
Roborock Qrevo MaxV vs Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni 2026
The Ecovacs X8 Pro Omni wins the mop with its OZMO Roller and 167°F dock, but the Qrevo MaxV reads obstacles better and runs far cheaper. The decision splits on suction versus navigation.
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Featured in this Guide

Ecovacs
Deebot X8 Pro Omni
- •For the buyer who hates redistributed dirty water: the OZMO Roller self-rinses in real time and a 167°F dock washes pads hot

Roborock
Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop
- •For cluttered
- •pet-filled homes: Reactive AI reads 62 object types in low light
- •plus FlexiArm edge mopping at $699.99 new

ECOVACS
DEEBOT T90 PRO OMNI Robot Vacuum and Mop
- •For deep-carpet pet hair on a budget: 30
- •000 Pa plus the OZMO Roller at $699
- •the suction leader of this set

Roborock
Qrevo S Pro Robot Vacuum and Mop
- •For hot-water hygiene without X8 pricing: 18
- •500 Pa and a 167°F self-cleaning dock at $699.99

Roborock
S8 MaxV Ultra
- •For mixed hard-floor and carpet homes: 10
- •000 Pa
- •a detergent dock
Head-to-Head: Suction, Mop Hygiene, Navigation, and the SHE Score
Smart Cleaning
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The Short Answer
The Ecovacs X8 Pro Omni wins this head-to-head: its OZMO Roller self-rinses continuously and a 167°F dock delivers superior mopping hygiene, with 18,000 Pa suction. Its constraint is below-average obstacle avoidance at $1,099.99. If superior navigation and substantial savings matter, choose the Roborock Qrevo MaxV.
You have committed to a flagship vacuum-mop in the premium tier, so the real question concerns compromise tolerance, not automation. The Qrevo MaxV rates 7,000 Pa against the X8 Pro Omni's 18,000 Pa, a 2.5x differential. That gap sounds decisive until you incorporate the X8's below-average obstacle avoidance. Vacuum Wars scored its navigation a disappointing 15 against the comparative category benchmark of 16.5.
This guide ranks five flagships on one weighted composite, the SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score. It normalizes suction, mopping hygiene, dock automation, obstacle avoidance, and value efficiency into a single comparable number. The methodology deliberately penalizes deficient navigation, the operational failure buyers consistently report. Roborock's Reactive AI recognizes 62 object types continuously; the X8's roller delivers superior hygiene. These flagships fail differently. Match the architecture over a 5-yr window.
Best for spotless mopping: Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni
Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni
If you are the buyer who hates the streaky residue a dirty pad leaves behind, the Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni is the right call. Skip it if your floors are cluttered, because its obstacle avoidance trails the field. The decision-critical specs: 18,000 Pa suction, a 167°F hot-water dock wash, and the OZMO Roller self-washing mop. It earns the top mopping-hygiene mark on the SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score, a composite of 8.4 overall.
What the roller delivers is concrete. The mop self-rinses continuously throughout the cleaning run, so Vacuum Wars confirms it captures wet spills rather than redistributing them. The dock subsequently washes that roller at 167°F and hot-air dries it, which yields measurably fresher pads. Suction performance is genuinely formidable, ranking top-10 of 100-plus robots Vacuum Wars has independently lab-tested.
The honest catch is navigation. Compared to the Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop, the X8's AIVI 3D 3.0 scored a below-average 15/20 at Vacuum Wars against a 16.5 category average — the clearest gap between these two flagships. RTINGS corroborates that navigation deficiency across its comparative review data. That below-average obstacle recognition is the central tradeoff this guide exists to quantify. Over a 5-yr ownership horizon, the accumulated interruption cost is a legitimate selection criterion.
What We Love
- OZMO Roller self-rinses in real time, so dirty water is never smeared back across the floor
- 167°F dock wash is the hottest in this set — measurably better mop hygiene than 140°F rivals
- 18,000 Pa ranks top-10 of 100+ robots Vacuum Wars has tested for raw suction
- Dock auto-dispenses cleaning solution and hot-air dries the roller for fresh pads
What Could Be Better
- AIVI 3D 3.0 scored 15/20 at Vacuum Wars, below the 16.5 category average
- At $1,099.99 it is the most expensive pick in this comparison
The Verdict
If your top priority is a mop that never redistributes grime — kitchens, entryways, or homes with kids — the Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni fits the brief without compromise. Its 8.4 composite reflects the best mop hygiene and dock automation here. You pay the most, and obstacle avoidance trails, but on mopping it is the standout.
Best obstacle avoidance: Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop
Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop
If your floors are an obstacle course of cords, pet bowls, and rug edges, the Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop is the right call. Skip it if deep-carpet suction is your priority, because 7,000 Pa is the lowest here. The decision-critical specs: Reactive AI reading 62 object types, FlexiArm 98.8% edge coverage, and a 140°F hot-water dock. Its weighted composite is 7.5, anchored by a category-leading obstacle-avoidance factor.
Note the Amazon listing first. The primary ASIN is a Renewed unit listing approximately $398.99; the new-unit retail is $699.99, discounted from a $1,399.99 MSRP at Roborock US, and our scoring uses that new price. What the navigation delivers is concrete: per Roborock, Reactive AI continuously recognizes 62 object types across 20 categories in low illumination, dodging obstacles roughly 1.5x more reliably than the X8.
The FlexiArm physically extends into corners, achieving TÜV-certified edge coverage the spinning competitors structurally cannot replicate. Compared to the Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni, it sacrifices raw suction and mopping hygiene for measurably superior obstacle recognition. Across a 5-yr ownership window, navigation reliability compounds into fewer interruptions.
What We Love
- Reactive AI reads 62 object types in low light — the broadest obstacle detection in this set
- FlexiArm extends the mop into corners that fixed spinning pads physically miss
- 98.8% edge coverage is TÜV Rheinland certified to a 1.85 mm precision margin
- Built-in voice assistant starts, stops, and recalls the robot without opening the app
What Could Be Better
- 7,000 Pa is the lowest suction here by a wide margin
- 140°F dock wash trails the X8's 167°F and lacks an in-run roller self-rinse
- The headline Amazon listing is a Renewed unit, not a new one
The Verdict
If your home is cluttered with cords, pets, and rugs and you want navigation that reads obstacles, the Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop lines up with what you actually need. Its 7.5 composite reflects the best obstacle avoidance here at $699.99 new. Suction is modest, but for hard floors and edge mopping it is a sensible pick.
Best raw-suction value: ECOVACS DEEBOT T90 PRO OMNI Robot Vacuum and Mop
ECOVACS DEEBOT T90 PRO OMNI Robot Vacuum and Mop
If embedded pet hair on carpet is your worst floor, the ECOVACS DEEBOT T90 PRO OMNI Robot Vacuum and Mop is the right call. Skip it if obstacle reading or the hottest dock matters most, because both go to other picks. The decision-critical specs: 30,000 Pa suction, an OZMO Roller self-cleaning mop, and a 145°F air-dry dock. It earns the highest composite on the SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score, anchored by a maximized suction factor.
The value calculation is what distinguishes it. Per Vacuum Wars, the OZMO Roller self-cleans throughout the run identically to the pricier X8, yet the T90 lists approximately $699 — the lowest flagship price here. Its ZeroTangle housing severs elongated hair before it wraps the axle, yielding substantially fewer mid-clean interruptions across pet households.
The catch is navigation breadth. Compared to the Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop, its AI obstacle avoidance trails the broader 62-type Reactive AI in object-type breadth. For raw cleaning power per dollar, though, it remains the value leader over a 5-yr horizon — its 30,000 Pa is exactly 3x the S8 MaxV Ultra's 10,000 Pa — and at roughly 1.6x lower price than the X8.
What We Love
- 30,000 Pa is the strongest pull here — built for embedded carpet pet hair
- OZMO Roller self-cleans in run like the X8, so dirty water never smears across floors
- ZeroTangle housing slices long hair before it wraps the brush axle
- Lists at $699 — the lowest flagship price in this comparison
What Could Be Better
- AI obstacle avoidance is a generation behind Roborock's 62-type Reactive AI
- 145°F dock dry runs cooler than the X8's 167°F wash temperature
- The OMNI dock is large and needs floor clearance like every roller-mop flagship
The Verdict
If you want the suction leader and the OZMO Roller without X8 money, the ECOVACS DEEBOT T90 PRO OMNI Robot Vacuum and Mop checks the boxes that matter for deep-carpet homes. Its 8.7 composite — the highest here — pairs 30,000 Pa with roller mopping at $699. Obstacle avoidance trails the Qrevo MaxV, but on raw value it leads.
Best 167°F dock value: Roborock Qrevo S Pro Robot Vacuum and Mop
Roborock Qrevo S Pro Robot Vacuum and Mop
If you want the X8's hot-dock hygiene without its valuation, the Roborock Qrevo S Pro Robot Vacuum and Mop is the right call. Skip it if you require a roller mop's in-run rinse, because it utilizes spinning pads exclusively. The decision-critical specifications: 18,500 Pa suction, a 167°F mop self-cleaning dock, and a liftable spinning mop. Its weighted composite is 8.4, tying the considerably pricier X8 Pro Omni on the SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score.
The value case is the hot dock. Per RTINGS, the 167°F self-cleaning matches the X8's wash temperature precisely, so pads emerge genuinely sanitized rather than cold-rinsed. The 18,500 Pa suction equals the X8's deep-carpet extraction class while undercutting it by roughly 1.5x the comparative dollars.
The limitations are mopping mechanism and navigation. Compared to the Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni, it lacks the OZMO Roller's real-time self-rinse and recognizes fewer object types. For hot-water hygiene per dollar across a 5-yr window, though, it delivers a genuinely strong result, per RTINGS.
What We Love
- 167°F mop self-cleaning matches the X8's dock temperature at a lower price
- 18,500 Pa rated suction matches the X8 and beats it on cost
- Anti-tangle brush cuts hair wrap for pet households
- Liftable spinning mop rises on carpet so rugs stay dry
What Could Be Better
- No in-run roller self-rinse like the OZMO mops
- Smart obstacle avoidance reads fewer object types than Reactive AI
The Verdict
If you want hot 167°F dock hygiene and strong suction without X8 pricing, the Roborock Qrevo S Pro Robot Vacuum and Mop is a sensible pick for that setup. Its 8.4 composite ties the X8 by pairing 18,500 Pa with a 167°F dock at $699.99. It lacks the roller's in-run rinse, but on hot-water value it is hard to beat.
Best balanced all-rounder: Roborock S8 MaxV Ultra
Roborock S8 MaxV Ultra
If you want one balanced robot for mixed floors rather than a specialist, the Roborock S8 MaxV Ultra is the right call. Skip it if you want the hottest mop or the most suction, because both go elsewhere. The decision-critical specs: 10,000 Pa suction, a sonic corner-to-edge mop, and a detergent-dispensing dock. Its weighted composite is 7.6 on the SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score, representing the balanced midpoint of this comparison.
What it accomplishes is everyday versatility. Per CNET, the integrated detergent dispenser doses cleaning solution automatically, and the corner-to-edge sonic mop reaches baseboards that fixed pads consistently skip. Its 10,000 Pa pull positions approximately 1.5x above the Qrevo MaxV for mixed hard-floor and low-pile carpet environments.
The ceiling is specialist hygiene. Compared to the ECOVACS DEEBOT T90 PRO OMNI Robot Vacuum and Mop, it lacks the OZMO Roller's in-run self-cleaning and generates considerably less suction. As the lowest-price all-rounder over a 5-yr window, though, it produces a genuinely sensible balance at roughly 1.8x lower suction cost than the 18,000 Pa X8, per CNET.
What We Love
- Detergent dispenser doses cleaning solution into the mop water automatically
- Corner-to-edge sonic mopping reaches baseboards most pads skip
- 10,000 Pa sits comfortably above the Qrevo MaxV for mixed floors
- Lists at $599.99 — the lowest entry price in this comparison
What Could Be Better
- No confirmed hot-water mop wash temperature spec
- ReactiveAI 2.0 is a generation under the Qrevo MaxV's Reactive AI
The Verdict
If you want a balanced flagship for mixed hard floors and rugs at the lowest entry price, the Roborock S8 MaxV Ultra checks the boxes that matter for everyday cleaning. Its 7.6 composite reflects a strong dock and solid 10,000 Pa suction at $599.99. It lacks a roller mop, but as an all-rounder it holds up.
How We Score: SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score
SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score
Score Formula
(Suction × 0.25) + (Mop Hygiene × 0.25) + (Dock Automation × 0.20) + (Obstacle Avoidance × 0.20) + (Value Efficiency × 0.10)Score Factors
- Suction (25%)Rated suction in Pa, mapped to a 0-10 scale against the product set: 30,000 Pa anchors the top at 10, 18,000-20,000 Pa scores 8.5, 10,000-12,000 Pa scores 7.0, and 7,000-8,000 Pa scores 5.5. Corroborated against Vacuum Wars lab suction measurements where available — the X8's 18,000 Pa ranks top-10 of 100+ robots tested.
- Mop Hygiene (25%)A composite of mop wash temperature and cleaning mechanism. Temperature scales 167°F at 9, 145°F at 7.5, 140°F at 7.0, no hot water at 4.0. A mechanism bonus adds 1.0 for an in-run real-time self-rinse like the OZMO Roller and 0.5 for an intelligent dirty-mop re-wash trigger. Co-weighted with suction as the top factor because mopping hygiene is the most-debated axis in this tier.
- Dock Automation (20%)A points count of automated dock functions: self-empty, auto tank refill, hot-air dry, cleaning-solution dispense, dirty-water drain, and an intelligent re-wash trigger. Raw points normalize to a 0-10 score, rewarding the docks that remove the most weekly maintenance chores.
- Obstacle Avoidance (20%)A qualitative score from published object-category breadth and independent test results. The 62-object-type Reactive AI with low-light function scores 9-10; an AI camera with an average independent score scores 7-8; a camera system that tests below average — like the X8's 15/20 versus the 16.5 Vacuum Wars average — scores 6. Weighted high because weak navigation is the tier's most-reported failure.
- Value Efficiency (10%)Price-adjusted value: the composite score excluding this factor, divided by new-unit price, normalized 0-10 within the set. It uses the new-unit retail price — $699.99 for the Qrevo MaxV, not the $398.99 Renewed Amazon listing — for a fair comparison. A lower price for equivalent capability yields a higher score.
SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score — Ranked

ECOVACS DEEBOT T90 PRO OMNI Robot Vacuum and Mop
8.7/10$699 — 30,000 Pa suction leader plus OZMO Roller mopping; the highest composite and the value pick of the set

Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni
8.4/10$1,099.99 — best mop hygiene and dock automation; penalized by below-average obstacle avoidance and top price

Roborock Qrevo S Pro Robot Vacuum and Mop
8.4/10$699.99 — 18,500 Pa with a 167°F self-cleaning dock; matches the X8's hygiene at a far lower price

Roborock S8 MaxV Ultra
7.6/10$599.99 — balanced 10,000 Pa all-rounder with a detergent dock; lacks a roller mop and hot-water spec

Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop
7.5/10$699.99 new — best obstacle avoidance and FlexiArm edge mopping; held back by the lowest 7,000 Pa suction
App and Ecosystem Compatibility
Wondering whether one of these flagships integrates with the smart home you already operate? The abbreviated version is that all five behave identically. You configure your mapping, no-go zones, and schedules within the maker's proprietary app — the Roborock app or the Ecovacs app. Every pick also answers to Amazon Alexa and Google Assistant. So you can start, stop, and dispatch the robot to a named room by voice regardless of brand. None supports Apple Home or Matter as of mid-2026, and RTINGS plus Tom's Guide both note that remains conventional for robot vacuums. Matter is not the deal-breaker for a robovac it represents for a light or a lock.
The one genuine hardware differentiation belongs to the Qrevo MaxV. It is the only pick here incorporating a built-in voice assistant, accepting spoken commands directly without routing through Alexa first. CNET characterizes that on-device voice as a meaningful convenience for hands-free starts. Beyond that, your decision reduces to suction, mopping mechanism, and price rather than ecosystem allegiance. Both brands additionally auto-empty, auto-refill, and hot-air dry the pads at the dock, so the maintenance routine is effectively indistinguishable. Calibrate the navigation and mop to your floors over a 5-yr ownership window, not the maximum specification.
| Product | Alexa | Google Home | Apple Home | Self-Empty Dock | Built-in Voice | Matter |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ecovacs-deebot-x8-pro-omni | ✓ | ✓ | – | ✓ | – | – |
| roborock-qrevo-maxv | ✓ | ✓ | – | ✓ | ✓ | – |
| ecovacs-deebot-t90-pro-omni | ✓ | ✓ | – | ✓ | – | – |
| roborock-qrevo-s-pro | ✓ | ✓ | – | ✓ | – | – |
| roborock-s8-maxv-ultra | ✓ | ✓ | – | ✓ | – | – |
When NOT to Buy
A flagship roller-mop combo is not automatically the correct decision. Say your home is predominantly hard floors with minimal carpet and few obstacles. The 7,000 Pa Qrevo MaxV or a mid-tier alternative from our Best Robot Vacuum-Mop Combos 2026: Roborock vs Dreame vs Narwal hub cleans equivalently for considerably less. The 18,000 Pa and 30,000 Pa suction ratings only justify their premium on deeply embedded carpet pet hair. And if your floors are heavily cluttered, evaluate the X8's below-average obstacle avoidance honestly before committing approximately $1,099.99 — the Qrevo MaxV recognizes substantially more objects for less. Calibrate the suction and mopping mechanism to your actual floors, and skip the flagship premium whenever a simpler robot genuinely satisfies the requirement across a 5-yr horizon.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why is the Qrevo MaxV $399 on Amazon when its MSRP is $1,400 — is it fake?
It is not fake, but the headline Amazon listing (ASIN B0FJLPGDRT) is a Renewed unit, which is why it shows about $398.99. The new-unit retail is $699.99 on sale from a $1,399.99 MSRP at Roborock US. A Renewed robot is professionally refurbished and tested, but it is not new, so compare the X8's $1,099.99 against the Qrevo MaxV's $699.99 new price, not the Renewed figure, for a fair head-to-head.
Does the X8's 18,000 Pa suction actually clean better than the Qrevo MaxV's 7,000 Pa?
On deep, embedded carpet pet hair, yes — the X8's 18,000 Pa pulls noticeably more out than 7,000 Pa, and Vacuum Wars ranks its suction top-10 of over 100 robots. On hard floors and low-pile carpet, the gap shrinks; both lift everyday dust and debris fine. If your home is mostly hard floors, the 7,000 Pa Qrevo MaxV is adequate, and you would buy the X8 for its mop and dock, not its suction.
Is the Ecovacs OZMO Roller actually better than Roborock's spinning mop pads?
For mop hygiene, yes. The OZMO Roller self-rinses in real time during the cleaning run, so per Vacuum Wars it can pick up wet spills and never smears dirty water back across the floor — the main complaint about spinning pads. Roborock counters with FlexiArm, which extends physically into corners that fixed pads miss. So the roller wins on hygiene, while the Qrevo MaxV wins on edge coverage at 98.8%.
Which handles pet hair better — the Ecovacs roller brush or Roborock's rubber brush?
The Ecovacs T90 Pro Omni's ZeroTangle housing and the X8's roller system are built to slice long hair before it wraps the axle, which helps in heavy-shedding homes. Roborock's all-rubber brush resists tangling too but relies less on a dedicated comb. For the worst pet-hair carpets, the 30,000 Pa T90 with ZeroTangle is the strongest combination of suction and anti-tangle hardware in this comparison.
Is the X8 Pro Omni's below-average obstacle avoidance a dealbreaker?
It depends on your floors. Vacuum Wars scored the X8's AIVI 3D 3.0 at 15/20, under the 16.5 category average, so it bumps cords, socks, and small toys more often than top systems. In a tidy, mostly-clear home that rarely matters. In a cluttered or pet-filled home it does, and the Qrevo MaxV's Reactive AI reads 62 object types for far better avoidance at a lower price.
How is the SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score calculated?
It weights five factors on a normalized 0-10 scale: suction (25%), mop hygiene (25%), dock automation (20%), obstacle avoidance (20%), and value efficiency (10%). See the methodology section above for the full formula and the per-factor scoring bands. The score deliberately penalizes below-average obstacle avoidance and rewards in-run mop self-cleaning, the two axes real buyers debate most in this tier.
Bottom Line
Get the Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni if spotless mopping is your top priority and you want the OZMO Roller's real-time self-rinse plus the hottest 167°F dock wash.
Get the Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop if your floors are cluttered and you want the broadest 62-type obstacle reading plus FlexiArm edge mopping at $699.99 new.
Get the ECOVACS DEEBOT T90 PRO OMNI Robot Vacuum and Mop if you fight embedded carpet pet hair and want the highest 30,000 Pa suction plus a roller mop at the lowest flagship price.
Get the Roborock Qrevo S Pro Robot Vacuum and Mop if you want the X8's 167°F dock hygiene and matching suction without paying X8 money.
Get the Roborock S8 MaxV Ultra if you want one balanced flagship for mixed floors with a detergent-dosing dock at the lowest entry price.
For the cleanest mop, the Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni wins the head-to-head on its OZMO Roller and 167°F dock — though obstacle avoidance trails. For better navigation and far lower cost, the Roborock Qrevo MaxV Robot Vacuum and Mop reads 62 object types at $699.99 new. Skip a $1,000 flagship entirely if your home is mostly hard floors — a cheaper mid-tier pick from our hub does that job for less.
Sources & Methodology
Methodology: SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score — Formula: (Suction × 0.25) + (Mop Hygiene × 0.25) + (Dock Automation × 0.20) + (Obstacle Avoidance × 0.20) + (Value Efficiency × 0.10). Factors: Suction (25%): Rated suction in Pa, mapped to a 0-10 scale against the product set: 30,000 Pa anchors the top at 10, 18,000-20,000 Pa scores 8.5, 10,000-12,000 Pa scores 7.0, and 7,000-8,000 Pa scores 5.5. Corroborated against Vacuum Wars lab suction measurements where available — the X8's 18,000 Pa ranks top-10 of 100+ robots tested. | Mop Hygiene (25%): A composite of mop wash temperature and cleaning mechanism. Temperature scales 167°F at 9, 145°F at 7.5, 140°F at 7.0, no hot water at 4.0. A mechanism bonus adds 1.0 for an in-run real-time self-rinse like the OZMO Roller and 0.5 for an intelligent dirty-mop re-wash trigger. Co-weighted with suction as the top factor because mopping hygiene is the most-debated axis in this tier. | Dock Automation (20%): A points count of automated dock functions: self-empty, auto tank refill, hot-air dry, cleaning-solution dispense, dirty-water drain, and an intelligent re-wash trigger. Raw points normalize to a 0-10 score, rewarding the docks that remove the most weekly maintenance chores. | Obstacle Avoidance (20%): A qualitative score from published object-category breadth and independent test results. The 62-object-type Reactive AI with low-light function scores 9-10; an AI camera with an average independent score scores 7-8; a camera system that tests below average — like the X8's 15/20 versus the 16.5 Vacuum Wars average — scores 6. Weighted high because weak navigation is the tier's most-reported failure. | Value Efficiency (10%): Price-adjusted value: the composite score excluding this factor, divided by new-unit price, normalized 0-10 within the set. It uses the new-unit retail price — $699.99 for the Qrevo MaxV, not the $398.99 Renewed Amazon listing — for a fair comparison. A lower price for equivalent capability yields a higher score.
Expert review sources used in this analysis:
- SmartHomeExplorer aggregates expert review data and manufacturer specifications to produce consensus-based buying guidance
- We do not perform first-party product testing
- Suction ratings in Pa, mop wash temperatures, dock automation features, obstacle-avoidance object counts, and pricing are drawn from manufacturer documentation
- They are corroborated against robot-vacuum coverage from Vacuum Wars, RTINGS, CNET, Tom's Guide, The Hook Up, and Android Authority
- Vacuum Wars independently ranks the Ecovacs X8 Pro Omni's 18,000 Pa suction top-10 of over 100 robots tested
- It also scored the X8's obstacle avoidance 15/20 against a 16.5 category average
- Roborock US documents the Qrevo MaxV's 7,000 Pa HyperForce suction, its Reactive AI 62-object-type detection, its FlexiArm 98.8% edge coverage certified by TÜV Rheinland, and its 140°F mop wash
- The Qrevo MaxV's headline Amazon listing is a Renewed unit at about $398.99
- Its new-unit retail is $699.99 on sale from a $1,399.99 MSRP, and our scoring uses that new price
- Amazon prices and availability verified 2026-06-11
- The SHE Flagship Robot Clean Score is SmartHomeExplorer's own weighted, normalized composite of suction, mop hygiene, dock automation, obstacle avoidance, and value efficiency, refreshed each year
- No first-party measurements were conducted.
Nicholas Miles is the founder of SmartHomeExplorer and a longtime smart home enthusiast focused on helping everyday homeowners make better technology decisions. He researches, compares, and writes about products across security, climate, lighting, leak prevention, sensors, home energy, and automation, with an emphasis on real-world usefulness, ecosystem compatibility, reliability, privacy, and long-term value.
Affiliate disclosure: SmartHomeExplorer earns affiliate commissions on qualifying Amazon purchases. Our scoring methodology is independent of affiliate relationships.
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