iRobot roomba i3+

Buy now £599.99, Irobot.co.uk
Out of the box, you’ll get the roomba i3+ robot, the charging base, which doubles up as automatic dirt disposal, one AllergenLock bag pre-installed in the cleaning base, as well as an extra one (this is made from an allergen-blocking material which traps 99 per cent of dust, allergens and mould). You’ll also find an extra filter for the robot – it’s recommended that this be replaced every two months.
One of the impressive recent developments in robot vacuum technology is the ability for robots to self-empty their dustbin. The i3+ is one of the cheapest models currently available which offers this – in comparison, if you opt for iRobot’s s9+ model, which also has the dirt disposal feature, this will set you back almost £1,500. The self-emptying feature is a huge draw for consumers, especially as the small bin capacity of robot vacuums is often the most complained about feature. Automatic dirt disposal means you don’t have to worry about the vacuum not finishing the cleaning job due to a full bin, plus it minimises your exposure to dust and allergens.
The base holds up to sixty days worth of dirt, and the i3+ easily found the base each time it needed to empty its bin, before returning to exactly the spot where it had been previously cleaning. One downside of this is that you need to make sure the robot has easy access to the base by either keeping all of your doors open so that it can find its way back, or moving the base into the specific room that the i3+ is working in to ensure that it will be able to complete the clean.
You do also need to bear in mind that both the i3+ and s9+ need a larger area of your home for its base as they are taller than standard charging bases, so make sure you have a free corner to place it in. Its plain black design is inoffensive and once you’ve chosen a spot for it out of sight, you do soon forget it’s there.
A key difference between the two models is that the i3+ doesn’t have smart home mapping, which the s9+ does feature. You can, however, view on the app a map of where the i3+ has cleaned, how long it took and how many times the bin was emptied. We also found that this vacuum was far quieter than the s9+ (more on that later), meaning you didn’t have to leave the room while it cleaned around you. Its straight line navigation ensured that it vacuumed all floor areas – it had some difficulty capturing dirt from room corners, but the edge-sweeping brush did manage to sweep in the larger pieces of fluff and dust.
The width of the actual robot is slightly thinner than the s9+, so it was able to clean under the sofa during testing, which was a definite plus. The vacuum moved across rooms and different floor surfaces with ease, providing a comprehensive clean, although it clearly worked best on hard floors and low to medium pile carpet. On rugs and high pile carpet it slightly struggled to suck up all of the dirt and dust, whereas the s9+’s suction power enabled it to clean these types of surfaces swiftly and easily.