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Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro Review: Brilliant on Carpet, Not the Mop King

A top-tier robot vacuum for carpets and thresholds, but the mopping still lags the best.

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Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro Review: Brilliant on Carpet, Not the Mop King

Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro Review: Brilliant on Carpet, Not the Mop King

By Editorial Team | April 2026

The Qrevo Curv 2 Pro is the one to buy if your home is a mix of carpet, hard floors, pets and annoying thresholds. It wins because it cleans like a serious robot vacuum first and a decent mop second, and that matters more than flashy app tricks. The snag is simple: if mopping is your priority, this is not the clean sheet.

Our pick: Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro

Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro — £849.99

This is a premium robot vacuum and mop that actually earns its price in the places busy homes struggle most. The 25,000 Pa suction is among the strongest you can buy, the 7.98 cm body slips under low furniture, and the AdaptiLift chassis helps it cross thresholds of up to 4 cm without getting stuck. Our score: 8.8/10.

Why it works:

  • 25,000 Pa suction gives it real bite on carpet, where weaker robot vacuums leave grit behind.
  • The retractable LiDAR tower keeps it low enough to get under sofas and cabinets that taller robots miss.
  • The dock takes care of the boring stuff: it washes mop pads with 100°C water, dries them at 55°C, and auto-empties for up to 65 days.

The honest trade-off: the spinning-pad mopping system is good, not class-leading, and cables or tiny clutter can still trip up the obstacle avoidance. If you want the best wet-floor cleanup, look at a roller-mop rival instead.

Buy the Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Pro here if you want the least babysitting for carpet-heavy, pet-heavy homes.

Best upgrade: Eufy Omni C28

Eufy Omni C28 — around £899

The upgrade case here is the mop. The Omni C28 uses a self-cleaning roller mop instead of spinning pads, which is the right answer if dried spills and sticky kitchen mess are your main problem. WIRED also highlights its stronger vacuuming setup and retractable detangling brushes, so it is the more rounded premium buy for mixed floors.

Worth it if: you care more about mopping quality than Roborock’s threshold-climbing party trick.

Best budget pick: Roborock Qrevo S5V

Roborock Qrevo S5V — from about £425

This keeps the Roborock formula but cuts the price hard. TechRadar notes 12,000 Pa suction and a self-cleaning dock, which is enough for many homes that want convenience without paying four figures. You give up a lot of raw carpet performance and the better chassis tricks, but the basics are still properly covered.

Worth it if: you want a set-and-forget robot for lighter messes and mixed hard floors, and you do not need elite carpet pickup.

How we chose

We looked at the stuff that actually changes daily use: suction, furniture clearance, threshold climbing, dock automation and mop maintenance. For robot vacuum-mops, the real question is not how many features are listed in the box; it is how often the machine gets stuck, how much you still have to do yourself, and whether it cleans the floors you actually have.

Frequently asked questions

Is a robot vacuum and mop worth it for a busy home?
Yes, if you hate the daily grind of dust, crumbs and pet hair. The best ones save time because they keep floors under control between proper cleans, not because they replace a full deep clean.

Why is this one so expensive?
You are paying for strong carpet cleaning, threshold handling, a low profile and a genuinely hands-off dock. Cheaper robots can vacuum well enough, but they usually compromise on one or more of those pieces.

How much maintenance does it need?
The dock handles most of it, including auto-emptying for up to 65 days and heated mop washing and drying, but you will still need to clear the odd cable or small object before a run.

Products in this article

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