Xiaomi has put the Mijia Electric Shaver Pro Set on sale in China, with a starting price of about $85. The grooming kit bundles a shaver, a wireless charging base, and extra trimmers, and its main selling point is a smart cleaning dock that charges, sterilizes, and dries the shaver automatically.
For a category that has spent years getting only marginally smarter while still feeling annoyingly old-fashioned, that is a solid upgrade. Xiaomi is clearly betting that men will pay for anything that shortens the morning routine, which is a stronger sales argument than marketing copy about ”precision” ever will be.
Mijia Electric Shaver Pro Set features
Under the hood, Xiaomi has packed in a dual-ring foil system with corrugated blades that move in a cross pattern to catch more hair in a single pass. The motor is rated for up to 5 million cuts per minute, while an intelligent system scans beard density up to 100 times per second and adjusts power on the fly.
There is also a 360° floating head and a pressure sensor that warns users if they press too hard, which should help more than a few irritated faces.
Battery life and charging
The shaver has a display, supports USB-C charging, and can still be used while plugged in. Xiaomi says it can run for up to 90 days without recharging, which is the kind of number that makes disposable razors look almost embarrassing. For frequent travelers, that endurance may matter as much as the shaving performance.
A premium grooming push from Xiaomi
China has become a useful testing ground for Xiaomi’s small appliances, and this launch fits the company’s usual playbook: add automation, price aggressively, then see who bites. The broader grooming market has been moving in this direction for years, with brands from Panasonic to Philips leaning harder into self-cleaning stations and skin-friendly sensors. Xiaomi is not inventing the category, but it is doing what it tends to do best: making a premium-feeling product look affordable enough to tempt buyers who were already halfway to checkout.
The open question is whether the dock and long battery life are enough to turn a shaver into a must-have gadget, or whether this stays a clever but niche buy for people who enjoy their bathroom devices a little too much.

