The best robot vacuums for cleaning up any home — at any budget

Sit back and let something else do all the hard work for you.
By Leah Stodart , Joseph Green , and Matt Ford  on 
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Overview

Best For Hardwood Floors

Roborock S6 MaxV

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Best For Speed

Neato Robotics D7

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Best For Stubborn Dirt

iRobot Roomba 960

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Best For Power

iRobot Roomba s9+

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Best For Low Furniture

Eufy RoboVac 11s

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Best For Tight Budgets

PureClean PUCRC25

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See 1 More

Table of Contents

This content originally appeared on Mashable for a US audience and has been adapted for the UK audience.

Here are some basic questions that will help you decide whether to buy a robot vacuum cleaner: Do you like cleaning the house? No, thought not. Do you like relaxing and putting your feet up? Of course you do. In that case, you absolutely need a robot vacuum in your life.

If you're not tech-minded, choosing a robot vacuum cleaner to whizz around your home is easier said that done. After all, is a robot vacuum worth the money? How do they work? And which is the best brand? If that's got your head spinning, don't worry — we're here to help.

Here's a quick guide on robot vacuums.

Are robot vacuums worth buying?

The crisp control of an upright vacuum comes with its own type of high. But if you're not one to use cleaning as a de-stressing method, a robot vacuum could cut a majorly agonising task off of your to-do list.

Whether robot vacuums are worth it or not comes with a caveat: it can't be just any robot vacuum. A cheap robovac that acts drunk — scattering dust rather than sucking, bumping into walls, getting stuck on area rugs — is completely missing that convenience factor that draws people to robot vacs in the first place.

How do robot vacuums actually work?

To answer that question, here's a list of essential features to consider:

Suction power — A vacuum is the one purchase that you hope sucks a lot. Suction power is typically measured in Pascals (Pa), ranging between 600 Pa to 2,500 Pa in the ones on this list. Stronger sucking will be needed to pick up heavier pieces of debris (be sure to set up a barrier around Legos) and to pull patted-down pet hair from rugs.

Floor type — Carpeting and high pile rugs will probably require stronger suction than hard floors, as well as special features like an extra-wide or self-cleaning brush roll to prevent hair from wrapping and clogging. Folks in homes with multiple floor types might consider a bigger, sturdier robovac that can hurl itself and its wheels over mats, rugs, and transitions from carpet to hard floors. 

Home layout — Every robot vacuum is equipped with sensors and drop detection. But if your home has lots of rooms, lots of turns, or lots of close-together furniture, you'll have fewer navigation issues with an advanced model that uses intelligent mapping to remember exactly how your home is laid out, including labelling of specific rooms and where staircases are.

Low-profile furniture — No one should have to be scared about what's accumulated under their sofa over the past year. A robot vacuum measuring three inches or less in height should be able to scoot under most low-hanging sofas and beds.

Battery life and square footage — One of the main complaints people have about their robot vacuum is that it craps out in the middle of the floor. Larger spaces require more time to clean, and it all depends on how annoyed you'll be if it only finishes a few rooms at a time. Average run times for the list below range between 90 and 150 minutes, which translate to about 500 and 2,600 square feet covered on one charge.

App control — WiFi-enabled robot vacuums can be synced with a smartphone app to control scheduling, manual start, cleaning settings, as well as telling your vac to make its rounds when you're not home. Low-end models that don't connect to WiFi will usually come with a separate remote. If you're used to asking Alexa or Google to turn off the lights or tell you the weather, a model with voice integration will blend in nicely.

It's really important to take all of these things into consideration before making any sort of purchase decision. The best models aren't cheap, so it's worth taking your time to properly think this through.

Is Roomba the best robot vacuum brand?

In an unspoken sort of way, Roomba has been crowned "the best" on the sole basis that it's the most established brand in the robot vacuum market. But other brands have the advantage of being already established in the vacuum market as a whole, including stick vacuums, handheld vacuums, and models with huge canisters.

But while other brands may be experts in other departments, Roomba dominates the robot business. The maps created by a Roomba after it gets a sense of your home feature precision down to each room and the type of messes it typically sees. Other vacuums can struggle to make reliable maps. Roombas also typically has better run times.

What is the best robot vacuum?

Whether iRobot, Eufy, Neato, or any other brand is the best at actual cleaning is pretty subjective. "Best" to someone with four dogs and lots of carpet may not mean "best" to someone with a huge house filled with wooden floors. To help make sense of this confusing situation, we have highlighted a selection of the very best robot vacuums for everyone.

These are the best robot vacuums in 2024.

Roborock S6 Max V robot vacuum

Roborock S6 MaxV

Best For Hardwood Floors

Mopping features on robot vacuums aren't novel anymore, but few robot vacuum/mop hybrids do anything more than push water around. The Roborock S6 MaxV is a true hybrid and a reputable alternative to iRobot's disappointingly spotty robo-mops.

Fully charged and on quiet mode, the S6 MaxV can squeeze out a full three hours of work — more than enough time to complete a full dry sweep and a wet scrub or two.

Laser scale sensors scan each room to adapt the route accordingly, adjusting suction for large pieces like cereal or small ones like salt. The S6 MaxV is gentle yet highly effective on hardwood, linoleum, and is a tech-powered beast on high-pile carpet as well. If a nasty obstacle is found by the stereoscopic cameras, just dampen the mop cloth and snap it on.

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A bumbling robovac and a stumbling toddler are a recipe for an accident. For homes with small children or lots of pets, the Neato BotVac D7 Connected gets in and out in a fraction of the time — and does so without skimping on the job itself.

Speed-wise, Neato ran circles around competing vacuums in a test done by Tom's Guide. Turbo Mode is loud and fast, but if the coast is clear, you can switch to Eco Mode for a slower, quieter clean. 360-degree laser scanning helps the D7 to scan rooms and execute an efficient plan of attack. 

It knows when to scoot its flat edge into corners, as well as switch to a spiral combo brush that alternates plastic and standard bristles to pull hair out of rugs.  

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The iRobot Roomba 960 offers the always-attractive combination of price and quality. It's cheaper that iRobot's big hitters, but delivers features and performance.

It has an AeroForce system that loosens dirt on even the most stubborn carpets and uses patented tangle-free brushes to combat pet hair. It also cleans for an impressive 75 minutes, from just a single charge, before returning to the charging station of its own accord for a top-up. Compatible with the iRobot app as well as Amazon Alexa and the Google Assistant, the 960 allows you to schedule your cleaning, so you come home to find your floors clean and sparkling.

Listed for just a touch over £500, it's actually generously priced considering how highly it's rated by reviewers and robo-vac enthusiasts.

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A robot vacuum that rivals a MacBook Pro in price has some serious ground to cover, and the iRobot Roomba s9+ crushes it. New additions like a slower side brush that won't scatter debris make it the best Roomba for edge cleaning, but iRobot's first D-shaped can do much more than suck the dust bunnies out of corners.

Both the s9+ and i7+ (the next-best Roomba) have automatic dirt disposal and a Clean Base that holds up to 60 days of debris. The s9+ fills up faster, but that's because it rakes in significantly more gunk. Boosted suction power, improved air flow, and wider dual rubber brushes take on medium-pile carpets, hard floor, and pet hair without tangling. 

Leave it to the s9+ to remember your home's layout, clean in neat rows, and retreat to its base after two hours of uninterrupted cleaning.  

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Nuisances like noise level or low profile furniture are magnified in cramped spaces. If you need something to suit a tight space, the Eufy RoboVac 11s might be your best option. It's reportedly one of the quietest bot vacs even on high-suction mode.

For less than £200, the Eufy 11s packs a serious punch — just don't expect any bells and whistles. The vacuum uses 1300A of suction power and can clean both carpets and hardwood, but its cleaning paths are more aimless bobbling than they are methodical.

There's no room scanning tech and scheduling is limited, but infrared sensors do ensure that it doesn't fall down stairs or run into corners. If you live in a confined space with limited furniture, this probably won't be a big deal.

The "S" actually stands for slim: At a mere 2.8 inches tall, it's also ace for sneaking under lower-sitting furniture. 

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This entry-level model by PureClean effectively cleans tile, hardwood flooring, and short carpet, with a low-profile and a reasonable run time of 90 minutes.

The PureClean PUCRC25 includes three cleaning programs and detachable brushes for tackling a range of issues. It's also equipped with anti-fall sensors that will automatically detect a gap and stop it from running off any edges in your home. It's all a bonus: You don't always get these features with cheaper models.

The HEPA filter keeps fine dust particles trapped inside the easy to clean removable dustbin, so this model is effective at controlling pet hair and allergy problems.

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Leah Stodart
Leah Stodart
Senior Shopping Reporter

Leah Stodart is a Philadelphia-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable where she covers essential home tech like vacuums and TVs as well as sustainable swaps and travel. Her ever-growing experience in these categories comes in clutch when making recommendations on how to spend your money during shopping holidays like Black Friday, which Leah has been covering for Mashable since 2017.

Leah graduated from Penn State University in 2016 with dual degrees in Sociology and Media Studies. When she's not writing about shopping (or shopping online for herself), she's almost definitely watching a horror movie, "RuPaul's Drag Race," or "The Office." You can follow her on X at @notleah or email her at [email protected].

Photo of Joseph Green
Joseph Green
Global Shopping Editor

Joseph Green is the Global Shopping Editor for Mashable. He covers VPNs, headphones, fitness gear, dating sites, streaming services, and shopping events like Black Friday and Prime Day.

Joseph is also Executive Editor of Mashable's sister site, AskMen.

Mashable Image
Matt Ford

Matt Ford is a freelance contributor to Mashable.


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