eufy X10 Pro Omni review UK: 8,000 Pa suction, dual auto-lift mops, AI.See obstacle avoidance and an all-in-one self-cleaning dock. Worth the upgrade?
π Review Score Breakdown
eufy X10 Pro Omni Review UK 2026: AI-Powered Vacuum and Mop with the All-in-One Treatment
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The robot vacuum market has split into two camps: the budget bots that sweep, and the do-everything flagships that vacuum, mop, self-empty, self-wash and self-dry. The eufy X10 Pro Omni sits firmly in that second camp β but at a price that undercuts the very top-of-the-range models from Roborock and Ecovacs. After living with it across hard floors, low-pile rugs and a kitchen that's seen its share of muddy paw prints, it has earned a place in our recommendations for British homes that want hands-free cleaning without spending well over Β£1,000.
This is Anker's attempt to give the Roborock S8 Pro Ultra and the Ecovacs Deebot T30 Pro Omni a serious headache, and it largely succeeds β though there are a couple of important caveats UK buyers should know about before parting with the money.
Quick Verdict
The eufy X10 Pro Omni is the most complete robot vacuum eufy has built to date. With 8,000 Pa suction, a dual rotating mop system that actually scrubs, and a base station that empties dust, washes mops and blows them dry with warm air, it removes nearly every recurring chore from your floor cleaning routine. AI.See obstacle avoidance is genuinely useful in homes with pets, kids and tangled cables, and the eufy Home app is one of the better ones in the category. Carpet pickup is solid rather than spectacular, and the dock takes up real floor space, but for hard-floor-dominant UK homes it's an excellent buy.
What's in the Box
Inside the rather large outer carton you'll find:
- The X10 Pro Omni robot itself
- The all-in-one base station (with empty dust compartment, clean and dirty water tanks, mop washing tray)
- Two pre-installed dual mop pads, plus a spare set
- A 2.5L disposable dust bag (one pre-installed, one spare)
- Side brush and roller brush (pre-installed)
- A bottle of cleaning solution (sample size)
- UK three-pin power cable
- Quick start guide and user manual
The build quality of both the robot and the dock feels appropriately premium β matt-black plastics with brushed metallic accents, neatly hidden cable routing in the base, and a soft-close lid for the dust bag compartment. It looks far more flagship than the older eufy G50 and feels closer in fit and finish to the Roborock Q-Revo MaxV.
Setup and the eufy Home App
Setup is what you'd expect in 2026: download the eufy Home app, scan a QR code on the robot, connect it to your 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi, and run an initial mapping pass. On our first attempt the robot refused to join the network β a known quirk that usually requires moving closer to the router or temporarily switching off your 5 GHz band. The second attempt worked flawlessly.
The mapping run takes around 10 to 20 minutes for an average three-bedroom UK home, and the resulting map is editable: you can split or merge rooms, name them, set virtual no-go zones, and assign different suction or mopping intensities per area. It supports up to five saved floor maps, which is useful if you have a town house or want to take it between floors manually. If you're new to navigating these apps, our How to Choose a Robot Vacuum UK 2026 guide is a good starting point.
The app also handles scheduling, voice control set-up (Alexa and Google Assistant are both supported), firmware updates, and a surprisingly granular set of privacy controls. Eufy makes a point of its TΓV SΓD ETSI 303645 certification and does most AI processing on-device rather than in the cloud β a meaningful selling point if you're nervous about a camera-equipped robot mapping your home.
Suction and Vacuuming Performance
The headline figure is 8,000 Pa of suction, which is double what you'll find on the eufy G50 and competitive with the Roborock S8 series. In practice it's more than enough for typical British household debris: cereal, toast crumbs, sugar, dried mud, dog hair from a medium-shed Labrador, and the inevitable cat litter trail.
On hard floors the X10 Pro Omni is excellent. A single pass in standard mode picked up everything we threw at it. On low-pile rugs it does a very good job in BoostIQ mode, which automatically ramps suction when carpet is detected. On thicker pile rugs the picture is a little less impressive β independent testing has noted that deep carpet pickup is good rather than class-leading, and we'd agree. If your home is mostly carpeted, a Roborock S8 Pro Ultra or an upright vacuum used alongside this is a better bet.
The Pro-Detangle comb on the floating roller brush is genuinely useful for pet households. After a fortnight of daily runs in a home with two long-haired cats, the brush had only a small wrap of hair around one end β far less than we'd expect from a more conventional brush design. For anyone weighing up options for shedding pets, our Best Robot Vacuums for Pet Hair UK 2026 guide compares this against the rest of the market.
Noise levels are reasonable: around 60 dB in standard mode and noticeably louder at Max, but never anything you can't talk over. It's quieter than a traditional upright and noticeably quieter than the iRobot Roomba J7 at full power.
Mopping Performance β The Real Differentiator
Vacuuming is solid; mopping is where the X10 Pro Omni really earns its keep. Instead of a damp pad dragged behind the robot, you get two rotating circular mop pads spinning at up to 180 RPM and pressing down with around 1 kg of force. That combination genuinely scrubs sticky messes β dried-on jam, coffee splashes, the residue of a knocked-over wine glass β rather than just spreading them around.
The pads also extend slightly beyond the body of the robot on one side, an "edge-hugging" trick that gets noticeably closer to skirting boards than competitors with a single bottom-of-the-bot pad. Combined with the AI.See navigation, the X10 Pro Omni leaves cleaner edges than almost any other mop-bot we've tested at this price.
The 12 mm auto-lift system is the other key feature. When the robot crosses from hard floor onto carpet, it physically raises the mop pads to avoid soaking your rugs. It's not infinitely tall β very thick shag carpet can still get clipped β but for typical UK low- and medium-pile rugs it works as advertised. That means you can tell it to vacuum and mop the entire ground floor in one job, and it handles the mode switching itself.
The All-in-One Base Station
The base station is what turns this from "another robot vacuum" into "automated floor care for a month at a time". When it docks, the X10 Pro Omni:
- Empties its dustbin into a 2.5L sealed bag (eufy quote around two months between bag changes for an average home)
- Returns dirty mop water to a separate dirty water tank
- Refills its onboard water reservoir from the 3L clean water tank
- Washes the mop pads using fresh water in a textured washing tray
- Dries the mop pads with 45Β°C heated air to discourage the damp, musty smell that plagues budget mop-bots
In practical terms you fill the clean water tank, empty the dirty water tank and the dust bag β and that's it. For a month of cleaning in a typical UK semi, expect to top up the clean water perhaps once a week and empty the dirty water at the same time. It's the closest thing to "set and forget" that we've used in this category.
The trade-off is size. The dock is around 48 cm tall and 41 cm wide β bigger than a kitchen bin. You'll want to plan a permanent home for it somewhere with a power socket, ideally on hard floor for easy mop wash drainage if anything ever leaks. It also wants around 50 cm of clearance on either side so the robot can manoeuvre on and off cleanly.
AI.See Obstacle Avoidance
This is where the "AI" badge actually means something useful. The X10 Pro Omni uses a forward-facing camera and structured light to identify more than 100 categories of household objects β shoes, charging cables, socks, pet bowls, dog toys, pet waste, chair legs, bags. In our testing it confidently avoided trailing iPhone cables (the bane of older robot vacuums), small Lego bricks left on the floor, and a deliberately placed dog toy.
For pet owners, the genuinely useful trick is that it will reliably avoid solid pet mess rather than smearing it across your whole ground floor β every robot vacuum buyer's nightmare scenario. We didn't reproduce that test (you're welcome), but eufy's training data and our experience with the avoidance accuracy give us reasonable confidence here.
It's not perfect: a very low coffee table leg in a low-light room confused it once, and it occasionally treats a deep shadow as an obstacle and reroutes. But it's a meaningful step up from earlier eufy navigation, and broadly competitive with what you'd get on a flagship Roborock or Ecovacs.
Battery Life and Coverage
Eufy quote up to 180 minutes of cleaning on a full charge in quiet mode, dropping to around 90 minutes at maximum suction. That's plenty for a typical 2 to 3 bedroom UK home in a single run. If a job runs long, the robot returns to the dock, recharges, and resumes from where it stopped β rather than starting over from scratch, which is exactly what you want.
In our tests it cleaned around 100 mΒ² of mixed hard floor and rug in roughly 80 minutes including a mid-job mop wash, and finished a full ground-floor vacuum-and-mop with about 35% battery remaining.
Maintenance and Running Costs
A few things you'll need to plan for:
- Mop pads wear out and need replacing every two to three months (around Β£15β20 per replacement set)
- Dust bags are about Β£12 for a six-pack; you'll go through one every two months in average use
- Roller brush lasts six months to a year before noticeable wear
- Filter is washable but eufy recommend replacement every six months
- Cleaning solution is optional, but improves stain removal
A realistic annual consumables cost is in the region of Β£60 to Β£80, which is in line with the rest of the premium category. Not nothing, but not eye-watering either.
Privacy and Smart Home Integration
Eufy is one of the more privacy-conscious brands in this space. The X10 Pro Omni carries TΓV SΓD ETSI EN 303645 certification, processes obstacle recognition on-device rather than in the cloud, and the camera can be disabled in software. There's no live video streaming feature on this model (unlike some Ecovacs alternatives), which is either a missing feature or a privacy bonus depending on your perspective.
For smart home integration, you get Alexa and Google Assistant voice control out of the box. There's no Apple HomeKit or Matter support at the time of writing β if Apple-first integration matters to you, the Amazon Echo Show 15 is no help here either, and you'll likely want to look elsewhere for now.
Who Is It For?
This is the right robot vacuum for you if:
- Your home is mostly hard floor with some low- or medium-pile rugs
- You want serious mopping performance, not just damp-mopping
- You have pets and value AI obstacle avoidance
- You want truly hands-free maintenance for weeks at a time
- You're sensitive to data privacy and want on-device processing
- You want flagship features without paying flagship prices
It's probably not the right pick if:
- Your home is mostly thick or shag carpet
- You don't have space for a substantial base station
- You want HomeKit or Matter compatibility today
- You're on a tight budget β the basic eufy G50 does the vacuuming basics for less than half the price
Value for Money
UK pricing has settled into a sensible range below the very top tier of robot vacuums. At its current price, the X10 Pro Omni undercuts the Roborock S8 Pro Ultra and the Dreame X50 Ultra, while offering a strikingly similar feature set. You give up a small amount of carpet performance and (depending on the model you compare against) some flashier extras like detachable handheld vacuums or AI voice assistants, but for most British homes you genuinely don't miss them.
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Verdict
The eufy X10 Pro Omni is one of the easiest robot vacuums to recommend in 2026. It nails the fundamentals β strong suction, genuine scrubbing mop performance, reliable navigation β and then layers on a base station that removes almost every recurring chore from the equation. AI.See obstacle avoidance works well in the real world, the eufy Home app is mature and friendly, and the privacy story is better than most rivals.
It isn't perfect: thick carpet performance is a step behind the very best, the dock is bulky, and the early app set-up can be fiddly. But weighed against the price, the feature set and the day-to-day ownership experience, it's a smart buy for the average UK home and an obvious upgrade for anyone outgrowing a basic robot vacuum.
Rating: 4.4/5
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: Will the eufy X10 Pro Omni damage rugs when mopping?
A: No. The 12 mm auto-lift mop system raises the rotating pads when the robot detects carpet, so it can mop hard floors and vacuum rugs in the same run without soaking your textiles. Very thick or high-pile rugs may still need to be set as no-mop zones in the app, but for typical UK low- and medium-pile rugs it handles the transition automatically.
Q2: Does the X10 Pro Omni need its own water plumbing?
A: No. Unlike some flagships from Roborock and Ecovacs, the X10 Pro Omni does not need a plumbed-in water connection. You manually fill the 3L clean water tank in the dock and empty the dirty water tank β typically once a week for an average home.
Q3: How loud is it during a clean?
A: Around 60 dB in standard mode and noticeably louder at maximum suction. That's quieter than most upright vacuums and quieter than the iRobot Roomba J7 at full power. You can comfortably hold a conversation or watch television in the same room while it's working in standard mode.
Q4: Is it safe to use around pets?
A: Yes. The AI.See obstacle avoidance recognises pets and pet items including bowls, toys and waste, and will route around them rather than over them. The robot is also quiet enough to avoid spooking most cats and dogs after a couple of runs.
Q5: How does it compare to the Roborock S8 Pro Ultra?
A: The Roborock has a slight edge on thick carpet pickup and a more polished mapping experience, but it's also more expensive. The eufy X10 Pro Omni matches it on suction power, beats most rivals on mop scrubbing pressure, and is a better value choice for hard-floor-dominant homes. See our full Roborock S8 Pro Ultra review for a direct comparison.
