Xiaomi has started selling its Robot Vacuum H50 series in Europe, with prices starting at 400 euros. The lineup includes two models, the standard H50 and the better-equipped H50 Pro, both built around autonomous cleaning, room mapping, obstacle avoidance, and self-service docking stations. That puts the new pair squarely in the crowded midrange, where brand loyalty is nice but suction numbers still sell boxes.

The Pro model gets the headline-grabbing specs, with suction rated up to 15,000 Pa and extendable side brushes designed to reach along walls, baseboards, and corners. Xiaomi is also leaning hard into convenience: the dock empties the dust bin, washes the mops, and dries them with hot air. That puts it in the same arms race as rival premium robot vacuums from Roborock, Dreame, and Ecovacs, where the real competition is less about cleaning and more about how rarely you have to think about cleaning again.

Xiaomi Robot Vacuum H50 Pro features

The H50 Pro uses a laser navigation system with 360-degree room scanning, plus brush engineering meant to reduce hair tangles. Xiaomi says its 5,200 mAh battery is good for about 180 minutes of runtime, enough to cover up to 240 square meters. That is the kind of spec sheet that sounds overbuilt until you remember how quickly a large apartment turns a cheap robot into a wheezing furniture bumper.

  • Suction power: up to 15,000 Pa
  • Battery: 5,200 mAh
  • Runtime: about 180 minutes
  • Coverage: up to 240 square meters

What the standard H50 adds

The regular Robot Vacuum H50 drops the suction figure to 10,000 Pa, but it still ships with a self-service station, automatic emptying, water-tank support, and Xiaomi Home app control. That means scheduling, virtual walls, and custom spot-cleaning zones are all in the mix, which is exactly what buyers expect now from a robot vacuum that wants to be taken seriously rather than bought on a whim and forgotten under the sofa.

For Xiaomi, the wider play is obvious: take the company’s aggressive pricing formula and move it into a category where convenience features have become the real differentiator. The H50 series may not be the most luxurious option on the shelf, but it is aimed at the sort of buyer who wants fewer chores, not a lecture about floor care.

In Europe, the H50 series enters a market already shaped by premium robot vacuums from Roborock, Dreame, and Ecovacs, so Xiaomi’s value pitch will matter as much as its spec sheet. The 400-euro starting price gives it a clear entry point, while the H50 Pro targets buyers who want stronger suction and more automation without jumping to the top tier.

Source: Ixbt

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