Intake upgrades are where honest sellers and dishonest sellers separate fastest. Here's the straight version of what each option does, what it costs you beyond the price tag, and how to decide.
A high-flow filter element that replaces the paper filter inside your factory airbox. Installation is minutes, the factory intake geometry stays intact, and there is no effect on emissions equipment.
Replaces the airbox and intake tract with a larger, smoother path, ideally drawing cooler air from outside the engine bay. On stock engines, gains are modest and engine-dependent; the bigger differences are throttle response and induction sound. CAIs earn their cost mainly on modified engines (tune, forced induction, exhaust) where airflow demand actually rises.
Intake modifications are emissions-relevant parts. A CAI that lacks an emissions exemption for your state may be illegal to install on a street-driven vehicle even if it bolts on perfectly, and some states verify under-hood parts at inspection. Many intakes carry exemption orders for specific vehicle applications — but coverage is per-application, not per-product. Before we sell an intake, we check whether the specific part number carries compliance for the specific vehicle and state. If a seller won't answer that question, that's your answer about the seller.
| Your situation | Our recommendation |
|---|---|
| Stock daily driver, want reusable filter | Drop-in, dry media |
| Stock engine, chasing power | Save the money — intake isn't the restriction |
| Tuned / modified engine | CAI matched to the build, compliance verified |
| Want induction sound & response | CAI, eyes open on noise and compliance |
| Emissions-inspection state | Only parts with verified compliance for your application |