"Cabin filter" and "pollen filter" sound like two different things. They're not — they're two names for exactly the same component. Here's the explanation, why both names exist, and why the part itself matters more than most drivers realise.
Search for either term and you'll find a sea of articles using them interchangeably, sometimes contradicting each other. So let's clear it up in one paragraph:
Cabin filter and pollen filter are the same part. Some manufacturers call it one, some the other, and some use both terms in different markets. Functionally and physically, it's the same component: a filter that sits in the air intake of your car's heating, ventilation and air-conditioning (HVAC) system, cleaning the air before it reaches your face.
The reason both names exist is historical. When these filters were first introduced as standard equipment in the 1990s, manufacturers marketed them on the basis of pollen filtration — particularly in Europe where hayfever is widespread. So "pollen filter" became the popular term. Over time, as filtration improved to capture much more than pollen — dust, soot, mould spores, exhaust particulates — the broader term "cabin filter" became more accurate. Both terms persisted.
If you're shopping for one, search either term — you'll find the same parts.
The filter sits in the path of all air that enters your cabin from the outside. Whether you're using fresh-air mode or recirculation mode, whether the AC is on or off, every cubic metre of air your HVAC system pushes into the cabin passes through this filter first.
Without it, you'd be breathing whatever the road threw at you — dust kicked up by other cars, diesel exhaust from the truck in front, pollen on a windy spring day, brake dust at every traffic light. With it, most of that gets caught in the filter and only filtered air reaches your lungs.
Not all cabin filters are equal. There are two main types, and which one your car uses (or could use) makes a real difference.
This is the entry-level type — typically a folded paper or non-woven fibre material that captures particulates by mechanical filtration. They're cheap, common, and effective against:
What standard filters can't do: remove gases, odours, or chemical compounds. Diesel fumes will still reach you, just with less particulate matter. Smoke smells will still come through, just with less visible smoke.
An upgrade. Activated carbon filters add a layer of treated charcoal between particulate-filtering layers. The carbon traps gases and odours through chemical adsorption — the way a fish-tank carbon filter cleans the water.
Carbon cabin filters block the same particulates as standard filters, plus:
If you do a lot of city or highway driving — particularly in stop-start traffic where you're sitting in someone else's exhaust — carbon filters are worth the small price difference.
Drivers tend to think of cabin filters as a "nice to have" — like windscreen washer fluid, something that improves comfort but isn't essential. That undervalues them. Here's the longer version:
The average commuter spends 1-2 hours per day in their car. That's 8-15% of all your waking hours, sitting in a sealed metal box, breathing whatever the cabin air is. If that air is clean, you barely notice. If it's loaded with pollen, dust, or exhaust, you do — for hours every day.
Counter-intuitive but true: studies repeatedly find that drivers in traffic are exposed to higher pollutant concentrations than pedestrians or cyclists on the same routes. Why? You're sitting at the height of other vehicles' exhaust pipes, and your air intake is right above your bumper. A working cabin filter mitigates a lot of this — a clogged or absent one doesn't.
A clogged filter chokes the airflow through your HVAC system. The fan has to work harder to push the same amount of air through. Symptoms:
If your AC has been "weak" lately, the filter is the cheapest first thing to check.
On most vehicles, the cabin filter is hidden behind the glove box. Open the glovebox, squeeze the sides to release it from the hinge stops, and let it drop down — you'll see a horizontal access panel that holds the filter. Some vehicles have it under the bonnet near the windscreen, behind a plastic cover.
If you can find it and access it, you can replace it yourself in 5 minutes with no tools. If you can't, any workshop will do it during a service.
Most manufacturers recommend cabin filter replacement every 15,000 to 20,000 km, or annually — whichever comes first. But this varies enormously based on conditions:
The visual test is simple: pull the filter out and look at it. A new filter is usually pale grey, white, or light tan. A filter that's ready for replacement is dark grey, brown, or black, often with visible dust and debris on the dirty side.
The filter doesn't just stop catching new dirt — it gradually becomes a problem in itself:
None of this is dramatic, none of it is dangerous in the short term. But over months and years, a cabin filter that's been neglected stops being a help and becomes a liability.
Three things matter:
Cabin filters are vehicle-specific. A filter for a VW Golf 7 doesn't fit a Polo, even though they look similar. Always check fitment by VIN or detailed vehicle spec. Our catalogue lets you search by your vehicle's make, model and engine to find the correct filter.
For most drivers, a standard particulate filter is fine. If you do a lot of stop-start city driving, sit in heavy traffic regularly, or are sensitive to fumes and odours, an activated carbon filter is worth the small extra cost.
Cabin filters are a part where quality difference is significant. Cheap budget filters often have:
Quality filters like our INTA range use proper filter media, well-fitted frames, and genuine activated carbon where specified.
Cars typically have four filters in total. Don't confuse them:
All four are important, all four are wear parts, and all four are stocked in our INTA range. The cabin filter is just the one most directly linked to your comfort and the air you breathe in your car every day.