Frequently Asked Questions
How much suction does the Eufy X10 Pro Omni have?
It has 5,000 Pa of suction, enough to pick up crushed crackers, dog hair, and dust from low-pile carpets.
Does the Eufy X10 Pro Omni empty itself?
Yes, it has a self-emptying base with a bag that claims to last up to 60 days. The bag seals itself when full so you don’t sneeze when swapping.
How does the mopping work on the X10 Pro Omni?
It uses two spinning pads that apply downward pressure to scrub floors, not just smear. The base washes and dries the pads with hot air to prevent them from getting funky.
Is the Eufy X10 Pro Omni good for pet hair?
Yes, with 5,000 Pa of suction it picks up dog hair wrapped around chair legs and fur tumbleweeds from under the couch.
Eufy X10 Pro Omni Review: Robot Vacuum That Mops and Empties Itself
Look, I’ve been through a lot of robot vacuums. I’ve had ones that got stuck under the couch, ones that dumped their dust bins mid-mission, and one that my daughter Sparkles named “Screamy” because it sounded like a dying hair dryer. So when I agreed to test the Eufy X10 Pro Omni, I wasn’t holding my breath. But after two weeks of letting this thing run through a house with two kids, a shedding dog, and a cat that thinks cereal crumbs are toys, I’ve got opinions. And for once, most of them are positive.
Key Specs & Features
Let’s start with the numbers, because I know you’ll compare them. The Eufy X10 Pro Omni has 5,000 Pa of suction—enough to pull up the crushed Goldfish crackers my kids leave under the dining table. It uses LiDAR navigation, so it maps your home in minutes and doesn’t bump into furniture like a drunk roommate. The self-emptying base holds a bag that claims to last up to 60 days, and honestly? We’re on day 19 and it’s not full yet. The mopping system uses two spinning pads that apply downward pressure—not the pathetic drag-a-damp-cloth approach. It has a built-in water tank on the robot itself, plus the base can clean the mop pads with hot air drying. The obstacle avoidance is decent: it sees cables, shoes, and pet bowls and mostly steers clear. App control is solid, with room-specific cleaning, scheduling, and no-go zones.
Who Is This Robot Vacuum For?
This vacuum is for people who want to press a button and forget about their floors until the bag needs swapping. It’s for parents of toddlers who drop food like they’re feeding seagulls. It’s for pet owners who find fur tumbleweeds under the couch every morning. It’s for anyone tired of emptying the dust bin on their current robot every single day—or worse, cleaning a wet mop pad by hand. If you have a mix of hard floors and low-pile carpets, the X10 Pro Omni handles both. But if you have thick, high-pile shag or a house littered with low-hanging charging cables, you’ll want to note some limitations.
What Works (And What Doesn’t)
Pros:
- Suction power: 5,000 Pa picks up everything from Cheerios to dog hair wrapped around chair legs. I ran it over our kitchen rug and it pulled up dust I didn’t know existed.
- Self-emptying base: Actually works. The bag seals itself when full, and I don’t sneeze every time I swap it. Sparkles calls it “the mailbox.”
- Mop that mops: The spinning pads scrub. They don’t just smear. I spilled a little apple juice on the tile, ran the mop function, and the floor dried without stickiness. Plus the base washes and dries the pads so they don’t get funky.
- Mapping accuracy: First run took 12 minutes to map our main floor. After that, it respected furniture positions and didn’t try to climb the dog bed.
- Quiet operation: On standard vacuum mode, it’s whisper-quiet compared to our old Roomba. The dog barely flinches.
- App control: Easy to set a schedule, send it to a specific room, or tell it to avoid the kids’ play area when Legos are out.
Cons:
- Obstacle avoidance isn’t perfect: It handles shoes and cables okay, but a single sock on the floor can still confuse it. I’ve found it pushing a sock across the room like it’s trying to play fetch.
- Mop pad drying takes a while: The hot air drying cycle runs for about two hours. If you need the robot to mop again soon, you might need to manually swap the pads or run a quick dry cycle.
- Self-emptying base is bulky: It needs about a foot of clearance in front and on the sides. Finding a spot in our small utility room was tricky.
- No integrated mopping water tank on the base: You have to fill the robot’s small tank (just enough for about 1,000 sq ft of mopping) manually. For a larger house, you’ll want a refill station—but those cost serious money.
- Price: It’s mid-range for a self-emptying robot mop, but still a chunk of change. If you can catch it on sale, that’s the sweet spot.
The Dad Experience
Sparkles, my seven-year-old, named this one “Omni” after the robot from Skylanders. She watched it map the living room and then asked, “Does it like me?” I said it’s just a vacuum. She said, “Everything likes me.” I can’t argue with that logic. The truth is, the Eufy X10 Pro Omni fits into our family rhythm better than any robot I’ve used before. The self-emptying feature is the real game-changer. I used to have to evacuate the bin every other day, and I’d inevitably get dust all over my hands. Now I just swap the bag once every three weeks. The mopping is actually useful—I put it on when the kids leave sticky footprints from their afternoon snack. It doesn’t replace a proper deep mop, but it keeps the floors from feeling gross between weekend cleanings.
One thing I’ll note: the robot’s navigation is smart enough to avoid the dog’s water bowl most of the time, but if the bowl is metallic and shiny, it can reflect the LiDAR and cause a hesitation. I just put a no-go zone around it in the app. Problem solved. Also, my wife has long hair, and I’ve had to clear the side brush once so far—about on par with any robot.
Final Verdict: Should You Buy the Eufy X10 Pro Omni?
Yes, with a couple of conditions. If you want a robot vacuum that vacuums hard, mops effectively, and empties itself without constant babysitting, this is a solid buy. It’s not the cheapest, but it delivers on the promises without the headaches I’ve seen with other self-emptying bots. I’d recommend it for families with pets, kids, or both—especially if you have hard floors or low-pile carpet. Skip it if you have thick shag carpet or a massive house where you’d prefer a robot with a self-refilling water station. For the price, the Eufy X10 Pro Omni does the job, and it does it quietly enough that even my toddler doesn’t wake up from her nap when it rolls past her door. That alone is worth the sticker price.