Vacuum Wars is reader supported. When you make a purchase using links on our site we may earn a commission. Details.

Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A Review: Record-Breaking Carpet Cleaning in a Mid-Range Robot Vacuum

The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A is a mid-range robot vacuum and mop combo that delivers one of the best carpet cleaning performances we’ve ever tested. When we reviewed the original Roborock Edge last year, it immediately became our number one pick at the time thanks to its excellent overall performance and premium feature set. Now Roborock has introduced the Edge S5A, a lower-priced variant that keeps many of the same core features while targeting a more accessible price point.

We bought the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and put it through our full battery of tests over the last few weeks to see whether it could live up to its predecessor’s reputation and earn a place on our Top 20 robot vacuum list. And in at least one category, it absolutely delivered — tying for the highest carpet deep clean score we have ever recorded at 96%.

The Edge S5A was the only active member of the Qrevo Edge series, with the original Edge apparently retired, but the Edge 2 was released just before we published our video review. The Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X (see our review) is a very similar model with many shared features, and we’ll compare results for both robots throughout this review where relevant.

The Quick Verdict: Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A Review: Record-Breaking Carpet Cleaning in a Mid-Range Robot Vacuumv

The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A is a mid-range robot vacuum and mop combo that delivers flagship-level carpet cleaning performance at a lower price point. It impressed us with its record-tying 96% carpet deep clean score, excellent mopping system, strong navigation efficiency, and highly automated dock features. While its obstacle avoidance performance was a major weakness compared to the original Qrevo Edge, the S5A still earned a place on our Top 20 Robot Vacuums list thanks to its exceptional real-world cleaning results.

👉 Check current price on Amazon for the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A

Pros

  • Outstanding 96% carpet deep clean score
  • Excellent vacuuming performance on hard floors and carpet
  • Anti-tangle DuoDivide brush works extremely well
  • Strong mopping performance with low water residue
  • Feature-rich dock with hot water mop washing and drying
  • Efficient LiDAR navigation and above-average battery coverage

Cons

  • Obstacle avoidance is well below average
  • Structured light only, no RGB camera
  • Standard 20mm threshold climbing
  • Smaller-than-average 325mL dustbin
  • Pet hair pickup was slightly below average

The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A is a mid-range robot vacuum and mop combo priced around $800 that impressed in several key tests, earning a spot on Vacuum Wars’ Top 20 list. Its DuoDivide main brush and FlexiArm side brush delivered excellent debris pickup on hard floors and carpets, while its carpet deep clean score of 96% tied the highest ever recorded in Vacuum Wars testing. The robot also earned a perfect long-hair test result with 0% hair wrap. Mopping performance was another standout, using dual spinning pads at 200 RPM with 30 water settings and achieving a strong dried-on coffee test score of 124 points with below-average water residue. Navigation efficiency reached .83 square meters per minute, about 15% above average, while battery efficiency measured 1.6 minutes per 1% of battery, allowing coverage of roughly 1,440 square feet per charge. Additional pros include hot-water mop washing, warm-air drying, intelligent dirt detection, and a feature-rich app. Downsides include average pet hair pickup at 78%, below-average suction bench scores, a smaller dustbin, and very poor obstacle avoidance, avoiding only 6 of 24 objects. See additional info


$659.99

Price as of May 18, 2026

Auto Empty Station: Self Empties Debris | Washes Mop Pad | Washes Mop Pad with Hot Water | Dries Mop Pad | Dries Mop Pad with Heated Air| Self Cleaning

Mopping: Lifts Mop Pads on Carpets | Extending Mop Pad for Hard to Reach Areas

Hardware: Auto Extending Side Brush for Hard to Reach Areas | 20mm Threshold Crossing | Removes Hair from Brush Roll

Performance: Carpet Boost Settings

Mapping / Navigation: Multi Level Maps | Virtual Barriers and No Go Zones

Controls: Third-Party Voice Control Options

ScoresRoborock Qrevo Edge S5AAverage Robot Vacuum Tested
Vacuum Wars Overall3.65

2.58

Features3.82

3.28

Mopping Performance3.23

2.39

Obstacle Avoidance1.22

3.39

Pet3.92

3.42

Navigation3.80

3.21

Battery3.27

2.56

Performance4.21

3.56

Official Battery Life: 190 MinutesNavigation Type: Spinning Lidar
Official Suction Power: 18500 PaDust Bin Size: 325ml
Obstacle Avoidance Type: Structured LightObjects Recognized:
Multi Level Maps: YesVirtual Barriers: Yes
Detergent Capacity: N/ADisposable Bag: 2.7L

Vacuuming Performance and Carpet Deep Cleaning

Stating with the pros, this Roborock robot vacuum had a few outstanding scores in several areas.

First, the vacuuming performance itself was really impressive. The Edge S5A uses Roborock’s DuoDivide main brush along with the FlexiArm extending side brush to help reach debris in corners. The robot did well sweeping debris of all sizes from both hard floors and carpets, which is something Roborock robot vacuums usually excel at.

Close-up of the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A DuoDivide main brush and FlexiArm extending side brush designed for improved corner cleaning and debris pickup on hard floors and carpets.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A combines its DuoDivide main brush with the FlexiArm extending side brush to improve edge and corner cleaning performance. In Vacuum Wars testing, it achieved excellent debris pickup scores on both hard floors and carpets across multiple debris sizes. © Vacuum Wars

But the real shocker came in our carpet deep clean test, where we embed sand and fine grit into medium-pile carpet and weigh how much the robot can remove. The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A managed to vacuum up an incredible 96% of embedded debris, which is the highest score we have ever recorded in this test. It tied with the Roborock Qrevo Q10 S5 and the older Roomba S9 for the best carpet deep clean score we’ve ever tested. For comparison, the similarly designed Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X scored 93%, while the average across all robot vacuums we’ve tested is 78%.

Vacuum Wars carpet deep clean test results comparing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A, Qrevo Curv S5X, Roborock Q10 S5+, and Roomba S9, showing the Edge S5A achieved a 96% embedded debris removal score on carpet.
In Vacuum Wars’ carpet deep clean test, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A removed 96% of embedded sand from medium-pile carpet, tying the highest score we’ve ever recorded alongside the Roborock Q10 S5+ and Roomba S9. The Qrevo Curv S5X scored 93%, while the overall robot vacuum average is 78%. © Vacuum Wars

This is especially notable because the Edge S5A achieves these results in a mid-range robot vacuum and mop combo category rather than a flagship-priced model. We are definitely seeing a pattern with Roborock’s newer S5-designated models when it comes to deep carpet cleaning performance.

Hair Pickup and Anti-Tangle Performance

We were also really happy with how the Edge S5A handled long hair. The DuoDivide brush has a gap in the middle that channels long hair through the intake port instead of allowing it to wrap around the roller.

That design has consistently done well in our 7-inch hair tangle test, and the Edge S5A earned another perfect score here with 0% hair wrap. The Curv S5X also scored 0%, while the average robot vacuum we test leaves about 26% hair tangled around the brush. If you are specifically looking for a robot vacuum for long hair or pet hair management, this anti-tangle system continues to be one of the better implementations we’ve tested.

That design has consistently done well in our 7-inch hair tangle test, and the Edge S5A earned another perfect score here with 0% hair wrap. The Curv S5X also scored 0%, while the average robot vacuum we test leaves about 26% hair tangled around the brush. If you are specifically looking for a robot vacuum for long hair or pet hair management, this anti-tangle system continues to be one of the better implementations we’ve tested.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A earned a perfect 0% hair wrap score in Vacuum Wars’ 7-inch hair tangle test, continuing the strong anti-tangle performance of Roborock’s DuoDivide brush system. By comparison, the average robot vacuum leaves about 26% of hair tangled around the brush. © Vacuum Wars

Mopping Performance and Edge Cleaning

Mopping was another major strength. The Edge S5A uses dual spinning mop pads rotating at 200 RPM with 30 water flow settings. The pads can lift 10mm over carpets, allowing the robot to vacuum carpets and mop hard floors in the same cleaning run, and one mop pad extends outward to improve edge cleaning performance.

Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A robot vacuum cleaning mixed hard floors and carpet with automatic mop lifting and edge-cleaning dual spinning mop pads.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A mop pads automatically lift 10mm over carpets, while the extending edge mop improves cleaning along walls and edges. © Vacuum Wars

This system performed extremely well in our dried-on coffee mopping test. The Edge S5A scored 124 points, which was significantly above the overall average score of 94 and also ahead of the Curv S5X, which scored 108.

Vacuum Wars dried coffee stain mopping test results comparing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X, with the Edge S5A scoring 124 points for stain removal performance.
In Vacuum Wars’ dried coffee stain mopping test, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A achieved an excellent score of 124 points. © Vacuum Wars

In addition to stain pickup, we also evaluate how much water the mop leaves behind because excessive water can cause streaking. The Edge S5A left behind just .85 grams of water on average, which was below the overall average of 1.07 grams. The Curv S5X was slightly lower at .55 grams, but both robots performed well here.

Vacuum Wars water penalty test results comparing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X, showing how much residual water each robot leaves behind after mopping.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A left behind an average of just 0.85 grams of water in Vacuum Wars’ water penalty test, outperforming the average of 1.07 grams. © Vacuum Wars

When we combined stain pickup and water management into our overall mop scoring system, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A earned a combined mop score of 26. That was comfortably above the average combined mop score of 22.8 and ahead of the Curv S5X’s score of 21.3. Overall, this was a very strong showing for a robot vacuum with spinning mop pads and automatic mop washing capabilities.

Vacuum Wars combined mopping score comparison showing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A earning a 26-point overall mopping score versus the Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X and category average.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A earned a combined mopping score of 26 in Vacuum Wars testing, outperforming both the overall average of 22.8 and the Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X’s score of 21.3. © Vacuum Wars

Navigation and Battery Efficiency

Navigation was another big pro. The robot uses a top-mounted spinning LiDAR sensor to map and route around the floor plan.

Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A robot vacuum featuring a top-mounted spinning LiDAR navigation sensor used for home mapping and obstacle-aware path planning.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A uses a top-mounted spinning LiDAR sensor for fast and accurate home mapping, helping the robot efficiently navigate around furniture and optimize cleaning routes throughout the floor plan. © Vacuum Wars

In our navigation efficiency testing, the Edge S5A covered .83 square meters per minute, which was about 15% better than the average score of .71 square meters per minute. The Curv S5X, which uses similar navigation technology, posted an almost identical result at .84 square meters per minute.

Vacuum Wars navigation efficiency test results comparing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X, showing floor coverage rates in square meters per minute.
In Vacuum Wars’ navigation efficiency test, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A covered 0.83 square meters per minute, outperforming the overall robot vacuum average of 0.71 square meters per minute. © Vacuum Wars

Battery efficiency was also solid. The Edge S5A managed 1.61 minutes of runtime per 1% of battery life, slightly above the average of 1.56 minutes. The Curv S5X was slightly higher at 1.69 minutes per percent.

Vacuum Wars battery efficiency test results comparing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X, showing runtime per 1% battery usage.
In Vacuum Wars’ battery efficiency testing, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A achieved 1.61 minutes of runtime per 1% of battery life, slightly outperforming the robot vacuum average of 1.56 minutes. © Vacuum Wars

When combining navigation and battery efficiency, we estimate the Edge S5A can cover around 1,438 square feet per charge. That is comfortably above the overall average of 1,170 square feet and only slightly behind the Curv S5X, which reached 1,528 square feet per charge.

Vacuum Wars estimated square feet per charge comparison showing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A covering 1,438 square feet per battery charge versus the Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X and category average.
Based on Vacuum Wars’ navigation and battery efficiency testing, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A is estimated to clean approximately 1,438 square feet per charge, exceeding the overall robot vacuum average of 1,170 square feet. © Vacuum Wars

How Vacuum Wars Tests Robot Vacuums: Step into the world of Vacuum Wars, where real-world tests, straight-forward reviews, and no sponsored products redefine robot vacuum evaluations.

Dock Features and Automation

The dock is another pro and includes several automations that reduce hands-on maintenance.

The dock automatically empties the robot’s dustbin into a disposable dust bag and refills the onboard water tank. It also washes the mop pads using hot water at 167°F, or 75°C, before drying them with warm air.

The dock’s intelligent dirt detection can sense when the mops are especially dirty and trigger both a mop rewash and an additional mopping pass. The base tray can also clean itself with hot water, and the tray detaches easily for manual cleaning when needed.

Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A multifunction dock with removable self-cleaning tray and disposable dust bag for automatic dust emptying, mop washing, and water refilling.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A’s multifunction dock empties debris into a disposable dust bag, refills the robot’s water tank, washes the mop pads with 167°F hot water, and dries them with warm air. The dock also features intelligent dirt detection for automatic mop rewashing and a removable self-cleaning tray for easier maintenance. © Vacuum Wars

Overall, this remains one of the better self-cleaning dock systems available in a robot vacuum and mop combo.

App Features and Smart Controls

Roborock’s app continues to be one of the best robot vacuum apps in our opinion because of how many customization features it offers.

The app supports room customization, zone cleaning, no-go zones, no-mop zones, adjustable suction levels, adjustable water flow settings, and the ability to mop in the same direction as your floorboards to reduce visible streaking.

For users who want more control over how their robot vacuum cleans different parts of the house, Roborock’s software ecosystem remains one of the strongest in the industry.

Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A smartphone app interface showing room mapping, zone cleaning controls, and customizable cleaning settings.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A app includes advanced customization features such as room-specific cleaning, zone cleaning, no-go and no-mop zones, adjustable suction and water flow levels, and floor-direction mopping designed to help reduce visible streaking on hard floors. © Vacuum Wars

Pet Hair Pickup, Suction, and Other Neutral Results

Before we get to the cons, there were a couple of areas that landed more in the middle for us — not particularly great, but not terrible either.

The Edge S5A did a little worse than average in our flattened pet hair pickup test, where we press 2.5-inch hair into carpet fibers to see how well a robot vacuum can remove it. The Edge S5A picked up 78% of the hair, slightly below the average of 82%. Meanwhile, the Curv S5X performed substantially better at 89%.

Vacuum Wars flattened pet hair pickup test results comparing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A (78%) and Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X (89%) on carpet hair removal performance.
In Vacuum Wars’ flattened pet hair pickup test, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A removed 78% of embedded pet hair from carpet, slightly below the overall average of 82%. © Vacuum Wars

The Edge S5A also scored below average in our suction bench tests despite Roborock’s very high official suction claim of 18,500 Pascals. In our sealed suction benchmark, the Edge S5A measured .4 kPa compared to the average of .99 kPa. The Curv S5X measured slightly higher at .47 kPa.

Airflow testing was similarly average-to-below-average. The Edge S5A measured 16 CFM in our airflow bench tests, matching the Curv S5X but slightly below the overall average of 16.95 CFM.

Vacuum Wars airflow and suction benchmark comparison for the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X, showing measured airflow in CFM versus official suction ratings in Pascals.
Despite Roborock’s official 18,500 Pa suction claim, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A produced average-to-below-average results in Vacuum Wars’ suction and airflow bench testing. The robot measured 16 CFM of airflow compared to the 16.95 CFM average, while the similarly designed Roborock Qrevo Curv S5X posted identical airflow results. © Vacuum Wars

These bench tests do not concern us too much because its real-world carpet deep clean results and debris pickup performance were so strong, but they are still metrics we track.

The dustbin is also a little smaller than average at 325mL compared to the overall average of 375mL, which may increase the likelihood of overfilling in larger homes.

Close-up graphic showing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A robot vacuum’s 325 mL onboard dustbin capacity compared to the robot vacuum average.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A includes a 325 mL onboard dustbin, which is smaller than the overall robot vacuum average of 375 mL and may require more frequent emptying in larger homes or high-debris environments. © Vacuum Wars

And while the original Roborock Qrevo Edge had additional threshold climbing capability up to 40mm, the Edge S5A is rated for standard thresholds around 20mm.

Vacuum Wars threshold climbing comparison showing the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A handling 20 mm thresholds versus the original Roborock Qrevo Edge with 40 mm climbing capability.
The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A is rated to climb standard thresholds up to 20 mm, which is less than the original Roborock Qrevo Edge’s advanced 40 mm threshold climbing capability. © Vacuum Wars

Obstacle Avoidance Is the Biggest Weakness

Moving on to the cons, there is one really major shift that people familiar with the original Roborock Edge will immediately notice, and that is the obstacle avoidance system.

The original Edge used a combination of structured light and an RGB camera for detecting small objects in its path, which helped it achieve an obstacle avoidance score of 16 out of 24 in our testing. The Edge S5A removes the RGB camera entirely and now relies only on structured light. That significantly limits the robot’s ability to recognize small obstacles around the home, and it showed clearly in our obstacle avoidance testing.

Between our standard obstacle tests and torture tests, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A avoided only 6 out of 24 objects. That represents what we believe is the biggest weakness in this otherwise highly capable robot vacuum.

Vacuum Wars obstacle avoidance test comparison between the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and original Roborock Qrevo Edge, showing structured light versus RGB camera obstacle detection performance.
In Vacuum Wars’ obstacle avoidance testing, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A avoided 6 out of 24 objects using its structured-light-only navigation system. By comparison, the original Roborock Qrevo Edge, which combines structured light with an RGB camera, achieved a significantly higher score of 16 out of 24. © Vacuum Wars

Because of this, we would recommend taking a little extra care before starting cleaning runs by picking up cables, socks, toys, and other small items that the robot may struggle to detect.

Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A obstacle avoidance test setup with cables, socks, toys, and small household objects placed on hard floors during Vacuum Wars testing.
Vacuum Wars’ obstacle avoidance testing showed that the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A can struggle with detecting smaller household items such as cables, socks, and toys. Users may need to tidy floors before cleaning runs to help prevent navigation issues or object entanglements. © Vacuum Wars

Final Verdict

When we reviewed all the data and totaled up the scores, we found that the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A did indeed earn a spot on our Top 20 robot vacuum list at the time of testing.

Its headline achievement was clearly the carpet deep clean test, where it tied for the highest score we have ever recorded at 96%. Combined with strong mopping performance, excellent navigation efficiency, impressive hair management, and a highly capable dock system, the Edge S5A delivers a lot of performance for a mid-range robot vacuum and mop combo.

Obstacle avoidance is absolutely the biggest compromise compared to the original Edge, and homes with a lot of clutter on the floor will want to keep that in mind. But if your priorities are vacuuming performance, especially deep carpet cleaning, along with strong mopping and automation features, the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A stands out as one of the better values in Roborock’s current lineup and one of the strongest carpet-cleaning robot vacuums we’ve tested to date.

Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A robot vacuum and multifunction dock shown in the Vacuum Wars studio, highlighting its premium design, carpet cleaning performance, and automated mopping features.
While the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A sacrifices some obstacle avoidance capability compared to the original Edge, it delivers exceptional carpet deep-cleaning performance, strong mopping results, and advanced automation features. Its industry-leading 96% carpet deep clean score makes it one of the strongest carpet-cleaning robot vacuums Vacuum Wars has tested to date. © Vacuum Wars

Top 20 Robot Vacuums

Explore Vacuum Wars’ always up-to-date rankings of the best robot vacuums, based on independent, hands-on testing. We purchase every unit ourselves and have evaluated more than 150 models, giving us a deep benchmark for cleaning performance, navigation, battery life, and advanced features like obstacle avoidance and mopping.

Top 20 Best Robot Vacuums

Frequently Asked Questions: Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A

Is the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A good on carpet?

Yes. The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A delivered one of the best carpet cleaning performances we have ever recorded in our testing. In our carpet deep clean test, where we embed sand and fine debris into medium-pile carpet, it removed 96% of embedded debris. That tied it for the highest carpet deep clean score we’ve ever tested alongside the Roborock Qrevo Q10 S5 and the Roomba S9.

Does the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A avoid cords and small objects well?

Not particularly. The Edge S5A uses a structured light obstacle avoidance system but does not include the RGB camera that was present on the original Qrevo Edge. In our obstacle avoidance tests, it avoided 6 out of 24 objects, which was well below average. We recommend picking up cables, socks, toys, and other small clutter before running the robot.

Does the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A mop and vacuum at the same time?

Yes. The Edge S5A can vacuum carpets and mop hard floors during the same cleaning run. Its dual spinning mop pads automatically lift 10mm when carpets are detected, helping prevent carpets from getting wet while still allowing continuous cleaning.

How good is the mopping performance on the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A?

The mopping performance was very good in our tests. The Edge S5A scored 124 points in our dried-on coffee mopping test, which was significantly above average. It also left behind a below-average amount of water, helping reduce streaking on hard floors.

Does the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A work well with long hair?

Yes. The robot uses Roborock’s DuoDivide anti-tangle brush design, which channels hair through the center of the brush instead of allowing it to wrap around the roller. In our 7-inch hair tangle test, the Edge S5A had 0% hair wrap, which is an excellent result.

Is the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A good for pet owners?

It depends on your priorities. The Edge S5A did very well with long hair tangles and general vacuuming performance, but its flattened pet hair pickup on carpet was slightly below average in our testing. It picked up 78% of flattened pet hair compared to the test average of 82%.

What is the difference between the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and the original Qrevo Edge?

The biggest difference is the obstacle avoidance system. The original Qrevo Edge used both an RGB camera and structured light for object detection, while the Edge S5A uses structured light only. The original Edge also had improved threshold climbing ability up to 40mm, while the S5A is rated for standard 20mm thresholds.

What is the difference between the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A and the Qrevo Curv S5X?

The two robot vacuums share many similarities, including navigation technology, dock features, suction claims, and anti-tangle brush designs. However, the Edge S5A achieved a higher carpet deep clean score in our testing at 96% compared to the Curv S5X’s 93%. The Curv S5X performed better in flattened pet hair pickup and slightly better in estimated square footage coverage per charge.

Does the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A have a self-cleaning dock?

Yes. The dock automatically empties the dustbin, refills the water tank, washes the mop pads with hot water, dries the pads with warm air, and can even trigger automatic mop rewashing when heavy dirt is detected.

Is the Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A worth it?

For many users, yes. The Edge S5A combines class-leading carpet deep cleaning, strong mopping performance, excellent navigation, and a highly automated dock system at a mid-range price point. Its main weakness is obstacle avoidance, but if deep cleaning performance is your priority, it is one of the strongest robot vacuums we’ve tested.

Compare

Roborock Robot Vacuum Buyer’s Guide 2025

If you’re overwhelmed by Roborock’s sprawling lineup, you’re not alone. This guide distills the key differences among each series—QSQrevo, and Saros—so you can decide which features are worth paying extra for and which you can skip. From budget-friendly models to premium robots with cutting-edge capabilities, we’ll help you focus on the must-know points and find a Roborock that fits both your home and your wallet. See the Guide

Roborock Robot Vacuum Buyers Guide 20205
author avatar
Christopher White CEO
Christopher White is the CEO of Vacuum Wars, the premier YouTube channel dedicated to vacuum cleaner reviews. Over the past eight years, Vacuum Wars has become a trusted resource, meticulously reviewing hundreds of robot vacuums, cordless vacuums, carpet cleaners, and various floor care products. Known for their comprehensive in-house testing, Vacuum Wars has built one of the most extensive databases of vacuum cleaner metrics available. Under Christopher’s leadership, the channel has maintained a strict no-sponsorship policy, ensuring that all reviews remain unbiased and trustworthy. This dedication to integrity has garnered a loyal following of over 300,000 subscribers who rely on their expert advice. Christopher is also a recognized authority on robot vacuums, boasting one of the largest private collections of these devices worldwide. Learn more

Vacuum Wars independently buys and tests every vacuum and floorcare product we review—providing unbiased, data-driven insights so you can make informed buying decisions and find the right technology for your home. Read more about how we test robot vacuums.

More Robot Vacuum Reviews

  • Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A Review: Record-Breaking Carpet Cleaning in a Mid-Range Robot Vacuum

    The Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A impressed us with a record-tying 96% carpet deep clean score, strong mopping performance, excellent hair management, and a feature-rich dock system. While its obstacle avoidance performance is a weakness, it still earned a spot on our Top 20 robot vacuum list.

  • Roborock Qrevo CurvX Review After 3 Months of Real-World Testing

    After weeks of real-world testing in a busy family home with kids, pet hair, hard floors, and daily clutter, this Roborock Qrevo CurvX review reveals how the robot vacuum actually performs beyond the lab. Learn its biggest strengths, surprising weaknesses, and the optimization tricks that dramatically improved its mopping performance.

  • Roborock Saros 20 Robot Vacuum Review: Climbing to New Heights!

    The Roborock Saros 20 is Roborock’s latest premium robot vacuum and mop combo, featuring advanced mopping, obstacle avoidance, and hands-free automation. In this Vacuum Wars review, we put it through extensive real-world and benchmark testing to see how it compares to other flagship robot vacuums in 2026.

  • Best (May 2026) Robot Vacuums

    May 2026 brought several notable shifts to our robot vacuum rankings. See our latest Best Overall, Best Value, and Best Budget picks based on independent Vacuum Wars testing of 150+ robot vacuums.

  • Best Vacuum Cleaners by Category: Our Top Picks and Best Value Picks

    We tested hundreds of vacuums across seven major categories to find the best overall and best value picks right now. Here are our current recommendations for upright, cordless, handheld, carpet cleaner, spot cleaner, hard floor cleaner, and robot vacuums based on our testing.

  • Dyson Spot+Scrub AI Review: Dyson’s First Real Robot Vacuum Contender

    The Dyson Spot+Scrub AI is Dyson’s first true all-in-one robot vacuum, adding mopping, AI obstacle avoidance, and a bagless auto-empty dock. In our testing, it impressed with top-tier obstacle avoidance and excellent bin performance, especially for pet hair. Here’s how it performed in our tests.

  • Shark PowerDetect UV Reveal Review: Impressive Results With One Big Catch

    The Shark PowerDetect UV Reveal introduces several new features, including UV-based stain detection that enables targeted extra mopping. After purchasing and testing it extensively across multiple scenarios, we assess its strengths, weaknesses, and whether it stands out as Shark’s best robot vacuum to date.

  • Best (April 2026) Robot Vacuums

    Vacuum Wars’ Best Robot Vacuums for April 2026 highlights our top overall, value, and budget picks based on independent testing. See why the Dreame X60 Max Ultra Complete, Dreame L50 Ultra, and MOVA P10 Pro Ultra earned their spots.

More Reviews

Home Robot Vacuum Reviews Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A Review: Record-Breaking Carpet Cleaning in a Mid-Range Robot Vacuum

Our Top Picks

Current Vacuum Wars product rankings:

Best Cordless Vacuums
Best Robot Vacuums
Best Upright Vacuums
Best Carpet Cleaners
Best Air Purifiers
Best Spot Cleaners