Eufy — the home division of Anker — has quietly become one of the most interesting robot vacuum brands on the market. While Roborock chases flagship glory and Roomba leans on its name, Eufy plays a different game: take a feature that used to cost $1,500 and ship it for half the price. Sometimes less.
That strategy makes the lineup confusing. The Omni S2 sits at the top with 30,000Pa suction and a hot-water roller mop. The X10 Pro Omni hovers in the upper-middle and routinely gets discounted into mid-range territory. The C-series (C20, C28) pushes Omni-dock features into the budget tier. And then there's the L60 — discontinued in late 2025, but still sitting on Amazon's shelves at fire-sale prices.
We've spent the past year testing every robot in this lineup. This guide is the short answer for shoppers who want the best Eufy in 2026 without reading six review pages.
30-Second Summary
- Best overall: eufy X10 Pro Omni — strong all-rounder, frequently discounted
- Best premium: eufy Omni S2 — hot-water mop and 30,000Pa suction
- Best for mopping: eufy S1 Pro Omni — roller mop with 1 kg downward pressure
- Best budget: eufy Omni C28 — full Omni-dock features under $499.99
- Skip if: you need deep-pile carpet performance — Eufy still trails Roborock and Dreame here
Our Picks at a Glance
| Pick | Model | Suction | Score | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Best Overall | eufy X10 Pro Omni | 8,000Pa | 9.2/10 | Most homes, mixed floors |
| Best Premium | eufy Omni S2 | 30,000Pa | 8.6/10 | Hard-floor homes, sticky messes |
| Best for Mopping | eufy S1 Pro Omni | 8,000Pa | 8.0/10 | Hardwood, tile, laminate |
| Best 3-in-1 | eufy E28 Omni | 20,000Pa | 8.0/10 | Pet households with carpets |
| Best Mid-Range | eufy Omni C20 | 7,000Pa | 7.8/10 | Apartments, low furniture |
| Best Budget | eufy Omni C28 | 15,000Pa | 7.8/10 | First robot vacuum buyers |
How We Test Eufy Robot Vacuums
Every model on this list went through the same standardized routine. We run each robot in our 1,200 sq ft test space across hardwood, tile, and a mix of low- and medium-pile carpet. Cleaning tests include the standard debris mix (cereal, coffee grounds, baby powder, fine sand) and a dedicated pet-hair test on flattened carpet.
For mopping, we drop dried coffee rings, ketchup smears, and a sticky soda spot, then track how many passes it takes to lift each. Navigation gets timed in a multi-room layout with cables, socks, and a fake plush toy as obstacles.
We also factor in real owner reports — Reddit threads, Amazon reviews, and long-term owner feedback — because two weeks of testing rarely catches the issues that show up at month three.
For the full methodology, see How We Test.
1. Best Overall: eufy X10 Pro Omni
If you can only consider one robot from this lineup, the X10 Pro Omni is the answer. We've tested it for over a year, and it still hits the sweet spot of features, performance, and price.
The headline numbers — 8,000Pa suction, dual oscillating mops with 12mm auto-lift, AI obstacle avoidance, full self-empty/wash/dry dock — read like a flagship spec sheet from 18 months ago. What makes the X10 Pro Omni interesting in 2026 is that Anker keeps cutting the price. The MSRP is $899.99, but Amazon has been running it at deep discounts; price-tracker data shows it dipped to $449.99 in early 2026, roughly half of launch.
On Vacuum Wars' deep-carpet sand test, the X10 Pro Omni pulled 83% of embedded debris — well above the 75% category average. On hard floors it handled fine to extra-large debris without trouble in our runs, with mopping that's reliably above its price class. The 12mm mop lift is high enough to clear most area rugs without leaving wet streaks, something cheaper Eufy models still struggle with.
One Reddit owner with two cats summed it up: "The anti-tangle brush actually handles hair without me cutting it out every day. It's been serving me perfectly for months." Another flagged the App as the weak link: firmware updates have occasionally caused connectivity issues. Most users report things stabilize within a release or two.
Pros:
- Frequent steep discounts make it the best price-to-performance Eufy
- AI obstacle avoidance actually catches cables and pet bowls
- 12mm mop lift handles area rugs reliably
- Robust dock — auto-empty, mop wash, mop dry, water refill
Cons:
- App firmware can be flaky after updates
- Carpet performance trails the absolute top Roborock and Dreame flagships
- Loud auto-empty cycle (~75dB)
Buy this if: you have a mixed-floor home and want flagship features without flagship pricing. Read our full eufy X10 Pro Omni review for the long-form deep dive.
2. Best Premium: eufy Omni S2
eufy Omni S2
The Omni S2 is the answer to "what does Eufy build when they stop watching the price tag?" Launched January 2026 with an MSRP of $1,599.99, it's the brand's first true halo product — and the first Eufy with serious flagship ambitions.
The numbers are aggressive. AeroTurbo 2.0 suction rated at 30,000Pa (nearly four times the X10 Pro Omni). HydroJet 2.0 roller mop with 60°C hot-water sterilization. A 12-in-1 dock that washes mops in hot water, disinfects with ozone, dries with hot air, and includes a built-in fragrance diffuser. The robot itself uses CleanMind AI navigation and an extending side brush for corner cleaning.
In testing, the hot-water mop is the standout. Dried coffee, sticky soda residue, even a smear of dried tomato sauce — single pass, gone. Vacuum Wars, in their first-look review, called it "the strongest vacuum we've reviewed to date" for hard floors. Carpet is the asterisk: despite the suction jump, the S2 scored the same as Eufy's mid-range E-series in deep carpet tests, around 80/100.
That carpet ceiling is the catch. If your home is mostly hard floors and you want the best mopping money can buy from Eufy, the S2 is unbeatable. If it's mostly carpet, save money and look elsewhere — even within Eufy, the X10 Pro Omni handles carpet about as well at half the price.
Pros:
- 60°C hot-water mop sterilizes and lifts dried-on stains in one pass
- 30,000Pa suction is the highest in any Eufy
- Slim 3.5-inch profile fits under most furniture
- Fragrance diffuser is a polarizing but genuinely effective dock feature
Cons:
- Carpet performance hasn't scaled with suction
- $1,349.99 puts it in Roborock S8 MaxV Ultra territory
- Hot water tank adds a maintenance step
Buy this if: you have a kitchen, dining room, and play area that need real sanitization — pets, kids, food messes — and you live mostly on hard floors.
3. Best for Mopping Performance: eufy S1 Pro Omni

eufy S1 Pro Omni
Before the Omni S2 launched, the S1 Pro Omni was Eufy's mopping flagship — and it remains the best dedicated mopping robot in the lineup if you don't need the S2's hot-water feature. The roller mop applies 1 kg of downward pressure (continuously rotating at 170 RPM), and the system includes onboard ozone disinfection during dock washing.
The current price is the story: launched at $1,499.99, it now lives at $849.99 on a near-permanent basis. That's roughly 40% off, and it pulls the S1 Pro into a price band where its mopping advantage starts to make sense.
Where it stumbles is carpet. We measured a 5.5/10 carpet score — the lowest of any flagship in this guide. The mop carriage doesn't lift high enough to clear medium-pile rugs without leaving them slightly damp, and the suction system is tuned for hard floors first. Pair this robot with a stick vacuum if you have a lot of carpet.
Pros:
- Best non-hot-water mopping in the Eufy lineup
- Permanent discount makes the value compelling
- Excellent obstacle avoidance — flags cables, socks, pet bowls
- Ozone disinfection cycle in the dock
Cons:
- 5.5/10 carpet score — meaningfully behind the X10 Pro Omni
- Roller mop maintenance is more involved than pad-style systems
- Fewer Reddit/owner reports than the X10 (smaller installed base)
Buy this if: your home is mostly hardwood, tile, or laminate and mopping is the job that actually matters. Full breakdown in our eufy S1 Pro Omni review.
4. Best 3-in-1 Versatility: eufy E28 Omni
eufy E28 Omni
The E28 is the most unusual robot in the Eufy lineup. The base station detaches into a portable handheld spot cleaner — Eufy calls it FlexiOne — that you can use on couches, car seats, and stairs. The robot itself runs at 20,000Pa with a HydroJet roller mop. At $999.99, you're effectively paying for a robot vacuum and a small portable carpet cleaner in one box.
In our testing, the robot performed about where you'd expect a 20,000Pa Eufy to land — strong on hardwood, decent on carpet, mediocre at mopping (the Tom's Guide review echoed this). Where the E28 earns its spot is the FlexiOne unit. It's actually useful: we used it on couch cushions, the car interior, and a wine-stained area rug, and it punches above its size.
The downsides? The base station is loud during empty cycles (one reviewer called it "noisy as a disposal"), and you're paying a premium for the spot-cleaner integration. If you'd never use a handheld spot cleaner anyway, skip this and buy the X10 Pro Omni for less.
Pros:
- Unique detachable FlexiOne portable spot cleaner — actually useful for couches, cars, and rugs
- 20,000Pa suction is solid for the price
- Slim profile and compact dock vs. Eufy's S-series
Cons:
- Robot mopping is mediocre — the HydroJet on the E28 lacks the S-series pressure
- Loud auto-empty cycle
- Pays a tax for FlexiOne integration
Buy this if: you have carpets, kids, or pets and would actually use a handheld spot cleaner — otherwise the integration premium isn't worth it.
5. Best Mid-Range Value: eufy Omni C20
eufy Omni C20
The C20 is the dark-horse pick in this lineup. The MSRP is $699.99, but Amazon and Walmart have routinely listed it for $399.99 or below. At that price, you're getting a full Omni-dock robot — auto-empty, mop wash, mop dry — with dual spinning mop pads and 7,000Pa suction.
The compromise is navigation. Eufy strips the LiDAR turret in exchange for keeping the body to 3.35 inches tall — slim enough to run under most sofas, beds, and toe-kicks. You get a "point-laser + IR" navigation array instead, which handles big furniture fine but misses small objects like cables and toys. Pre-tidy your floors before you start a clean, and the C20 is a great value. Don't, and it'll get stuck.
Vacuum Wars measured 96% pickup on flat pet hair (excellent) and 75% on deep carpet (average). Reddit owners report the dual spinning mops handle dried-on stains surprisingly well for a budget unit. The Pro-Detangle Comb on the roller brush actually works — multiple owners with shedding dogs report no daily hair-cutting maintenance.
Pros:
- Slim 3.35-inch height — best Eufy for low furniture access
- Dual spinning mop pads with 6N pressure (rare at this price)
- 96% flat pet hair pickup in independent testing
- Frequently discounted to under $400
Cons:
- No LiDAR / camera — needs a tidy floor or it gets stuck
- 7,000Pa is the lowest suction in this guide
- Less responsive App than the X10 Pro
Buy this if: you live in an apartment with low-clearance furniture and don't want to pay for AI navigation features you'd never use.
6. Best Budget Newest: eufy Omni C28
eufy Omni C28
Released February 2026, the C28 is Eufy's newest budget robot — and it's the one we'd recommend to first-time buyers. At $499.99, it gets you 15,000Pa suction (more than double the C20), an AI obstacle-avoidance camera, a HydroJet self-cleaning roller mop, and a 5-in-1 Omni dock that washes and dries the mop and self-empties dust.
The roller mop is the under-appreciated part. Most sub-$500 robots ship with pad-style mops that smear dirty water around. The C28's HydroJet roller continuously washes itself during a clean, and the result is a noticeably cleaner mop pass. Tom's Guide called the C28 "an affordable robovac that defies its price tag" — that's a fair read.
It's not perfect. The dock is louder than the X10 Pro's. The App tier-lock means a few features (like room-specific water-flow tuning) are gated to the higher-end E and S series. But for a buyer's first robot, the C28 covers the basics — dust, mop, dock, navigation — better than anything else under $500.
Pros:
- Newest model, full 2026 spec sheet (15,000Pa, HydroJet, AI obstacle avoidance)
- 5-in-1 Omni dock at sub-$500 pricing
- Good fit for first-time robot vacuum buyers
Cons:
- Dock is loud
- Some App features tier-locked to higher Eufy models
- Carpet performance still trails Roborock equivalents
Buy this if: this is your first robot vacuum and you want the modern feature set without overspending.
Honorable Mention: eufy L60 (Discontinued, While Stock Lasts)
The L60 was Eufy's surprise budget hit of 2024-2025: a true LiDAR-mapping robot at $279.99. Eufy officially discontinued it in October 2025 to make room for the C-series, but Amazon stock has lingered well into 2026 — and at clearance prices, it's still one of the best deals in the category.
We measured a 7.4/10 overall, with {{score:eufy-l60-ses:hard_floor}}/10 on hard floor and 8.0/10 on carpet. There's no mopping function, no AI obstacle camera, and no Omni dock — but for a buyer who only needs vacuuming on a small-to-medium home with hard floors and a few rugs, it's hard to beat.
Read our full eufy L60 review for the deep dive. Just be aware that Eufy isn't restocking, so once Amazon's inventory dries up the price advantage disappears with it.
Eufy vs. Other Brands: Should You Buy Eufy?
Eufy plays a specific game: take features that used to be expensive and ship them at half the price, six months after the bleeding edge. That makes it the right brand if you care about value. It's the wrong brand if you want the absolute best.
For deep-pile carpet, Roborock and Dreame still rule — see our Roborock vs Eufy comparison for the specifics. For pure mopping pressure on a budget, Narwal's Freo X Ultra remains a strong alternative to the S1 Pro. And for AI obstacle avoidance, the latest Roborock Saros models still edge out anything in this Eufy lineup.
But for a first robot, a second home robot, or a home that's mostly hard floors with light carpet — Eufy's lineup is the easiest to recommend in 2026. The combination of frequent discounting and a robust dock-based feature set means even the budget models do things that cost twice as much three years ago.
Eufy Robot Vacuum Buying Tips
Wait for a sale. Eufy discounts deeply and predictably. The X10 Pro Omni at MSRP is overpriced; the X10 Pro Omni at $449 is a steal. Use a price tracker and wait for Prime Day (July), Black Friday (November), or major Eufy promotions.
Match the model to your floor. Hardwood/tile-heavy home? Look at S-series (S1 Pro, S2). Carpet-heavy home? X10 Pro is the better all-rounder. Mixed-floor with low furniture? The C20 fits where bigger robots can't.
Don't overpay for FlexiOne if you won't use it. The E28's portable spot cleaner is genuinely useful — but only if you'd actually pull it out for couches and cars. Otherwise, the X10 Pro covers the same ground for less.
Skip the L60 if you can't get it on clearance. It's discontinued. Once Amazon stock runs out, the C-series replaces it. Buy now or move on.
Plan for the App. Several Reddit threads in 2025 flagged Eufy's firmware quality after updates. It's improved, but it's still the brand's weakest area. If app stability is critical to you, Roborock and Dreame are more polished.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are eufy robot vacuums worth it?
Yes — but specifically because of price. Eufy rarely makes the absolute best robot in any category, but it consistently makes the second- or third-best at a much lower price. If you compare list-price-to-list-price against Roborock or Dreame, Eufy looks weaker. If you compare actual selling prices on Amazon, Eufy frequently wins. Wait for a sale and the value math is hard to argue with.
Which eufy is best for pet hair?
The X10 Pro Omni is the best all-around pick for pet households. The anti-tangle brush actually works (multiple Reddit owners with shedding dogs report no daily hair maintenance), the 8,000Pa suction handles fur on both hard floors and carpet, and the AI obstacle avoidance catches pet bowls and toys. If your pet hair situation is really severe and budget allows, the Omni S2's 30,000Pa suction is a step up — but it's overkill for most homes.
Is eufy better than Roborock?
For most categories, no — Roborock's flagships still lead in carpet cleaning, navigation polish, and App quality. But Eufy is consistently better at one thing: price. A discounted X10 Pro Omni at $449 outperforms most Roborock products at the same price. The honest answer is that they're complementary brands serving different buyers. See our Roborock vs Eufy comparison for a head-to-head breakdown.
Why is the eufy L60 discontinued?
Eufy phased out the L60 in October 2025 to consolidate its budget tier around the C-series (C10, C20, C28). The L60 used a traditional LiDAR turret, which made it taller; the C-series uses a different navigation system that allows a slimmer profile. Stock at retailers has lingered into 2026, and at clearance prices it's still a good deal — but new buyers should expect the C-series replacements going forward.
What's the difference between eufy and Anker?
Eufy is a sub-brand of Anker, the company best known for charging accessories. Anker uses Eufy as its smart-home division (robot vacuums, security cameras, doorbells). The relationship matters because Anker's manufacturing and supply-chain scale is part of why Eufy's prices are so aggressive — they're not a startup margin away from breaking even.




