Anker has launched the eufy C15, a robot lawn mower aimed at smaller gardens and priced from 900 euros. The eufy C15 is Anker’s cheapest wire-free robot mower yet, and it skips both perimeter wire and RTK antenna setup in favor of camera-based navigation.

The C15 is the brand’s cheapest mower so far, sitting below the larger E15 and E18. It is built for lawns of up to 500 square meters, which puts it squarely in the ”compact suburban garden” category rather than the sprawling estate fantasy often used in robot mower ads.

TrueVision camera navigation replaces boundary wire

Instead of relying on a perimeter wire or RTK positioning, the C15 uses eufy’s TrueVision system, which is based on cameras for navigation and mapping. The front camera setup detects obstacles, figures out where it is, and plans a route on the fly. That should help it steer around toys, patio furniture, pets, and even small wildlife such as hedgehogs.

Camera-led navigation is becoming a more serious sales point in robot mowers because it cuts installation time and avoids the fiddly antenna setup that still scares off many buyers. The trade-off is obvious: the mower needs a good view of the garden, and first-time mapping can still take a while depending on the layout.

C15 specs and mowing range

  • Cutting disc diameter: 180 mm
  • Cutting height: 20 mm to 60 mm
  • Maximum slope: 32%
  • Recommended garden size: up to 500 square meters

That 32% slope rating should be enough for most small home gardens, though steep and awkward layouts are still where these machines tend to get very confident very quickly. The smaller 180 mm cutting disc also tells you who this is for: not monster lawns, but tidy weekly trimming without the hassle.

Price, preorder timing and the free garage offer

The eufy C15 is now officially on sale after a recent preorder phase. Pricing starts at 900 euros, and for a limited time eufy is bundling a free garage that normally costs 1000 euros. That’s either a generous launch promo or a very expensive way to make a mower look like it has a parking space.

If the C15 performs as advertised, it gives Anker a sharper entry point into a category where rivals increasingly compete on camera vision, easier setup, and lower friction rather than raw mowing muscle. The real test will be whether wire-free convenience is enough to win over buyers who have so far tolerated cables because they at least know where the mower is supposed to go.

Source: Ixbt

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