Ambient Warmth for Living Spaces


Convection wall heaters warm a room by drawing cool air across a heated element, which warms it and allows it to rise naturally. This creates a constant circulation cycle that slowly raises the temperature of the whole room. This type of convective heating creates a soft, even warmth that spreads throughout the room, reducing noticeable cold or hot spots. Because of this, convection wall heaters work well in living rooms, bedrooms, and offices where people spend long periods and want consistent background comfort.


Installed at floor level along the base of outer walls, baseboard wall heaters are convection heaters. This is where cold air naturally gathers as it falls from cooler window surfaces. Baseboard wall heaters stop the cold-draft cycle that makes rooms feel cold even when the air temperature above them is fine by heating the air at floor level. Their low-profile installation makes them visually unobtrusive once in place, which makes them a popular choice for private living areas that care about how things look.


Essential Features & Installation Considerations 


Beyond the type of power and heating method, the practical factors that decide day-to-day satisfaction are the wall heater's built-in controls and the space it takes up in your home during installation. Understanding both of these factors will help you choose a heater that fits your area and lifestyle.


Smart Wall Heaters and Thermostat Features: Precision Control for Modern Comfort


Connectivity options like Wi-Fi or Bluetooth make smart wall heaters one of the more technologically advanced types of wall heaters on the market. Users can control heating from afar via a smartphone app, set up scheduled heating programs, and view real-time energy usage. If you want to come home to a warm house without leaving the heater on all day, smart wall heaters let you preheat from a distance, something manual types can't do.


Electric wall heaters with thermostats, whether smart or standard, let you control the temperature more precisely than any other type of wall heater. Programmable thermostats let you set different temperature goals for different times of the day. They automatically lower the heat output while you sleep or are away, and then raise it again when you wake up or return.


Installation Requirements, Hardwired, Plug-In, and Gas Line Considerations


The difficulty of installing a wall heater varies a lot depending on the type of heater. Knowing what each type of heater requires before buying will help you avoid surprises, such as unexpected costs or problems. Plug-in electric wall heaters are the easiest choice. All you need is a nearby wall outlet with the right rating, and you can install them yourself in minutes without a professional.


It is important to connect gas or propane wall heaters to a gas supply line or a propane tank, install a flue or direct-vent exhaust system through an exterior wall, and follow the local gas appliance installation codes. Only a certified gas technician should do this work. Properly wiring the thermostat is an important part of installing smart or electric wall heaters. It determines whether the temperature control works as it should.


Why VEVOR Wall Heaters Deliver Reliable, Efficient Warmth 


VEVOR wall heaters use tried-and-true heating technology, useful control features, and strict safety standards to keep any room warm, no matter the weather or room type. What kind of wall heaters do you need? Electric wall heaters for a simple plug-in solution in the bedroom, electric wall heaters with thermostats for precise temperature control, gas or propane wall heaters for high-output space heating, infrared wall heaters for instant targeted warmth, convection wall heaters or baseboard wall heaters for even comfort throughout the room, and smart wall heaters for easy control through an app.


FAQs


What is the most energy-efficient type of wall heater for a bedroom? 


Electric wall heaters with thermostat control are among the most energy-efficient choices for bedrooms, as the thermostat cycles the heater on and off to maintain a set temperature rather than running continuously. Smart wall heaters with programmable scheduling add further efficiency by automatically reducing output during sleeping hours.


Do gas wall heaters require professional installation? 


Yes. Gas- and propane-wall heaters are typically required to be installed by a certified gas technician in most jurisdictions. The installation includes connecting the gas line, routing the flue or direct-vent exhaust through an outside wall, and following local building and gas appliance codes. Attempting to install a gas heater without certification is unsafe and may void the product warranty.


Are infrared wall heaters safe for continuous use? 


Yes. Infrared wall heaters are safe for extended operation when installed at the correct height and with the specified clearance from combustible materials, as specified in the product documentation. They produce no combustion byproducts, operate very quietly, and do not reduce room humidity, making them a comfortable choice for living spaces and workshops alike.


Can bathroom wall heaters be installed above a shower or bathtub? 


Installation zone restrictions for bathroom wall heaters are governed by local electrical codes that define exclusion zones around water sources. In most jurisdictions, heaters cannot be installed directly above a bathtub or within a defined horizontal distance from a shower enclosure unless they carry a specific IP rating for that zone. Always consult local electrical regulations and a licensed electrician before specifying the position for a bathroom wall heater installation.


What size wall heater do I need for my room? 


A general guideline is to allow approximately 10 watts of heating capacity per square foot of floor area for a well-insulated room. A 150-square-foot bedroom, therefore, requires approximately 1,500W of heating capacity as a baseline. Rooms with poor insulation, high ceilings, large windows, or exposure to exterior walls on multiple sides may require 20 to 25% additional capacity above this baseline figure.


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