The regeneration of the NADH cofactor is crucial for bioelectrocatalytic reactors. This can be achieved by using an electrochemical mediator such as the rhodium complex [Cp*Rh(bpy) Cl] + , but the overall reduction process suffers from the interference of molecular oxygen. This interference can be avoided by using a second porous working electrode (acting as a real oxygen filter) positioned near the surface of the first working electrode. To fabricate the oxygen filter, platinum particles were deposited on the surface of a carbon paper.NADH could be produced in the presence of the oxygen filter with a faradaic yield at 63.4 %, very close to the yields obtained without the filter at 61.7 % in a fully N 2 -degased medium, and only at 10.6 % in the presence of oxygen. Moreover, the productivity was also increased by nearly a factor of four. Therefore, the proposed concept of the oxygen filter offers a new avenue in the current strategies for NADH regeneration in biocatalytic reactors based on electrochemical methods.