Frequently Asked Questions

Is this good for pet hair?

Yes, 8000Pa suction handles cat and dog fur on hard floors.

How loud is it?

About 67dB on standard mode β€” quiet enough during naptime.

Eufy X10 Pro Omni Review: Self-Cleaning Robot Vacuum for Busy Families

There comes a moment in every parent’s life when you look at the crumbs under the kitchen table and just accept them as part of the decor. That was me until Sparkles started naming the dust bunnies. “That one’s Gerald,” she’d say, pointing at a particularly ambitious clump under the sofa. That’s when I knew we needed help. The Eufy X10 Pro Omni isn’t my first robot vacuum, but after six weeks of daily testing with two kids, a shedding dog, and a cat who thinks the floor is a personal snack station, I can tell you exactly where this machine earns its keep and where it stumbles. Let’s get into it.

Key Specs and Features at a Glance

  • 8,000 Pa suction power β€” yes, that is a lot for a robot
  • Self-emptying base station that holds up to 45 days of dirt
  • Self-washing and self-drying mop pads β€” the base handles the gross stuff
  • LiDAR navigation with full mapping and no-go zones
  • Battery life rated at around 150 minutes on a single charge
  • Works on hard floors, tile, laminate, and low-pile carpet
  • Voice control via Alexa and Google Assistant, plus the Eufy Clean app

The self-cleaning base is honestly the headline here. You fill the clean water tank, the robot goes out, mops, then comes back and the base scrubs the mop pads with hot water and dries them with warm air. You dump the dirty water and empty the dust bin when it tells you. That is basically full-time housekeeping for the price of one appliance.

Who This Vacuum Is For

This is a machine built for families who have more spills than they can count and less time than they need. If your kitchen floor sees a rotation of cereal crumbs, juice drips, and pet drool by 8 a.m., the X10 Pro Omni is designed to handle that cycle without you touching a mop for weeks. It is also for people who hate emptying robot bins. The self-emptying feature is not a luxury once you experience it. It becomes a necessity.

That said, this vacuum is not for everyone. If you have thick, high-pile carpet throughout your home, the X10 Pro Omni will still pick up, but it will struggle more than on hard floors. The mopping system is also not designed for serious scrubbing. It maintains a clean floor. It does not rescue a floor that has been neglected for months. Be honest with yourself about your floor condition before buying.

The Pros and ConsWhat Works Well

  • Self-emptying and self-washing are game changers. I have gone two weeks without touching the base except to refill water. That is real freedom.
  • 8,000 Pa suction is no joke. It picked up crushed goldfish crackers that had been ground into the tile by small sneakers. Gerald the dust bunny never stood a chance.
  • LiDAR mapping is fast and accurate. The robot mapped our entire downstairs in about 12 minutes. It avoids obstacles reasonably well, including the dog who refuses to move for anything.
  • The app is straightforward. You can set no-go zones, schedule cleanings, and even tell it to avoid specific carpets when mopping. I set up a schedule for 10 a.m. when everyone is at school and work, and the floors are clean by lunch.
  • Battery life is solid. It handles our entire main floor on one charge, including a full vacuum and mop cycle.What Does Not Work as Well
  • The mop pads lift when it detects carpet, which is clever, but on transition strips between tile and rug, it sometimes drags a wet pad across the edge. I have a few damp corners to prove it.
  • The dirty water tank has a slightly funky smell if you do not empty it every three or four days. The base dries the mops, which helps, but the water tank still needs attention.
  • Obstacle avoidance is good, not perfect. It will avoid a shoe or a charging cable, but it has run over a small toy car that was lying flat on the floor. Sparkles was not thrilled.
  • It is loud during the self-cleaning cycle. The base empties the bin with a whoosh that sounds like a small jet engine for about 10 seconds. That is normal for self-emptying robots, but it startled the cat the first time.
  • Price is on the higher end for a Eufy robot. You are paying for the convenience of the base station. If that convenience is worth it to you, then it is a fair price. If not, there are cheaper options that still vacuum well but require more manual work.

How It Performed in a Real Home

I tested the X10 Pro Omni in a 1,800-square-foot home with a mix of tile, laminate, and low-pile carpet. We have a 60-pound dog who sheds year-round, a cat who tracks litter, and a seven-year-old who has a PhD in making messes. The robot ran daily for six weeks with no maintenance beyond refilling the clean water tank and dumping the dirty water and dust bin about once a week.

On hard floors, it is excellent. The combination of suction and mopping leaves the tile looking clean without streaks. On low-pile carpet, it picks up pet hair well, though I still run a full-size upright vacuum once a week for a deeper clean. That is normal for any robot. The self-emptying feature means I never have to deal with a full bin of dog hair mid-cycle, which used to happen with our older robot.

Sparkles gave it her official endorsement after it cleaned up a spilled bowl of Cheerios without leaving stickiness behind. She did point out that it “looks like a UFO that lost its way.” She is not entirely wrong.

Verdict and Buy Recommendation

The Eufy X10 Pro Omni earns a strong recommendation from me for busy families who have mostly hard floors and want to go weeks without thinking about floor cleaning. It is not the cheapest robot vacuum on the market, and it is not perfect on carpet transitions or small flat objects. But for the core job of daily maintenance cleaning on tile and hardwood, it delivers. The self-washing mop pads and self-emptying bin are not gimmicks. They are genuinely useful features that save time and reduce the mental load of keeping a home clean.

If your floors are mostly hard surfaces and you are tired of sweeping and mopping every single day, this is one of the best self-emptying robot vacuums I have tested. If you have wall-to-wall high-pile carpet, look elsewhere or plan to supplement with a canister vacuum. But for my home, with my kids and my dog and my dust bunnies, the X10 Pro Omni earns its spot.

As Sparkles said the first time it docked itself and started cleaning its own mops: “That’s the most lazy-smart thing I’ve ever seen.” Out of the mouth of a seven-year-old. She is not wrong.