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Comparison

Roborock vs eufy Robot Vacuum: Premium vs Budget

Roborock vs eufy robot vacuum compared on suction, dock tech, navigation and value — so you can decide whether Roborock's premium builds justify the price over eufy's budget-friendly range.

By FoxVerdict Editors, Editorial Team10 min read

Roborock vs Eufy robot vacuum: what sets them apart

Roborock and Eufy sit at different points in the robot vacuum market. Roborock's current line-up, including its Saros and Qrevo series, typically retails from around £900 up to £1,400 or more and pairs high suction with hot-water mop-washing docks. Eufy's line-up typically sits in the roughly £300–£450 range and focuses on making self-emptying and basic mop automation affordable rather than chasing the highest suction or wash-temperature figures.

This comparison sets three Roborock models — the Saros 10, Qrevo Curv 2 Pro and Qrevo S Pro — against three Eufy models: the L60 Hybrid, Omni C20 and X10 Pro Omni. All six combine vacuuming with mopping and include a self-emptying dock, so the real differences lie in suction power, navigation, and how thoroughly the dock washes the mop.

Rule of thumb

Roborock's range in this comparison suits buyers who want the highest suction and a hot-water mop wash and are willing to pay for it. Eufy's range suits buyers who want reliable self-emptying and basic mop automation at a lower price, without needing the strongest suction figures on the market.

Suction power compared

Suction is stated in Pascals (Pa) by each manufacturer using its own test method, so figures are not directly comparable across brands, but the gap between these two brands' ranges is large and consistent across all three model pairs.

ModelSuction (manufacturer-stated)
Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro25,000 Pa
Roborock Saros 1022,000 Pa
Roborock Qrevo S Pro18,500 Pa
Eufy Omni C207,000 Pa
Eufy L60 Hybrid5,000 Pa at the robot; 17,000 Pa at the self-empty station motor
Eufy X10 Pro OmniNot stated as a Pa figure; described as 'Incredible Suction'

Even the lowest-suction Roborock model here (18,500 Pa on the Qrevo S Pro) states more than double the Eufy Omni C20's 7,000 Pa. Eufy's L60 Hybrid partly compensates with a separate, higher-powered motor at the self-empty station, but that motor pulls debris from the robot's bin rather than boosting the robot's own floor suction.

Mop technology and dock features

All three Roborock docks wash the mop in hot water. The Saros 10's RockDock Ultra washes at 80°C with 60°C air drying, an auto detergent dispenser and a self-refilling water tank. The Qrevo Curv 2 Pro's Dock 3.0 Hygiene+ runs a 100°C wash, 60°C warm mop and 55°C hot-air dry, with a no-disassembly soaking tray and up to 60 days between manual emptying. The Qrevo S Pro washes the mop at 75°C through its self-cleaning all-in-one dock.

Eufy's docks automate more of the process than a basic self-empty station but stop short of a stated hot-water cycle. The Omni C20 automates emptying, washing and drying, but dries with room-temperature air rather than heated air. The X10 Pro Omni automates mop washing, drying, emptying and refilling, but does not state a wash temperature either. The L60 Hybrid is the exception even within Eufy's own range: its self-empty station focuses on Hair Detangling Technology at the dustbin, and its attachable mop pad is not automatically washed at all.

Automated washing isn't the same as hot-water washing

Two of the three Eufy models here do automate mop washing and drying, but neither states a hot-water temperature the way all three Roborock models do. If a heated wash matters to you specifically, that is a genuine gap between the two brands in this comparison, not just a suction gap.

Side-by-side comparison

ModelSuctionNavigationMop washDock automation
Roborock Saros 1022,000 PaRetractable LDS + camera, Reactive AI 3.080°C wash, 60°C air drySelf-empty, auto detergent, self-refilling
Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro25,000 PaReactive AI (200+ objects), clears obstacles up to 4cm100°C wash, 55°C air drySelf-empty (up to 60 days), soaking tray
Roborock Qrevo S Pro18,500 PaLiDAR + smart obstacle avoidance, custom carpet strategy75°C washSelf-empty, self-cleaning all-in-one dock
Eufy L60 Hybrid5,000 Pa (+17,000 Pa station)iPath Laser Navigation (LiDAR), AI.Map 2.0Not automated (mop pad)Self-empty, Hair Detangling Technology
Eufy Omni C207,000 PaNot stated beyond carpet detectionRoom-temperature wash/drySelf-empty, wash and dry
Eufy X10 Pro OmniNot stated (Pa)LiDAR + AI obstacle avoidance, carpet detectionAutomated, temp not statedSelf-empty, self-refilling, dual mops with 12mm auto-lift

Who should buy Roborock vs Eufy

Roborock (Saros 10, Qrevo Curv 2 Pro, Qrevo S Pro)

Pros

  • Highest suction figures in this comparison, from 18,500 Pa up to 25,000 Pa
  • All three docks state a hot-water mop wash (75–100°C) with heated-air drying
  • Camera-led Reactive AI object recognition, with two models stating an obstacle-climbing height or object-recognition count
  • Qrevo Curv 2 Pro's up to 60 days between manual emptying is the longest interval across both brands here

Cons

  • Significantly higher price, typically £900 to £1,400 or more
  • Larger, more complex docks that need more worktop or floor footprint
  • The suction and dock sophistication go underused in a small, mostly hard-floor home

Eufy (L60 Hybrid, Omni C20, X10 Pro Omni)

Pros

  • Considerably lower price, typically £300 to £450
  • Two of the three still automate mop washing and drying, just without a stated hot-water temperature
  • L60 Hybrid's Hair Detangling Technology and X10 Pro Omni's 12mm auto-lift dual mops with carpet detection add useful automation at this price
  • Still self-empty with LiDAR-based mapping and app control

Cons

  • Suction figures are markedly lower where stated (5,000–7,000 Pa), and the X10 Pro Omni does not publish a figure at all
  • No model washes the mop in stated hot water, unlike all three Roborock models
  • Less camera-based object recognition; obstacle handling leans more on LiDAR and basic detection
  • L60 Hybrid's mop pad is not automatically washed, unlike the other two Eufy models

Verdict and frequently asked questions

Choose a Roborock model — the Saros 10, Qrevo Curv 2 Pro or Qrevo S Pro — if you want the highest suction and a dock that washes the mop in stated hot water, and the higher price is justified by carpet, pets, or wanting the most hands-off system available. Choose a Eufy model — the L60 Hybrid, Omni C20 or X10 Pro Omni — if your budget is tighter and you are comfortable with lower suction and a dock that automates less of the mop-washing process, or none of it at all on the L60 Hybrid.

  • Q: Is Roborock always better than Eufy? A: Not necessarily for every home — Roborock's advantages in this comparison (suction, hot-water wash, camera-led navigation) matter most with carpet, pets, or a preference for minimal manual maintenance. On mostly hard floors with light use, Eufy's lower suction may be perfectly adequate.
  • Q: Do any Eufy models here match Roborock's hot-water mop wash? A: No — the Omni C20 and X10 Pro Omni automate washing and drying but don't state a hot-water temperature, and the L60 Hybrid doesn't automate mop washing at all.
  • Q: Which pairing is closest in price positioning? A: The Qrevo S Pro is Roborock's more accessible model in this trio (18,500 Pa, 75°C wash) but still sits well above Eufy's typical £300–£450 range.
  • Q: Does Eufy's L60 Hybrid station suction of 17,000 Pa mean it cleans as well as Roborock? A: No — that figure is the self-empty station's motor pulling debris from the robot's bin into its dust bag, not the robot's own floor-cleaning suction, which is stated separately at 5,000 Pa.

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