• EPAuto CP134 (CF10134) Honda & Acura Replacement Premium Cabin Air Filter includes Activated Carbon.
  • Clean air for driver and passengers, contains soda and carbon to generate fresh breeze air.
  • Enhanced HVAC performance, Recommended replacement every 12 months or 12,000 miles
  • Replacement for FRAM CF10134, Honda Genuine part # 80292-SDA-A01, 80292-SDC-A01, 80292-SEC-A01, 80292-SHJ-A41, 80292-SWA-A01, 80292-T0G-A01, 80292-TZ5-A41.
  • Compatible Auto List: ACURA: CSX (2007-2011), ILX (2013-2018), MDX Gas (2007-2018), RDX (2007-2018) , RL (2005-2012), RLX (2014-2018), TL (2004-2014), TLX (2015-2018), TSX (2004-2014), ZDX (2010-2013); HONDA: Accord (2003-2018), Accord Crosstour (2010-2011), Civic (2006-2015), Croostour (2012-2015), CR-V (2007-2016), Odyssey (2005-2017), Pilot (2009-2018), Ridgeline (2006-2018).

Cabin air filters are often overlooked. This is a inexpensive fix to keep your interior of your car from smelling like a locker room. I placed small drops of peppermint oil on the filter and it gives a hint of it when the AC or Heater is on.

MY CARS. I have 2 cars so I ordered 2 of these. One was for a Rav4 and the other was for a Lexus. NUMBER OF PLEATS. The number of pleats (folds) is much less than what is shown in the picture. This is important because the higher number of pleats means that it filters more air. Of course the manufacturer prefers lesser pleats because that means less material so less cost. The number of pleats that I recieved was 13. The number of pleats shown in the picture is 19. QUALITY. This filter contains baking soda and carbon. Other filters on Amazon do not, so this is a huge bonus, especially when this filter is so much cheaper than everything else. AIR FLOW. The only other major problem that I can foresee is air flow. Despite the lesser pleats, this filter is pretty thick due to the carbon and baking soda. Comparing this air filter with another brand, the air flow from the air conditioning vents seems less but sufficient. FIT. I had made a previous post which stated that one of the filters did not fit my Rav4. I found out that the error was on my car's part. I found out that no filters fits well with this car. The shape of the car's compartment is crooked. On the other hand, I did find small variations in the filter's dimensions. The measurements vary by an 1/8 of an inch. That's sort of a big deal since that means these filters are not a complete seal as air will flow through the hole of least resistance. CONCLUSION. The number of pleats is slightly important to me but it isn't enough to deter me to purchase a more expensive filter. I'd rather just buy filters more often since all filters get dirty pretty quick due to the outside air (depending upon where you live). I suggest you buy this filter due to the pretty awesome price of $9. It still has charcoal in it so I bet you that it filters just as well as the OEM and other filters. And you really can't beat the price. Just make sure you switch it out every 6 months. *If this review was helpful, please click that it was helpful. (I'd like to know if my reviews help anyone.)

The filters ability to thoroughly eliminate dust particles from entering into my 2009 Honda CRV and 2008 Honda Odyssey. Don't want dust mites in my cars. From "It Stills Runs" Prior to the advent of the cabin air filter, a lot of the dirt, dust and allergens from outside came inside the vehicle through the vents. This often left the vehicle's interior, and sometimes the passengers, coated in a fine layer of dust and dirt. The cabin filter changed all that, and today many vehicles have cleaner air than ever before.

This filter was a LIFE SAVER! If I could give it 100 stars, I would! It came in a cardboard box that was also inside of a white, plastic mailer envelope. It got here within 2 days, and I was praying the whole time! I needed this because we parked by an area that must have had a male cat marking his territory, because when we got back in my car, I thought that a cat had peed all IN MY CAR! I nearly died all the way home. There was nothing in my car, so we knew that it was from something outside that had contaminated the cabin air filter of my car - the smell was all outside around my car where we had parked. When we got the filter, there were no directions that came with it - but we kind of figured that would be the case. We had already found a great YouTube video on how to replace the cabin air filter in a 2014 CRV (which is the kind of car this filter fits.) . We had the video on my phone and watched it step by step, following all of the instructions. It was very simple and thank the LORD JESUS, this thing worked! I was ready to go trade my car in for a new one if the filter didn't work! So if your car is smelly or you just want to make sure you're breathing clean air inside your 2014 Honda CRV, then order one of these filters. It will make your life so much better! Here's the link to the video we used. It's a different name filter, but the process is still the same:

Fits perfect and tight into my 2003 Honda Acura. About as many pleats as the OEM. Second one I have bought - nice easy 2 minute job folks - don't pay the dealer $89...you don't even need a screwdriver for my model.....WOW....just make sure you look for air flow direction arrow before removing the old filter and understand correctly the arrow direction on the side of the filter to put it in right way...

Okay. It's an air filter. Do you need it? That depends. Have you ever driven by a dog or cat food factory, a large beer brewery, an oil refinery, etc.? You would know because you can smell them well before you can see them and that's probably with the windows up. How about a dead skunk someone ran over and left on the side of the road? Miles around, that smell lingers and you can still smell it windows up or not. Enter the carbon/soda filter. It's what takes the gnarly smells from a 10 down to a 4, less gnarly from 8 to 2, etc. To say it completely eliminates the stink would be an erroneous statement. But to say it scales down the stink would be factual. Here in the beautiful state of Colorado we have the dog and cat food factories, the beer breweries both large and small, several large oil refineries and a seemingly endless supply of skunk. For the price I paid for this filter and the 2 minutes it took to install, yes. Absolutely yes it is worth it. It is not worth the $50-60 dollars for a mechanic to perform the exact same function as it would take you the $9 and 2 minutes to do it yourself. It just doesn't make sense. For the counter arguments that when the mechanic replaces the filter, they do so with an approved Honda filter. You may see from the photos that I have provided that the ribs on the old, nasty filter are aplenty and on the new filter are far fewer. And yes, the photo does show that it should have far more ribs than what I received. For me, that just means I have to replace the filter every 10,000 miles instead of 15-20,000 miles. Let's do some back of the napkin math, shall we? $9 for 10,000 miles vs. $60 for 20,000 miles or $18 for 20,000 miles vs. $60 for 20,000 miles. Not to mention the time it takes you to install the filter vs. a mechanic. I know exactly THREE things about my car (changing a flat, things like that) and changing a filter is not one of them and I did it in 2 minutes. I don't know about you but I've never had a mechanic take less than 20 minutes to do what they do on my car. And that's IF they do ONLY an oil change. Not all the other junk like wiping the windows, swapping filters, etc. So I ask you this question: what is your time worth to you? S'more math: $18 for 20,000 miles and 4 minutes total for installation vs. $60 for 20,000 and 30 minutes for installation. Congratulations, you just saved $42 and 26 minutes. For perspective, you would have to make just under $100 an hour to justify paying the $60. So quit complaining whether this has more or less ribs. Save yourself the grief and just buy this. You'll love it.

This is probably the most neglected filter of all filters, that's mainly because no one knows how to change it. Shops capitalize on this lack of knowledge and charge anywhere from $60-$100. Ah but that changes right now. If you use the AC unit, heater, or set the climate control to fresh air - a clean cabin filter is a must. I don't care what skill level you're at, you can do this. First do a Google search something like "2009 accord cabin air filter youtube" and boom, an instant list of "how to" videos for your car. Second, go change the filter. Here's a step by step process but it really makes more sense once you've seen your YouTube video first. Trust yourself, you can do this - good luck. 1. The filter is directly behind the glovebox 2. Empty your glovebox 3. Open it and let it rest 4. Run your fingers up each side of the glove box until the dashboard/top of glovebox stops you, at that point push in on each side – hard 5. The glove box will disengage and lower even further, allowing you to see the tray that holds the filter 6. The tray has tabs on each of its sides. You can see them and even feel them. Press in on the tabs like you did the glovebox. It will pop loose. 7. Pull the tray out and replace the filter 8. Slide the tray back in and you’ll hear it click in place. 9. Close the glovebox and you’re done.

I bought this cabin air filter and the engine filter from this same manufacturer for my 2007 Honda Ridgeline. Filter was the same size and looks the same as other brands I have used that cost twice as much. Since all these things do is get dirty, I like paying for both these for the same price as one major name brand filter from discount auto parts dealers. If you are using a Honda dealer, the savings is even more. The savings compared to having a shop install these is pretty significant and shops are always saying they need changing while doing oil changes. With You Tube instructions even a non-mechanic can change these filters themselves quite quickly and easily. I still pay to get my oil and filter done on my car with a coupon rather than do it myself because this is a lost leader to drum up business by auto mechanics. Changing these air filters is worth it to me since this is the single biggest percentage mark up of parts and labor of any auto servicing and so easy to do.

Disclaimer: I know very little about cars but I do know quite a bit about saving money. I went to get my 2008 Honda Civic airbag replaced this past month (for those of you out there who don't know... there is a recall!) and they recommend I replace both my cabin filter and engine air filter. It was going to cost $60 and $40 for cost and labor!! It said it was "critical" red on the paper they gave me (you know they have green, yellow or red). I YouTubed how to replace these two items and it looked so simple. I bought both items on Amazon (same brand) for less than $20!!! For a 26 year old female (completely inexperienced with cars) who spent 10 minutes on YouTube and an extra 10 minutes in installation, I saved over $80!!! I probably would have had to wait at Honda more than the 20 minutes it took me overall and would have had to pay an extra $80. No thank you!! Just want anyone to know and who has any doubts, if I can do it, you certainly can too! As far as the quality, I can only really base it on what I see. The durability seems to be the same as the one I had in it before. I will update if I find the need.

Saved lot of $$s compared to dealer ... for engine AIR and Cabin AIR filter dealer was asking $200, was able to do it home for less than $25. Fits perfectly with 2010 Acura TL. Can't believe it was so easy to replace cabin AIR filter. Bought this based on ratings, see the picture the pleats are not as dense as OEM but time will tell the quality even if i change at 50% interval still saves lot of money...happy for now.