What to consider when choosing a robot lawn mower
Many guides focus on features. In reality, choosing the right robot lawn mower comes down to how it performs in your garden.
1. Lawn size
The size of your lawn is the starting point for any decision.
Every robot lawn mower is designed to maintain a certain area. If the capacity is too low, the mower may struggle to keep up during periods of fast growth. If it’s too high, you’re often paying for performance you don’t need.
As a rule:
- Small lawns → simpler models are usually sufficient
- Medium lawns → choose models with stronger navigation and coverage
- Large lawns → require higher capacity and longer runtime
Choosing a model slightly above your lawn size typically results in more consistent performance over time.
2. Layout and obstacles
Two lawns of the same size can require very different solutions.
If your garden includes trees, narrow passages, multiple zones, or obstacles, navigation becomes critical. This is often where simpler models fall short.
Modern robot lawn mowers are designed to understand and adapt to real garden layouts using mapping and sensors. This allows them to:
- Move efficiently through complex layouts
- Navigate narrow areas without getting stuck
- Avoid obstacles without repeated collisions
In practice, this is one of the biggest differences between entry-level and more advanced systems.
3. Slopes and terrain
If your lawn includes slopes or uneven ground, this should be a key factor in your decision.
Not all robot lawn mowers are built for terrain. Some are designed primarily for flat lawns, while others are built to maintain traction, stability, and consistent cutting on more demanding surfaces.
If your garden includes inclines, soft ground, or uneven areas, choosing a model designed for terrain will make a significant difference in everyday performance.
4. Edges and finish
A lawn can be well maintained - and still not look finished.
Edges are where most manual work happens, and they often determine how clean the overall result looks. If the mower cannot cut close to borders, you’ll still need to trim regularly.
Models designed with stronger edge performance reduce this need and create a sharper, more complete finish across the entire lawn.
5. Setup and technology
How the mower is installed and navigates your garden has a direct impact on how easy it is to use.
Traditional systems rely on boundary wire, which requires installation and adjustments. Newer systems use digital mapping technologies such as GPS, RTK, LiDAR, and advanced sensors to define and manage the mowing area.
For most modern gardens, these newer approaches provide:
- Faster setup with less installation work
- Greater flexibility if your garden changes
- More precise control in complex layouts
This is not just a technical difference - it directly affects how simple the product is to live with over time.
Boundary wire or wire-free robot lawn mowers?
One of the biggest decisions when choosing a robot lawn mower is how it navigates your garden.
For years, robot lawn mowers relied on boundary wire - a physical cable installed around the lawn. While this approach still exists, it is increasingly seen as a more traditional setup that requires installation and ongoing adjustments.
Today, many new robot lawn mowers use a wire-free approach.
Instead of cables, they use GPS, RTK, LiDAR, and intelligent sensors to map your garden digitally. This allows you to:
- Set up faster with no digging or cables
- Adjust boundaries directly in the app
- Handle complex layouts more precisely
- Adapt easily if your garden changes
Roborock’s latest models are built around these modern systems,
combining advanced sensing with intelligent mapping to deliver a more flexible and seamless mowing experience.
For most gardens today, wire-free navigation is the simpler and more
future-proof choice.