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Eufy E25 Omni vs Dreame X60 Max Ultra

Best-value vs best-overall robot vacuum: the Eufy E25 Omni costs less than half the Dreame X60 Max Ultra. Where the savings hold up, and where the flagship earns its premium.

Eufy E25 Omni vs Dreame X60 Max Ultra

This is the robot-vacuum value question in its purest form: the Dreame X60 Max Ultra Complete is our best-overall pick at around $1,499, and the Eufy E25 Omni is our best-value pick at around $680 — often less on sale. The Eufy costs less than half as much. The real question isn't which is "better" (the Dreame is, on paper), it's whether the Dreame's advantages are worth more than doubling your spend for your home specifically.

What the Eufy gives you for the money

The E25 brings features that used to be flagship-only down to a mid-range price. Its defining trick is a HydroJet roller mop instead of the usual pads — an edge-to-edge roller that's continuously scraped and rinsed as it cleans, so only a clean surface ever touches your floor, with no pad-washing pause mid-run. Paired with Eufy's DuoSpiral anti-tangle brush, it's outstanding in pet homes: independent testers measured near-zero hair tangling and pet-hair pickup around 93%, with an 88% embedded-carpet-debris score that beats the category average. The all-in-one dock still empties the bin, washes the mop, and hot-air dries it, so day-to-day upkeep is minimal. For most mixed hard-floor, pet-heavy homes, this is the bulk of flagship performance for a fraction of the price.

What the extra money buys on the Dreame

The Dreame is the more capable machine in four concrete ways. Suction is 35,000 Pa versus the Eufy's 20,000. It climbs thresholds up to about 2 inches on retractable legs, where the Eufy's mop lift is modest enough that Eufy itself advises no-go zones for medium- and high-pile carpet. Its body is just 3.13 inches tall — the slimmest flagship made — so it reaches under furniture the Eufy's larger chassis can't. And across every test category at once — carpet, hard floors, edges, pet hair — it's simply the most consistent robot we track, which is why it's our overall #1.

Where the Eufy's limits actually show

Two honest gaps decide whether the savings are right for you. First, edges: the roller doesn't extend, so a thin strip stays unmopped along baseboards, and while it lifts everyday films easily, it struggles with baked-on dried stains. There's also no true mop-only mode. Second, it won't match the Dreame's obstacle avoidance or navigation, and first-run mapping can be fiddly. None of that matters in an open, hard-floor home; all of it matters if you have lots of edges, thick rugs, and tight furniture.

Verdict

Buy the Eufy E25 Omni if you want roughly 90% of flagship cleaning — including genuinely excellent pet-hair pickup and self-cleaning roller mopping — for well under half the price. For most homes, it's the smarter buy and leaves a thousand dollars in your pocket. Step up to the Dreame X60 Max Ultra if you have high thresholds, thick carpet, low furniture, or you simply want the most consistent cleaning made and don't mind paying for it and spending 30 minutes dialing in its settings.

See how the Dreame stacks up against the other flagship in Dreame X60 vs Roborock Saros 20, or browse the full robot vacuums lineup.

Still choosing?

Still choosing?

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