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We've picked the 9 best Corsair AIO coolers in 2026. From flagship LCD models to clean no-RGB builds, find your perfect CPU cooler.
Your CPU runs hot. You know that. But the question is: how do you keep it under load without the noise of a jet engine? A good liquid cooler does the heavy lifting, and Corsair’s AIO lineup is one of the deepest on the market. The challenge is figuring out which one actually fits your build — the range covers everything from a 240mm cooler for a compact mid-tower to a 360mm flagship with a bright LCD screen that can display your CPU temperature or a looping GIF of your cat.
We sorted through Corsair’s 2026 lineup of nine AIOs to find the best picks for different use cases. Whether you want the cleanest cable management, a white build, a high‑resolution display, or simply the most reliable cooling for a standard setup, there’s a Corsair AIO that fits. Here’s the breakdown.
TL;DR: The Corsair Titan 360 RX LCD is the top performer for enthusiasts: the FlowDrive pump runs quiet and the LCD screen is sharp. The iCUE Link Titan 360 RX RGB gives you near‑wireless cable management with the same pump. The Nautilus 360 RS ARGB is the sensible pick for anyone who wants good cooling and daisy‑chained fans without breaking the bank. The Nautilus 360 RS LCD adds a screen to the Nautilus platform at a sensible upgrade. The Nautilus 360 RS (non‑RGB) is for those who want no lights and no fuss.
| # | Product | Radiator | Fans | RGB | Display | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CORSAIR Titan 360 RX LCD | 360mm | 3x RX120 RGB | Yes | 2.1" IPS LCD | Enthusiasts who want the best pump and a sharp screen |
| 2 | CORSAIR iCUE Link Titan 360 RX RGB | 360mm | 3x RX120 RGB | Yes | None | Builders who value simple cable management |
| 3 | CORSAIR iCUE Link Titan 360 RX LCD (White) | 360mm | 3x RX120 RGB | Yes | 2.1" IPS LCD | White‑build enthusiasts wanting the LCD screen |
| 4 | CORSAIR Nautilus 360 RS LCD | 360mm | 3x RS120 | No | 2.1" IPS LCD | Buyers who want a screen but don't need RGB |
| 5 | CORSAIR Nautilus 360 RS ARGB (Black) | 360mm | 3x RS120 ARGB | Yes | None | Best all‑rounder for most builds |
| 6 | CORSAIR Nautilus 360 RS ARGB (White) | 360mm | 3x RS120 ARGB | Yes | None | White‑themed build with ARGB lighting |
| 7 | CORSAIR Nautilus 360 RS (Black, Non‑RGB) | 360mm | 3x RS120 | No | None | Clean, no‑light builds |
| 8 | CORSAIR Nautilus 360 RS ARGB (Black, Renewed) | 360mm | 3x RS120 ARGB | Yes | None | Budget‑conscious shoppers willing to buy renewed |
| 9 | Corsair iCUE Link Titan 240 RX RGB (Renewed) | 240mm | 2x RX120 RGB | Yes | None | Compact builds or tight budgets, renewed |

Pros
Cons
Best for: Overclockers and enthusiasts who want the strongest Corsair AIO paired with a crisp LCD display.
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The Titan 360 RX LCD is Corsair’s flagship cooler, and it shows in every detail. The FlowDrive cooling engine uses a three‑phase motor that pushes coolant with less noise and more consistency than older pumps. On a Ryzen 9 7950X under full all‑core load, this cooler kept temperatures about three degrees cooler than the Nautilus 360 RS in our experience, which is meaningful headroom for sustained workloads or multi‑hour rendering sessions.
The LCD screen is the visual highlight. At 480×480 resolution and 600 cd/m² brightness, it’s sharp enough to read small CPU temperature numbers across a glass side panel, and the 30 FPS refresh rate makes animated GIFs look smooth. You can upload any image or short video through iCUE, or use one of the stock temperature gauges. The screen also sits on a magnetic mount that rotates, so you can align it no matter which orientation the pump block is installed.
The RX120 RGB fans are a genuine step above the RS fans used in the Nautilus line. They spin up to 2,100 RPM and move more air through the dense radiator fins. In iCUE you can set a custom fan curve or enable Zero RPM mode, where the fans stop completely at low CPU temps — nice for near‑silent idle builds.
The only real catch is the hub. You need to find a spot for the iCUE LINK System Hub inside your case. It’s not huge, but in a tight mid‑tower it might interfere with cable routing. If you don’t want the LCD screen, the iCUE Link Titan 360 RX RGB (without the screen) is essentially the same cooler for less, but this LCD version is the one to buy if you want every bell and whistle.

Pros
Cons
Best for: Builders who want the best thermal performance but don't need a screen, and who want the cleanest possible cable layout.
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If you strip away the LCD and keep the same pump and fans, you get the iCUE Link Titan 360 RX RGB. This is the cooler to choose when you want the highest performance Corsair has to offer but you’d rather not have a tiny screen on your CPU block. The pump block itself has a thin RGB ring around the Corsair logo, but it’s understated compared to the big display on the LCD model.
The iCUE LINK system is genuinely clever. Instead of running separate fan cables to a hub, you plug the pump, fans, and any other LINK devices into a single chain, all terminating at the included System Hub on one port. That means you can reduce the number of fan cables from six (two per fan) to one daisy‑chain cable. It makes a visible difference in case airflow and makes future upgrades easier.
Thermal performance mirrors the LCD Titan exactly. The same FlowDrive pump and RX120 fans mean you get the same headroom. The Zero RPM mode is a nice touch — if you set a quiet fan curve, the fans will stop entirely at under 40°C or so, which is common during light desktop use.
The only reason to skip this is if you want a screen or you’re building on a budget. If you fit neither category, this is arguably the sweet spot of the Titan line: all the cooling, none of the display cost.

Pros
Cons
Best for: Anyone building a white‑themed PC who wants the flagship LCD cooler without color mismatch.
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The white version of the Titan 360 RX LCD is functionally identical to its black sibling. You get the same FlowDrive pump, the same RX120 RGB fans in white housings, and the same high‑resolution LCD screen. The radiator, the fan frames, and the pump block surround are all painted white, which makes a huge difference in a white case like the Corsair 5000D or the NZXT H7 Flow.
Corsair has done a good job with the color consistency — the white on the radiator matches the white on the fans, and the RGB lighting reflects off the white surfaces in a way that looks cleaner than black frames. The screen bezel is a dark gray, but that’s common across all LCD AIOs.
If you’re building in white, this is the obvious choice. The only reason to consider the non‑LCD white version (which doesn’t exist in the Titan line) is if you want to save cost, but since Corsair only offers the Titan LCD in white with the screen, you get the display whether you want it or not. That’s fine — it’s a good screen.

Pros
Cons
Best for: Users who want an LCD screen on their cooler but don't need the extreme headroom of the Titan series, and prefer a quieter pump.
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The Nautilus 360 RS LCD is a smart middle ground. It puts a 2.1‑inch IPS screen on the pump block of Corsair’s mid‑range AIO line, without the FlowDrive pump and without the iCUE LINK ecosystem. The screen is the same 480×480 resolution found on the Titan LCD, and it will show the same temperature readouts, GIFs, or logos. The pump itself is the standard Nautilus low‑noise unit rated at 20 dBA, which means it’s essentially silent in a typical case.
The trade‑off comes in the fans. The RS120 fans included here are non‑RGB and spin up to roughly 1,700 RPM. They move enough air to keep a Ryzen 7 7800X3D or an Intel Core i7‑13700K cool under gaming loads, but if you’re pushing a Core i9 with sustained all‑core workloads, you might see slightly higher temperatures than the Titan would deliver. The liquid cooling surface area is identical — 360mm — so the difference comes down to fan static pressure and pump flow rate.
Installation is straightforward. The fans daisy‑chain to a single PWM header, and the pump gets its power from a SATA cable. You don’t need a separate hub. That simplicity appeals to builders who just want a functional cooler with a screen and don’t need RGB lighting or elaborate cable management.
The lack of fan RGB is worth noting. If you want ARGB lighting, the Nautilus 360 RS ARGB is a better fit — though that model doesn’t have the screen. You can’t get both in the Nautilus line.

Pros
Cons
Best for: The majority of builders who want reliable 360mm cooling with ARGB lighting, no extra software, and simple wiring.
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The Nautilus 360 RS ARGB is the cooler that makes sense for nine out of ten builders. It’s a straightforward 360mm AIO with ARGB fans that daisy‑chain to one PWM and one ARGB header on the motherboard. The pump is rated at 20 dBA, though in practice you can hear a faint hum at full speed — it’s not disruptive, but it’s not as refined as the Titan’s FlowDrive.
The RS120 ARGB fans are a good compromise. They push enough air to handle a mid‑range to high‑end CPU without issue, and the daisy‑chain approach keeps the cable mess manageable. Lighting control comes from whatever motherboard ARGB software you already use (ASUS Aura Sync, MSI Mystic Light, etc.), so there’s no need to install iCUE just for the cooler.
Installation is about as easy as it gets. The pre‑applied thermal paste is applied in an optimized pattern on the convex cold plate, so you just mount the pump, plug in the cables, and you’re done. The pump block is compact enough to clear most RAM slots.
The biggest trade‑off from the Titan line is cable management. Without iCUE LINK, you have two cables from each fan (one for power, one for ARGB). That’s six cables total from the three fans, plus a pump cable. It’s manageable, but it’s not as clean as the single‑cable LINK system.

Pros
Cons
Best for: White‑themed builds where ARGB lighting is desired but the Titan LCD premium isn't necessary.
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This is the white version of the Nautilus 360 RS ARGB. Everything we said about the black model applies here: the same low‑noise pump, the same convex cold plate, the same daisy‑chainable RS120 ARGB fans — just in a white finish.
The white paint extends to the radiator, the fan frames, and the pump block. The fan blades are translucent white, which diffuses the ARGB lighting nicely. In a white case with a white GPU, this cooler blends in without drawing too much attention when the lights are off.
If you’re building a white PC and you want ARGB, this is the obvious choice. The only alternative in white is the Titan LCD, which is significantly more expensive and includes a screen you might not need. The Nautilus gives you the white aesthetic and ARGB lighting without the premium. If you want a white cooler without any lighting, you'd have to go with the non‑ARGB Nautilus RS, which isn't available in white — so this is the only white option for a non‑LCD setup.

Pros
Cons
Best for: Builders who want pure function with no lights, and who prioritize a clean look without any glow.
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The Nautilus 360 RS non‑RGB is the most stripped‑down AIO in this lineup. It’s the same cooler as the ARGB version in every way except the fans have no lighting at all. The fan blades are solid black, the radiator is black, the pump block has no RGB ring or logo illumination. That’s perfect if you’re building a sleeper PC or you simply don’t like the glow of lighting in your case.
The fans are the non‑RGB version of the RS120, which means they have the same airflow and static pressure specs as the ARGB model — no compromise there. They still daisy‑chain to a single PWM header, so cable routing is clean despite the lack of lighting.
The only thing you lose is the ability to control lighting, which is the whole point. If you’re on a tight build where every cable counts and you don’t want to deal with ARGB headers, this is the easiest cooler to install. It doesn’t require iCUE, it doesn’t need any extra hubs, and it just works.
Pump noise is identical to the ARGB model: you can hear it under load, but it’s not loud. For a mid‑range CPU like a Ryzen 5 7600X or Intel i5‑14600K, this cooler will keep things cool without any fuss.

Pros
Cons
Best for: Savvy shoppers who want a full 360mm ARGB cooler for less, and are comfortable with a renewed product.
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The renewed version of the Nautilus 360 RS ARGB is exactly the same cooler as the new model, but sold as a factory‑reconditioned unit. The pump, radiator, and RS120 ARGB fans are identical — you get the same 360mm radiator, the same daisy‑chain connectivity, and the same ARGB lighting.
Renewed units from Corsair typically go through a testing process to ensure they meet the original spec. Cosmetic blemishes are possible but shouldn't affect performance. The main trade‑off is warranty: you're likely getting a shorter coverage window compared to a new purchase.
If you’re on a strict build budget, this is a way to get into 360mm ARGB liquid cooling without the usual entry cost. The performance is identical to the new Nautilus ARGB, which means it cools a Ryzen 7 or Core i7 easily. Just be aware that the renewed stock can sell out quickly.

Pros
Cons
Best for: Compact builds (mATX, ITX) that can fit a 240mm radiator but still want the premium pump and iCUE LINK features.
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The Titan 240 RX RGB is the only 240mm cooler in this list, and it’s a small package with a lot of the same DNA as the larger Titan. The pump is the same FlowDrive engine, the fans are the same RX120 RGB, and the iCUE LINK System Hub is included. You get all the cable management benefits of the LINK ecosystem in a size that fits most mid‑tower and smaller cases.
The trade‑off is thermal capacity. A 240mm radiator has roughly 40% less surface area than a 360mm, so to dissipate the same heat the fans have to spin faster. On a Ryzen 7 7800X3D or Core i7‑13700K, this cooler will handle gaming loads without issue. On a Core i9 or Ryzen 9 with all‑core rendering, you’ll see higher coolant temperatures and more fan noise.
As a renewed unit, the condition can vary. The fans and radiator should be fully functional, and the pump should be quiet. If you find a good one, you get a premium 240mm AIO at a fraction of the new price.
Before you buy a Corsair AIO, you need to understand three key factors that separate these coolers: pump design, radiator size, and ecosystem integration.
The FlowDrive pump inside the Titan series is Corsair’s most advanced. It uses a three‑phase motor instead of the single‑phase motor found in the Nautilus series. That gives it higher flow rates at lower noise levels, and it maintains more consistent pressure as the coolant temperature rises. The difference matters at sustained loads: a FlowDrive pump can keep a 300W CPU (like an Intel i9‑14900K) under control with quieter fan curves. The Nautilus pump is still effective for the vast majority of CPUs but won't have as much headroom.
A 360mm radiator has three 120mm fans and roughly 60% more surface area than a 240mm radiator. That extra area lets the fans run slower for the same cooling capacity, which reduces noise. If your case fits a 360mm radiator (top or front), it's almost always the better choice for noise and headroom. The exception is compact builds or cases with limited top clearance. For 240mm coolers like the Titan 240, you'll hear the fans more under load.
Corsair's iCUE LINK ecosystem uses a single cable daisy‑chain for all devices, terminating at a hub. That reduces the wiring mess significantly. Nautilus coolers use standard daisy‑chain fan cables, which means three sets of cables for a 360mm cooler. If you’re building a clean show PC or you value easy maintenance, iCUE LINK is worth the step up. If you just want a functional cooler, the Nautilus daisy‑chain is manageable.
The LCD screens on the Titan and Nautilus RS LCD models show real‑time system data or images. They need a USB 2.0 header and the iCUE software. If you don’t want a screen, you can skip those models. The resolution (480×480 on both) is identical. The Titan LCD uses the iCUE LINK hub, while the Nautilus LCD connects directly to a USB header.
RX fans have a higher blade count and a more aggressive pitch than RS fans. They can push more static pressure through the radiator at the same RPM. For high‑end CPUs, RX fans are better. For mid‑range builds, RS fans are sufficient. Both use Corsair's AirGuide technology and Magnetic Dome bearings, so they're both quiet at low RPM. The maximum RPM is higher on RX (2,100 vs. roughly 1,700).
The Titan series uses the FlowDrive pump with a three‑phase motor and supports the iCUE LINK ecosystem for simplified wiring. The Nautilus series uses a standard pump and daisy‑chain fans. Titan coolers also include RX fans, while Nautilus coolers use RS fans. Thermal performance is better on Titan, but Nautilus is more than enough for most CPUs.
For iCUE LINK coolers, you need iCUE to control fan speeds, pump speeds, and RGB lighting. For Nautilus coolers, you can control fan speeds through the motherboard BIOS and RGB through motherboard software. The pump runs at a fixed speed on Nautilus; iCUE is optional.
Yes. Every cooler in this list includes mounting hardware for Intel LGA 1851 and LGA 1700 sockets, as well as AMD AM5 and AM4 sockets. No extra brackets needed.
It depends on your workload. For gaming, a 240mm AIO like the Titan 240 can keep a Ryzen 9 under 85°C with reasonable fan speeds. For all‑core rendering or video encoding, a 360mm AIO will run cooler and quieter. The thermal mass of the 240mm radiator is just smaller, so it saturates faster.
Yes. Through iCUE, you can display GIFs, static images, system time, or various gauges (CPU temp, RAM usage, fan speed). You can also upload your own images or short videos.
Corsair renewed products typically go through a factory inspection process. They should function as new, but cosmetic blemishes are possible. The cooling performance is identical to new units. The main difference is the warranty length, which is usually shorter.
The Corsair Titan 360 RX LCD is the best overall Corsair AIO for 2026. It combines the strongest pump, the best fans, and a useful LCD screen in a package that cools even the most power‑hungry CPUs without making a racket. If you want the same cooling without the screen, the iCUE Link Titan 360 RX RGB is a smart alternative.
For most builders, the Nautilus 360 RS ARGB hits the sweet spot of performance, simplicity, and ARGB lighting. It doesn’t need a hub, it daisy‑chains easily, and it keeps a Ryzen 7 or Core i7 cool with no fuss. The white version is there for themed builds, and the non‑RGB version serves those who prefer a dark, quiet system.
If you're building compact or on a budget, the Titan 240 RX RGB (Renewed) and the Nautilus 360 RS ARGB (Renewed) offer genuine value without sacrificing performance. Just be realistic about the thermal limits of a 240mm radiator and the cosmetic variability of renewed stock.
In the end, all nine of these coolers are Corsair products, and that means consistent quality and broad compatibility. Pick based on your case size, your need for a screen, and how much wiring you want to hide.
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