Frequently Asked Questions

Is the Eufy X10 Pro Omni quiet enough for naptime?

Yes, on the quiet setting it runs at about 40 dB and did not wake a sleeping baby in the next room with the door open.

Does the Eufy X10 Pro Omni wash its own mop pads?

Yes, the self-emptying base station automatically washes and dries the rotating mop pads, so you never have to touch a wet, smelly pad.

How much suction does the Eufy X10 Pro Omni have?

It has 8,000 Pa of suction power, and it can detect dirt and adjust suction accordingly.

What kind of floors does the Eufy X10 Pro Omni work best on?

It works best on hardwood and tile floors because the mop pads lift up on carpet, but it may struggle on thick carpets or steep thresholds.

Eufy X10 Pro Omni Review: Quiet Enough for Naptime Mopping?

Look, I’ve had more vacuums than I’ve had hot dinners—and I’ve had a lot of hot dinners. When you’ve got two kids, a dog that sheds like it’s allergic to being indoors, and a floor that seems to attract crumbs from another dimension, you start collecting cleaning gadgets like some people collect stamps. The Eufy X10 Pro Omni landed in my living room a few months ago, and I’ll be honest: I was skeptical. A robot vacuum that also mops? Quiet enough to run during baby naptime? That’s a tall order in a house where the floor is basically a daily disaster zone. But Sparkles (that’s my seven-year-old, who names all our vacuums) took one look at it and said, “That’s Bubbles, because it’s round and it makes the floor wet.” So Bubbles it is. Here’s the dad-truth about whether this thing actually earns its keep without waking the baby.

Key Specs & Features That Actually Matter

Before I get into the nitty-gritty, here’s what Eufy packs into the X10 Pro Omni: a self-emptying base station that also washes and dries the mop pads, LIDAR navigation, 8,000 Pa suction power, and a quiet mode that claims to be around 40 dB. It uses two rotating mop pads that lift up when it hits carpet (thank you), and it can detect dirt and adjust suction accordingly. The battery lasts about 75 minutes on a full charge, which is enough for our main floor if it doesn’t get stuck under a coffee table. It also has a built-in camera for remote monitoring—which I thought was gimmicky until I used it to check if the kids had left a sock on the floor.

Who Is This For? (Hint: Not everyone)

If you’re a parent with a baby who naps like a hibernating bear and you have mostly hardwood or tile, this could be your new best friend. The quiet mode is genuinely impressive—I’ve stood right next to it while it’s mopping and it’s quieter than a refrigerator hum. That’s huge when your kid only sleeps for 45 minutes at a time and you need the floor clean for crawling. But if you have thick carpets, steep thresholds, or a floor plan that looks like a maze, Bubbles might struggle. It’s not a miracle worker—it’s a good robot vacuum that happens to mop well for its price. And it’s way quieter than my old Roombas.

Pros & Cons from a Dad Who’s Tested It With Kids and PetsPros

  • Quiet enough for naptime: On the quiet setting, I’ve run this thing while the baby was asleep in the next room—door open—and she didn’t stir. That’s a win. The base station when it empties is louder (like a loud hand dryer), but you can schedule that for when everyone’s awake.
  • Self-cleaning mop pads: One of the grossest parts of any mop robot is dealing with the dirty pads. The X10 washes and dries them automatically. I haven’t touched a wet, smelly mop pad in weeks. Sparkles calls that “magic.” I call it sanity.
  • Good on hardwood: The dual spinning mops actually scrub instead of just dragging a wet cloth. On our engineered hardwood, it leaves a visible clean streak. No streaks, no residue—just clean floors.
  • Smart dirt detection: It has a built-in AI that spots dirt and goes over it again. I dropped some cereal crumbs on purpose (don’t ask) and it did a double pass without me telling it to. Not perfect, but better than most.
  • App is decent: For a dad who just wants to hit “go” and walk away, the app is simple. You can set no-go zones by drawing boxes on a map, and it actually stays out of them 95% of the time.Cons
  • Not for thick carpets: The mop pads lift when it detects carpet, which is nice, but on medium-pile area rugs it can still leave moisture marks if the rug is thin. On shag? Forget it. It’ll get stuck or just push the rug into a heap.
  • Base station takes up space: The self-emptying and washing station is about the size of a small trash can. It needs to be against a wall with room on the side. In a small living room, that’s a real estate problem.
  • Mapping can be finicky: If you move furniture around, it’ll get confused and start bumping into things. I had to re-map after we rearranged the couch. Not a huge deal, but not set-and-forget.
  • Battery life is just okay: For a house over 1,200 square feet, it might need to recharge mid-cleaning. That adds time. On quiet mode it’s slower, too.
  • Pet hair tangle: My golden retriever mix sheds like a husky. The X10’s brush does get hair wrapped around it—not as bad as my old Roomba, but I still have to cut it off every couple of weeks.

Verdict: Should You Buy It?

Yes, but only if you match the profile. If you’re a parent of a little one who naps, and you have mostly hard floors, the Eufy X10 Pro Omni is the quietest mop-and-vacuum combo I’ve tested that doesn’t cost a mortgage payment. It’s not perfect—thick carpets are its kryptonite, and the battery won’t make it through a big house in one shot—but for day-to-day maintenance while the baby sleeps? It’s a lifesaver. Sparkles still calls it Bubbles, and every time it finishes mopping she does a tiny dance on the clean floor. I call that a win. Buy it if quiet matters and you don’t mind a big base station. Skip it if you’ve got wall-to-wall carpet or need to clean a mansion in one go. And for the love of all that is holy, schedule the base station cleaning for after naptime.