Description
RHF0801-1-S99010213 replacement range hood grease filter Overview
Compatible with Broan Part #S99010213
The RHF0801-1-S99010213 is a direct aftermarket replacement compatible with the Broan S99010213 aluminum mesh grease filter for compatible range hoods. The range hood grease filter is the first line of defense in your range hood: it traps airborne grease particles, cooking aerosols, and range hood grease before they coat interior surfaces or reach the blower motor, keeping your range hood clean and operating at rated airflow. aluminum mesh grease filters are washable and reusable—clean these range hood grease filters monthly in the dishwasher to maintain peak performance.
This American Metal Filter Company filter is manufactured to meet or exceed the original OEM specifications for dimensions and mesh density — a direct drop-in range hood filter replacement for part S99010213.
Compatible with 0 range hood models.
Range Hood Filters Inc. is an independent manufacturer of aftermarket filters. Broan® and the Broan logo are registered trademarks of Broan-NuTone LLC. All OEM part numbers and brand names referenced on this page are used strictly for compatibility identification purposes and do not imply any affiliation with or endorsement by the trademark holder.
Key Benefits of the RHF0801-1-S99010213 Aluminum Grease Filter
- Meets or Exceeds OEM Specifications: Manufactured to match the original equipment dimensions, mesh density, and frame fit in your range hood filter bay.
- Traps Airborne Grease and Cooking Aerosols: aluminum mesh grease captures grease particles before they reach the blower motor, ductwork, or interior surfaces, protecting your range hood filter investment and maintaining rated airflow.
- Washable and Reusable: Clean this range hood grease filter monthly in the dishwasher (top rack) or by hand with warm soapy water. Properly maintained, aluminum mesh grease filters last for years of regular use.
- direct drop-in range hood filter replacement: Order the RHF0801-1-S99010213 for a guaranteed fit in all compatible models.
- Fits 0 Range Hood Models: See the compatible models table below to confirm your model before ordering.
- Expertise: Range Hood Filters Inc. is the manufacturer — we design and build the filters we sell.
- Experience: We have been building and supplying range hood and microwave filters since 1986 — more than 40 years of filter manufacturing.
- Authoritativeness: As the manufacturer, Range Hood Filters Inc. supplies the United States with millions of replacement air filters, all made in the U.S.A.
- Trustworthiness: For more than 40 years we have honored and supported our customers with guaranteed satisfaction on every order.
RHF0801-1-S99010213 Filter Specifications — Compatible with Broan Part #S99010213
| Specification | Detail |
|---|---|
| OEM Part Number | S99010213 |
| Manufacturer | American Metal Filter Company |
| Fits Brand | Broan |
| Part Type | Aftermarket Replacement Aluminum Mesh Grease Filter — Meets or Exceeds OEM Specifications |
| Filter Technology | aluminum mesh grease (range hood grease capture) |
| Application | Range hood grease capture — first-stage filtration |
| Replaces Part Numbers | — |
| OEM Internal Reference | None |
| Compatible Model Count | 0 models (see table below) |
| OEM / Aftermarket | Aftermarket — meets or exceeds OEM specifications |
| Washable / Reusable | Yes — clean monthly in dishwasher (top rack) or by hand |
How Aluminum Mesh Grease Filters Work
The range hood grease filter is the first line of defense protecting your hood blower, motor, and ductwork. As cooking vapors and grease-laden air are drawn up through the range hood grease filter, the fine aluminum mesh grease creates turbulence that causes grease droplets and particles to coalesce and cling to the mesh surface. This prevents grease from coating interior surfaces, reduces fire risk, and keeps blower performance at rated levels.
Range Hood Filter Cleaning & Maintenance
Clean the RHF0801-1-S99010213 monthly by running it through the dishwasher (top rack) or washing by hand with hot water and degreaser. A clogged or grease-saturated filter significantly reduces airflow and hood effectiveness. Replace if the mesh is physically damaged, permanently discolored, or no longer cleanable.
Range Hood Grease Filter Installation
- Turn off the range hood before accessing the range hood grease filter bay.
- Remove the old filter: Slide or unclip the existing range hood grease filter from its track or mounting hooks.
- Insert the RHF0801-1-S99010213: Slide the new filter into the same track or clip it onto the mounting hooks. Confirm it lies flat and is fully seated.
- Restore operation: the range hood grease filter is ready for immediate use. No break-in period required.
RHF0801-1-S99010213 Filter FAQ — Compatible with Broan Part #S99010213
Which range hood models are compatible with the Broan S99010213 range hood grease filter?
The RHF0801-1-S99010213 is compatible with 0 range hood models. See the compatible models table on this page.
What part numbers does the S99010213 replace?
The RHF0801-1-S99010213 replaces no listed predecessors. Order the RHF0801-1-S99010213 regardless of which older number appears on your filter.
How do I clean the Broan aluminum grease range hood filter?
Remove the range hood grease filter and place it on the top rack of the dishwasher, or wash by hand with hot water and a degreasing detergent. Clean monthly under average cooking conditions—more frequently if you cook at high heat or fry often. Allow to dry completely before reinstalling.
How often should I replace the range hood grease filter?
Aluminum mesh grease filters are designed to be washed and reused, not periodically replaced. Replace if the mesh is bent, torn, permanently discolored, or no longer cleanable after dishwasher cycles.
Is this a genuine Broan part or an aftermarket replacement?
This is an aftermarket replacement range hood grease filter manufactured by American Metal Filter Company, not a genuine Broan OEM part. It is manufactured to meet or exceed the original OEM specifications for dimensions, mesh density, and frame fit, making it a direct drop-in range hood filter replacement compatible with Broan part number S99010213.
The History of the Residential Range Hood
Before Electricity: Hearths, Flues, and Chimney Canopies
The fundamental problem of removing cooking smoke from an enclosed space is as old as indoor cooking itself. Ancient Roman kitchens were constructed with hearths positioned beneath vented roof openings, allowing convective airflow to carry smoke upward and out. Medieval great halls used central hearths under high-vaulted ceilings designed to disperse and dilute smoke before it reached eye level. The refinement of the chimney fireplace in Europe during the 12th and 13th centuries formalized the concept of a capture zone above the cooking source connected by a flue to the exterior — the direct architectural ancestor of the modern range hood.
By the early 19th century, institutional kitchens in large hospitals, military facilities, and hotels were being designed with purpose-built sheet metal canopy flues suspended above cooking ranges. These were passive systems — no fan, relying entirely on the buoyancy of hot air and the draft of the chimney. They were effective at removing heat and some combustion gases, but provided limited capture of grease vapor and smoke at the cooking surface. For these early systems there was no filter, no blower, and no standardized product — each was custom-fabricated by tradespeople as part of the building’s kitchen construction.
Electrification and the Commercial Kitchen Exhaust Hood (Early 1900s)
The electrification of American cities in the 1880s and 1890s made electrically powered exhaust fans practical for large-scale installation. By the 1910s and 1920s, major American hotels, restaurants, hospitals, and institutional food service operations were routinely specifying powered sheet metal exhaust hoods above their commercial ranges. These were custom-fabricated structures: a formed sheet metal canopy sized to span the cooking equipment, connected by ductwork to an exhaust fan that discharged to the building exterior. There was still no standardized filter medium — grease accumulated on the interior hood surfaces and ductwork, which required periodic manual cleaning.
Municipal governments and fire safety organizations took notice. The National Fire Protection Association® (NFPA®), founded in 1896, began developing standards for commercial cooking equipment ventilation in the early 20th century — standards that would eventually be codified as NFPA 96, the Standard for Ventilation Control and Fire Protection of Commercial Cooking Operations, which remains the governing standard for commercial kitchen exhaust today. Municipal health departments in major American cities similarly began requiring mechanical exhaust ventilation in permitted commercial kitchens. Demand for the custom-fabricated commercial kitchen hood was thus established not just by occupational comfort but by code compliance — an early example of regulation driving adoption of a safety technology.
One critical manufacturing challenge became apparent almost immediately: grease accumulation in the exhaust ductwork represented a serious fire hazard. A single uncontrolled grease fire in an exhaust duct could rapidly spread to the building structure. The need for a removable, cleanable filter to capture grease at the hood — before it entered the ductwork — was recognized, and early commercial hoods began to incorporate primitive mesh or baffle-style grease collectors. These were the forerunners of the modern aluminum mesh grease filter.
The First Residential Range Hoods: Dallas, Texas and Hartford, Wisconsin (1932–1933)
The range hood as a mass-market residential consumer product — something designed, manufactured, packaged, and sold to American homeowners rather than custom-fabricated for commercial kitchens by tradespeople — was born in the United States in the early 1930s. Two companies, founded just one year apart, created this market.
In 1932, in the depths of the Great Depression, Henry Broan developed and manufactured the Motordor® Fan in Hartford, Wisconsin. The Motordor® name was registered as a trademark. The product was a quiet, efficiently motorized kitchen ventilation fan designed for residential installation — affordable, compact, and manufacturable at scale. Broan’s insight was that American homeowners would pay for relief from kitchen heat, smoke, and odors if the product were priced and sized for a residential budget. It was not yet a range hood in the modern canopy sense, but it was the first mass-produced powered residential kitchen ventilation product, and it launched what is today Broan-NuTone LLC.
One year later, in 1933, Vent-A-Hood® Company was founded in Dallas, Texas. According to the company’s own published history, Vent-A-Hood® was “the first manufacturer of home cooking ventilation and range hoods.” The circumstances of that founding were as humble as could be: the first range hoods were manufactured in a house with a dirt floor in Dallas, then sold door-to-door — an owner would make a sale, return to the shop, build the hood for that specific customer, and deliver it. In 1937, Carr P. Collins, Sr. — a prominent Dallas financier and founder of Fidelity Union Life Insurance Company — provided investment financing that allowed the company to grow beyond its workshop origins. The following year, in 1938, Miles Woodall, Jr., Collins’s nephew, was recruited to manage the company. In 1961, Vent-A-Hood® moved its operations to Richardson, Texas, where it has been headquartered for more than 90 years after it was first manufactured on a dirt floor in Dallas.
Postwar Expansion and the Aluminum Mesh Grease Filter (1940s–1950s)
The end of World War II and the subsequent American housing boom transformed range hood installation from an occasional luxury into a standard feature of new home construction. Under programs including the GI Bill, millions of new single-family homes were built across the United States between 1946 and 1960. Builders, architects, and building code authorities began standardizing the residential kitchen — and powered range hood ventilation became a built-in design expectation rather than an optional upgrade.
It was during this critical postwar period that the aluminum mesh grease filter was developed and refined into the form that remains in production today. the range hood grease filter consists of multiple layers of woven aluminum mesh bonded inside a pressed aluminum frame, sized to fit the filter bay of a residential range hood. As cooking vapors are drawn upward through the filter, the fine mesh creates turbulence that causes airborne grease droplets to coalesce and adhere to the mesh surface rather than passing through. The captured grease drains to the filter frame, where it can be removed during regular cleaning. The filter is washable in the dishwasher, reusable indefinitely with proper maintenance, and manufacturable to precise dimensional tolerances at low cost. These properties — functional simplicity, durability, and no ongoing replacement expense — made it the ideal consumer filter technology for a product that would be installed in millions of American homes. The design has remained essentially unchanged for more than 70 years.
In 1955, the residential ventilation products industry formed the Home Ventilating Institute (HVI), a trade association dedicated to establishing standardized testing protocols and performance certification for residential range hoods, exhaust fans, and related products. HVI developed the standardized measurement of hood airflow in CFM (cubic feet per minute), established noise level (sone) ratings, and created certification programs that allowed building codes to reference verifiable, third-party-tested performance data. HVI certification — the familiar HVI seal found on range hood packaging — became the industry standard for performance claims and remains the governing certification program for the North American residential ventilation market today. Broan-NuTone is a longstanding member of HVI.
Also in 1955, on the other side of the Atlantic, Faber S.p.A. was founded in Fabriano, in the Marche region of Italy. Faber became one of the earliest dedicated range hood manufacturers in the world and the origin point of what would become a globally significant Italian range hood manufacturing industry. The Fabriano area — already known for centuries as a center of paper manufacturing and precision craftsmanship — would go on to become one of the world’s foremost manufacturing centers for range hood products. Faber was acquired by the Swiss Franke Group in 1995.
The Ductless Hood and Activated Charcoal Filtration (1970s)
Through the 1960s, virtually every residential range hood sold in the United States was a ducted model: it required a sheet metal or flexible duct penetrating the wall or ceiling to carry exhaust air to the building exterior. This constraint limited range hood installation to locations where ductwork routing was feasible — generally exterior kitchen walls or ceilings with accessible attic or soffit space.
The rapid expansion of apartment and condominium construction in American cities during the 1960s and 1970s created a large and underserved market: kitchens in multi-unit buildings where exterior duct penetration was impractical, structurally constrained, or prohibited by building management. The ductless — or recirculating — range hood was developed for this market. Ductless hoods filter air in two stages and return it to the kitchen rather than exhausting it outdoors. The first stage is the familiar aluminum mesh grease filter; the second stage is an activated charcoal (activated carbon) filter that adsorbs cooking odors, smoke compounds, and volatile organic compounds that the aluminum mesh cannot capture. Activated charcoal has a finite adsorption capacity and must be periodically replaced — typically every three to six months under normal residential cooking conditions, or sooner in households that cook frequently at high heat.
In 1970, Elica S.p.A. was founded in Fabriano, Italy — the same city as Faber. Elica grew to become one of the world’s largest manufacturers of range hoods by unit volume, a publicly traded company on the Italian Borsa Italiana stock exchange, and a significant force in bringing European design aesthetics and engineering to the global range hood market. The concentration of range hood manufacturing expertise in Fabriano — two of the world’s major dedicated range hood manufacturers founded in the same small Italian city — is a striking example of industrial clustering driven by shared craft heritage and manufacturing knowledge.
The Baffle Filter and Professional-Grade Residential Hoods (1980s–2000s)
European range hood manufacturers, led by Italian companies with deep sheet metal fabrication expertise, developed and refined the baffle filter as an engineering improvement over the aluminum mesh grease filter. Rather than a woven mesh, baffle filters use a series of precision-formed angled metal channels. As cooking vapors pass through the channels, forced directional changes in the airstream cause grease droplets — which are heavier than air and cannot make sharp turns as quickly — to impact and adhere to the baffle channel surfaces. This mechanical separation principle offers measurably higher range hood grease capture efficiency than mesh filtration, maintains better airflow as grease accumulates, and produces a filter that is fully dishwasher-safe and indefinitely reusable. By the 1980s, baffle filters were standard equipment in European residential range hoods and in premium commercial hood applications.
In the American residential market, baffle filters became available in premium hoods through the 1990s and found their largest audience in a new product category that transformed American kitchen design: the professional residential range. In 1984, Fred Carl Jr. of Greenwood, Mississippi founded Viking® Range, LLC, developing the first range designed to bring the power and performance of commercial cooking equipment — high-BTU burners, heavy-gauge construction, commercial-grade controls — to the residential kitchen market. Viking Range was acquired by The Middleby Corporation in 2012. The professional residential cooking movement that Viking launched created strong demand for range hoods that could handle the higher grease and vapor loads of powerful residential ranges, accelerating adoption of baffle filter designs and larger, higher-CFM hood configurations in American homes.
The Range Hood Today
Today, the residential range hood is a standard fixture in virtually every American kitchen. The industry is served by manufacturers across the United States, Italy, China, South Korea, and beyond, with products ranging from builder-grade aluminum-housing ducted hoods to architectural statement pieces with custom stainless or glass finishes costing several thousand dollars. HVI certification remains the authoritative standard for performance verification in the North American market. NFPA standards continue to govern commercial cooking ventilation, and residential building codes in most jurisdictions reference minimum ventilation requirements for kitchen spaces.
Despite nearly a century of product development, the aluminum mesh grease filter — first refined during the American postwar housing boom of the late 1940s and 1950s — remains the most widely installed range hood filter technology in the United States. Washable, reusable, manufacturable to precise dimensional tolerances by precision machining, and highly effective at its core purpose, the aluminum mesh grease filter is found in tens of millions of American homes. Its endurance as the dominant residential range hood filter for more than 70 years is a testament to the elegance of the original engineering: a simple structure that captures what it needs to capture, withstands regular cleaning, and lasts for years of hard use without requiring periodic replacement.
About Broan®: America’s Leading Range Hood Manufacturer
Broan® has been manufacturing residential ventilation products since 1932, when Henry Broan developed the Motordor® Fan—a quiet, efficient kitchen ventilation fan—during the Great Depression. That single product launched what is today known as Broan-NuTone LLC.
Four years later, in 1936, J. Ralph Corbett independently founded NuTone® with an innovative melodious door chime. Both companies, both headquartered in the Midwest, grew steadily as each introduced new products for homeowners. In 1981, Broan Mfg. Co., Inc. was acquired by Nortek, Inc., becoming the lead company of Nortek’s Residential Building Products Group. NuTone changed hands several times—sold to Scovill Manufacturing in 1967, then acquired by Williams plc in 1991—before Nortek brought the two companies together: in 1998, Nortek acquired NuTone and merged it into the Broan Group, renaming it the Broan-NuTone Group. In January 2000, Broan Mfg. Co., Inc. formally became Broan-NuTone LLC.
Today, Broan-NuTone LLC is headquartered in Hartford, Wisconsin, employs over 2,500 people worldwide, and its products are found in more than 110 million homes across the United States under the Broan®, NuTone®, and BEST® brand names.
Broan® is a registered trademark of Broan-NuTone LLC. Range Hood Filters Inc. is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by Broan-NuTone LLC. References to the Broan® brand and model numbers are used solely for product compatibility identification purposes.
Why Order from Range Hood Filters Inc.?
These are precision compatible replacement filters, not OEM originals — and that’s intentional. Range Hood Filters Inc. has been manufacturing precision replacement range hood filters for all brands for more than 40 years, building each filter to exacting specifications using precision machining techniques. Every filter is proudly made in the U.S.A. and engineered to meet or exceed the performance of the original brand part it replaces. Any range hood filter that is no longer available from the original manufacturer can be replaced with confidence using our precision compatible filters.
When you order through Range Hood Filters Inc., you get:
- 40+ years of manufacturing expertise — filters built to precision-machined specs, not rebranded imports
- Made in the U.S.A. — every filter manufactured domestically to consistent quality standards
- Hundreds of filter models in stock — one of the largest in-stock inventories of range hood replacement filters available anywhere
- Fast shipping — most orders ship the same or next business day
- Free shipping on qualified orders
- Free 30-day returns — if it’s not the right fit, return it at no cost
