At least one detailed review calls out a sparse accessory bundle, with limited spares included by default and some extras (like an additional main brush) varying by market. Plan to buy consumables and replacement parts earlier than you might expect for a premium-priced robot.
Multiple reviewers emphasize that the S5X does not have the higher-end chassis-lift system found on pricier Curv variants. It can still handle small thresholds (commonly described around 2 cm or roughly 3/4 inch), but may struggle on taller transitions or inconsistent thresholds.
The related PowerDetect design was described as sleek and premium-looking, though the UV Reveal itself is more functional than flashy.
Multiple reviews praise the Curv styling, describing a clean, glossy, rounded look that some compare to a Stormtrooper aesthetic. The S5X is commonly noted as white-only, and the dock design is appreciated for looking tidy when the robot is docked.
Smart features are broad, including app control, room cleaning, schedules, voice assistants, and stain-aware automation, but the app and map editing are not as polished as the best rivals.
The Roborock app is repeatedly called excellent, with deep customization, schedules, routines, water-flow control, and feature toggles like remopping logic and Do Not Disturb behavior. Voice-assistant integration is supported, but the S5X lacks the built-in assistant found on some higher-end models.
The corner air jet can help push debris into the cleaning path, but it is not universally successful and can sometimes scatter mess instead.
Mixed-floor and rug handling is strong overall: rugs often look refreshed, and the robot transitions between vacuuming and mopping better than many combo bots.
Area-rug handling is mixed: low-pile rugs are manageable, but small or lightweight mats can cause the robot to get stuck or need rescue. Reviewers recommend removing problematic mats or adjusting cleaning zones to avoid frequent interruptions.
Setup is generally straightforward, with easy dock assembly, app onboarding, and quick first maps, although full initial setup can still take around an hour.
Setup is described as straightforward: QR-based onboarding, Wi-Fi connection, and initial mapping are generally easy to complete. Reviewers recommend spending time customizing maps and routines, while noting some optional smart-home integrations may take extra steps compared to basic setup.
Battery life consistently tracks close to Shark's three-hour claim, and the robot reliably returns to recharge or service itself when needed.
Battery and charging are discussed positively, including fast-charging support via the dock. While detailed runtime numbers vary by settings and home size, reviews present the system as suitable for larger apartments and routine daily cleaning with dock-based recharging.
The bagless dock is a standout convenience, avoiding disposable bags and making debris removal simple, though owners still need to watch bin fullness.
The dock’s bagged auto-empty system is repeatedly highlighted for convenience, with claims/estimates around a multi-week dust-bag life (often referenced as up to about seven weeks). Bags are easy to swap, but the included spares are limited, so ongoing refills are expected.
Carpet performance is acceptable to good on everyday carpeting, but thicker or longer-pile carpet exposes weaker pickup, especially with fine debris like kitty litter.
Low-pile rugs and carpets are workable but not the robot’s strongest area, with reviewers noting that thorough carpet cleaning may require multiple passes and/or higher suction. Several reviews explicitly position the S5X as best for mostly hard-floor homes rather than carpet-dominant layouts.
No summary yet.
Controls are centered on the Roborock app, with reviewers highlighting live map views, room-by-room customization, water-flow levels, and the ability to add a targeted cleanup area. Some note that smart-speaker/voice integrations can be more complicated than basic in-app control, and model naming can be confusing.
Corner cleaning looks better than average thanks to the side brush and edge reach, with at least one reviewer seeing it grab debris from very tight corners.
Corner performance is frequently highlighted as strong due to the FlexiArm side brush and extendable mop behaviors. Some video testing shows occasional corner misses on a first attempt, but targeted area cleaning or a second pass typically corrects this.
Crevice and edge reach are a highlight due to the FlexiArm side brush and extendable mop behavior, but reviews still mention that deep grooves or tight crevices can retain a small amount of debris. Some caution that enabling aggressive crevice-extension features can increase cable snagging in cord-heavy zones.
The UV system is the product's defining trick and a genuinely useful one on hard floors, making hidden stains and dirty spots easier to detect and target.
A standout feature in the video reviews is the dock’s dirt-detection logic that can trigger a remopping event after the robot washes its pads. Reviewers note it may require enabling in the app, and they credit it with improving results on dirtier zones after the first pass.
The dock is one of the vacuum's strongest assets, handling self-emptying, mop washing, drying, and re-prep with little intervention and generally dependable behavior.
The multifunction dock is repeatedly described as the product’s key value: bagged auto-empty, mop washing with heated water, mop drying with warm air, and water refilling to keep hands-on effort low. Reliability feedback is strongly positive overall, with the auto-empty step being quick but louder.
Dock-related noise is mixed: auto-emptying and pad washing are loud enough to notice, while pad drying is usually described as a softer background hum.
Dock noise is acknowledged as noticeable during auto-emptying, but reviewers emphasize it is short-lived. Outside of the emptying burst, overall sound levels are described as relatively manageable for a premium robot vacuum/mop combo.
Edge cleaning on hard floors is a strength, with reviewers noting good wall, cabinet, and room-edge coverage during mopping.
No summary yet.
The bagged auto-empty design and contained disposal are praised for keeping mess low when emptying. The process can be the loudest part of operation, but it is described as brief and largely hands-off.
Dust containment is a plus thanks to the sealed, anti-allergen bagless base, although this benefit is described more as a feature claim than a heavily tested differentiator.
Reviews mention a standard replaceable/cleanable filter and bagged dust collection at the dock, which helps keep dust contained. The app’s maintenance section and part-life tracking are used as the practical way to manage filtration upkeep rather than any standout filtration claims.
Hair pickup on carpets is generally good but not perfect, with reviewers sometimes observing a few hairs left behind after a pass. A second pass and stronger suction profiles improve results, aligning with broader comments that carpet performance trails hard-floor performance.
Hair pickup on hard floors is consistently described as excellent, with reviewers noting the robot handles pet and human hair well during routine cleaning. This is frequently tied to the brush design that reduces wrapping and keeps hair moving toward the inlet.
Anti-tangle performance is a major strength across reviews, with split/DuoDivide-style rollers and zero-tangle brush design repeatedly credited for reducing hair wrap. This improves day-to-day reliability for pet owners and reduces how often users need to manually cut hair off the brush.
Hard-floor cleaning is repeatedly described as a strength, with reviewers reporting consistently strong results on smooth surfaces. Performance is framed as especially satisfying when paired with the dock’s automation and edge/corner extensions.
For everyday debris like crumbs and tracked-in dirt, reviewers generally report strong intake on hard floors, often with solid first-pass results. Heavier or messier areas may benefit from two-pass patterns or spot-cleaning routines.
At least one hands-on video highlights a built-in light on the robot, which the reviewer appreciates for navigation/visibility in darker areas. This is treated as a nice-to-have rather than a headline cleaning feature.
Heated mop-pad washing is a key point across reviews, with water heating (often referenced around 75 C) used to clean pads more effectively. This is framed as a premium dock feature that supports hygiene and reduces manual scrubbing of mop pads.
Compared with competing robot mops, the UV-guided stain targeting and deliberate re-scrubbing feel more distinctive and more useful than most novelty features.
The robot is described as low enough to reach under many furniture pieces (often cited around a 98 mm height), but the top LiDAR turret still sets the clearance requirement. Reviews indicate it performs well under common couches and cabinets where clearance is adequate.
Maintenance looks manageable, with rinseable filters and largely self-servicing dock routines, but owners still need to empty tanks and keep an eye on debris capacity.
Maintenance is repeatedly described as low-effort thanks to auto-emptying and automated mop washing/drying, plus app-based reminders for parts. The remaining chores are refilling/emptying water tanks, occasional dock base cleaning, and replacing consumables on schedule.
Mapping is usually fast and reasonably accurate, but one-floor-only maps, finicky room edits, and occasional routing glitches keep navigation from feeling fully premium.
LiDAR-based navigation is consistently praised for producing reliable maps and efficient paths. Reviewers highlight strong mapping accuracy, live tracking in the app, and generally confident room-to-room navigation in typical home layouts.
The mop lifting and detach-reattach system is widely praised because it avoids dragging wet pads over carpet and makes mixed-floor cleaning far more practical.
Mop lifting is consistently cited around a 10 mm lift when carpet is detected, enabling mixed vacuum+mop routines with reduced risk of wetting rugs. Reviews describe this as effective for typical transitions, though very plush carpets and small mats can still be problematic for navigation.
Mopping is the star of the show, with repeated praise for stain removal, return-to-scrub behavior, and floors that often look close to hand-mopped.
Mopping performance earns strong praise, especially in video tests cleaning muddy paw prints and in written reviews describing time savings versus manual mopping. The dock’s wash-and-dry process plus optional remopping is credited with keeping results consistent over time.
Running noise from the robot itself trends on the loud side, with at least one reviewer calling it rattly even at medium power.
Noise is described as relatively low during mopping at lower water flow and acceptable during standard vacuuming. The loudest moments tend to be MAX+ suction and the brief auto-empty cycle at the dock, which reviewers note is quick.
Obstacle avoidance is above average and often strong around furniture, cables, shoes, and thresholds, though it is not flawless.
Obstacle avoidance is described as good for larger items (like toys, shoes, or furniture legs), but cables remain a clear weakness where the robot may snag or run them over. Compared with camera-based variants, reviewers suggest avoidance is slightly reduced, making pre-tidying important.
Shark's deodorizer and hot-dry dock features help with odor management and mildew prevention, adding convenience for homes with frequent mopping.
Hot-air drying at the dock is repeatedly credited with reducing mop-pad odor and mold risk. Some reviewers still note dirty-water tank smell can be unpleasant if neglected, and suggest regular emptying (and optional deodorizing tricks) as part of ownership.
Recurring ownership costs are lower than many premium rivals because the dock is bagless, though filters and normal maintenance still remain.
Ongoing costs are primarily dust bags, filters, and occasional brush/mop-pad replacements. Reviews suggest parts are widely available and reasonably priced, but the limited included spares mean these costs show up sooner in ownership.
Overall sentiment is strongly positive: most reviewers came away impressed, especially by hard-floor cleaning and dock automation.
Overall sentiment across sources is strongly positive, with video reviewers calling it a top recommendation and a written review rating it around 4/5. The most consistent caveats are cable handling, small-mat reliability, and carpet performance that can require extra passes.
Packaging is described as protective and information-rich, with clear visuals communicating key features. The main drawback mentioned is the box size and weight, which can make carrying/unboxing easier with help.
Pet households are a good fit because the robot handles drool, food areas, tracked-in debris, and a lot of pet hair well, even if some carpet hair can remain.
Across reviews, the S5X is positioned as pet-friendly mainly due to strong hair handling and effective mopping for paw prints. The lack of a front camera is seen as a privacy win, but it also removes camera-based pet tracking/remote viewing features found on pricier models.
Value is the biggest tension point: several reviewers think the performance helps justify the price, but around $1,300 is still a serious ask.
Value is framed as strong when discounted and as a smarter buy than camera-equipped, chassis-lift premium variants for many households. Reviewers still call it expensive at full price, but see it as a balanced way to get a premium dock and strong cleaning without paying top-tier flagship pricing.
Privacy handling is a relative plus because Shark says image processing stays on-device and the camera is not exposed as a security feature.
A core differentiator highlighted in multiple reviews is the absence of a front camera, which reduces privacy concerns for many buyers. The main tradeoff is giving up camera-based remote viewing and certain advanced object-identification behaviors found on pricier camera-equipped models.
The dock’s self-cleaning behaviors (scrapers/wipers and a removable base) are praised for reducing manual cleanup. Reviews still note that buildup can occur over time and the removable dock base makes periodic rinsing/wiping more practical.
Firmware updates are explicitly recommended in at least one review, with an auto-update option and the expectation of bug fixes and improvements. Some future feature support is discussed (for example, Matter support in a software update), but timing and delivery are not confirmed by reviewers.
Reviews note there is no dedicated solution bottle/tank on the dock, so users add cleaning solution manually into the clean-water tank. This keeps the system simple but adds a small recurring manual step for those who want solution-assisted mopping.
On heavier wet messes, reviewers note that a first pass can leave minor smearing, but the system’s remopping logic and/or two-pass patterns substantially reduce residue. For typical maintenance mopping, overall feedback remains strongly positive.
NeverStuck-style lifting helps the robot escape thresholds and tricky furniture better than average, reducing rescues even when obstacles do slow it briefly.
Stuck events are most often tied to loose cables and small/lightweight rugs or bath mats. Reviewers recommend pre-tidying cords and managing small mats to improve reliability, and some note that aggressive crevice/edge extensions can increase snag risk in cord-heavy areas.
Reviews consistently describe strong suction (often cited around 17,000 Pa) with impressive hard-floor pickup and generally good carpet vacuuming for a robot. Turbo/MAX modes improve pickup but raise noise, so many users rely on extra passes instead of always running at max.
Support impressions vary by channel, with at least one reviewer preferring to purchase through Amazon for smoother returns and warranty handling. Brand support is described as better than some competitors, but not always seamless, so retailer-based support is seen as a practical hedge.
Its roughly 3-inch height lets it reach under some furniture that bulkier robot vacuums can miss.
Under-furniture access is generally good as long as clearance meets the robot’s height, with reviews citing it can clean under many sofas and cabinets. The LiDAR turret means ultra-low furniture can still be a limitation, so low-clearance zones may need no-go rules.
The water system is thoughtfully designed, with comfortable tank handling and enough capacity for multiple cleanings before it needs attention.
The clean/dirty water tank system is frequently described as convenient, with reviewers citing generous capacities (for example, 4 L clean and 3 L dirty in one review) and automatic refilling of the robot’s internal tank. Users still need to periodically refill and empty tanks, especially in heavy mopping households.