The Complete version is repeatedly praised for shipping with lots of useful extras, including spare bags, filters, brushes, mop pads, and cleaning solutions.
The X60’s lifting system is a standout feature on paper and in many threshold tests, although some reviewers said it is not always refined or universally helpful in real homes.
Reviewers who commented on appearance described the X60 as sleek, modern, and premium-looking, with upscale finishes.
The related PowerDetect design was described as sleek and premium-looking, though the UV Reveal itself is more functional than flashy.
Smart features are extensive, from mapping controls and automation to dirt detection and voice integrations, but not every reviewer found those advanced features equally reliable or worthwhile.
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 corner air jet can help push debris into the cleaning path, but it is not universally successful and can sometimes scatter mess instead.
Area-rug handling is a weak spot in at least one review, where chassis-lift behavior hurt vacuuming on lower rugs and still did not fully protect thicker carpet.
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.
Setup was described as especially easy, with quick app connection and a smooth initial onboarding experience.
Setup is generally straightforward, with easy dock assembly, app onboarding, and quick first maps, although full initial setup can still take around an hour.
Charging is a consistent plus thanks to roughly 80-minute fast charging, while battery performance itself ranges from solid to only average once max-power cleaning is involved.
Battery life consistently tracks close to Shark's three-hour claim, and the robot reliably returns to recharge or service itself when needed.
The dock bag setup is well featured, but the onboard dustbin is a recurring tradeoff: reviewers liked the bag capacity and bin design, yet several called the robot’s internal bin small.
The bagless dock is a standout convenience, avoiding disposable bags and making debris removal simple, though owners still need to watch bin fullness.
One review explicitly called the build robust, pairing the slim form with a durable-feeling body.
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.
On medium-pile carpet, the X60 posts clearly above-average deep-clean results in multiple tests, though exact scores vary by reviewer and setup.
Debris prevention is not flawless: in one torture-style test the auto-empty process jammed under a very heavy load.
One benchmark-heavy review went so far as to place the X60 at the top of its current robot-vacuum rankings.
App and control feedback is mixed: some reviewers found the mapping tools and redesigned app intuitive, while others called the software cluttered, confusing, or merely second-best to Roborock.
Corner cleaning is a strength when the side brush and edge systems deploy correctly, though perfection is not always claimed.
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.
At least one test specifically praised the X60’s grout cleaning, suggesting good pickup from grooves and textured hard-floor gaps.
The X60’s blue or proactive light is repeatedly described as helping it spot dust, stains, or debris that cameras alone might miss.
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.
Docking and auto-emptying work well enough in normal conditions, but some reviews still stop short of calling the system flawless.
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.
Dock noise is better than average in the supporting reviews, with self-emptying described as relatively subdued rather than startling.
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.
Stain removal is a real strength overall, with strong coffee and hot-sauce results, though one review stressed that moisture and settings matter.
Ease of use is generally good thanks to simple setup and intuitive controls, though not every reviewer agreed the deeper settings remain easy.
Edge cleaning is good in the best cases, especially along baseboards, but some homes with quarter-round or similar moldings expose clear weaknesses.
Edge cleaning on hard floors is a strength, with reviewers noting good wall, cabinet, and room-edge coverage during mopping.
Emptying results are generally good in normal use, but not spotless, with leftover crumbs or maintenance caveats still appearing in some reviews.
The filter clearly captures fine dust and debris, but at least one review said it still needs frequent manual cleaning after auto-emptying.
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.
One hands-on review explicitly said the X60 left the floor looking comfortingly shiny after mopping.
Carpet hair pickup is excellent in the supporting reviews, ranging from near-total cat-hair pickup to a perfect flattened-pet-hair score.
Hair management is a major strength. Multiple reviewers reported little to no hair wrap, and several highlighted the anti-tangle dual-brush design.
Fine-dust pickup on hard floors is strong, with reviewers calling out litter dust, coffee grounds, or similar small debris as well handled.
The X60 generally handles larger dry messes well on hard floors, from cat litter and rice to leaves, paper, sand, and other chunky debris.
An onboard blue light or similar assist light is explicitly mentioned as part of the X60’s sensing hardware.
The heating story is mixed. Several reviews praised heated mopping or hot pad washing, while others said real on-floor heat is brief or falls short of the advertising.
The X60 is portrayed as technically ambitious, with at least one review calling its slim body plus strong threshold climbing a major engineering achievement.
Compared with competing robot mops, the UV-guided stain targeting and deliberate re-scrubbing feel more distinctive and more useful than most novelty features.
One reviewer specifically framed the fast obstacle reactions as useful in homes where kids leave toys on the floor.
One ad-vs-reality test found the X60 handled peanuts and similar larger debris well enough to count as a pass, though not perfectly.
The slim body is one of the X60’s most repeated positives, especially for low-clearance spaces and homes with furniture other robots cannot reach under.
Maintenance is reduced compared with simpler robots, but not eliminated: reviewers still mention water use, dock cleanup, filter upkeep, and pad wear as ongoing chores.
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.
Mapping tools can be strong, but path efficiency is inconsistent. Several reviews noted below-average navigation efficiency, occasional missed areas, repeated passes, or getting lost.
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.
One review praised the ability to remove mop pads before carpet vacuuming, calling it a standout carpet-protection feature.
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.
Mopping is broadly strong, especially on everyday hard-floor cleaning and many stain tests, but a few reviews said specific messes, settings, or marketing claims keep it from being flawless.
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.
Noise was generally described as impressively restrained for a flagship with this much suction, though it is still louder on max than lower-power cleaning modes.
Running noise from the robot itself trends on the loud side, with at least one reviewer calling it rattly even at medium power.
Obstacle avoidance is one of the X60’s signature strengths, with many reviews praising its reactions around cords, toys, and other objects, even if a few tests still found misses.
Obstacle avoidance is above average and often strong around furniture, cables, shoes, and thresholds, though it is not flawless.
Odor handling is a plus, with pet-odor solution support and positive comments about the dock avoiding bad smells during routine use.
Shark's deodorizer and hot-dry dock features help with odor management and mildew prevention, adding convenience for homes with frequent mopping.
Ownership-cost concerns appear in at least one review because Dreame is said to approve only its own floor-cleaning solution.
Recurring ownership costs are lower than many premium rivals because the dock is bagless, though filters and normal maintenance still remain.
Automation and low-touch cleaning are recurring strengths, especially with self-emptying, self-maintenance, and hands-free daily upkeep.
Overall sentiment is positive: most reviewers called the X60 one of the best or most capable robots they tested, even when they also flagged tradeoffs.
Overall sentiment is strongly positive: most reviewers came away impressed, especially by hard-floor cleaning and dock automation.
Pet-focused extras show up repeatedly, including flattened pet-hair performance, pet-odor detergent support, and app features aimed at pet zones and pet-related cleaning.
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.
At least one critical review argued the X60’s performance does not justify its $1,700 price, despite acknowledging real strengths.
Value is the biggest tension point: several reviewers think the performance helps justify the price, but around $1,300 is still a serious ask.
Privacy handling is a relative plus because Shark says image processing stays on-device and the camera is not exposed as a security feature.
Runtime is adequate rather than class-leading. Some reviewers reported solid coverage or long sessions, while others found square-footage-per-charge only middling at higher settings.
Dock self-maintenance is a major strength overall, with repeated praise for hot-water pad washing, hot-air drying, and strong mop-cleaning performance.
Feature longevity got a qualified note in one review, which said Matter support may depend on future firmware updates.
The liquid system is one of the X60’s richer features, with repeated mentions of dual detergent compartments, pet formulas, and automated mixing or dispensing.
One reviewer specifically praised the redesigned dock for being smaller and taking up less space than the previous generation.
One review specifically praised the X60 for leaving a streak-free sheen after mopping.
Threshold handling is strong in some homes and tests, but not universally foolproof, with reports ranging from no issues to stranding or wheel-suspension errors.
NeverStuck-style lifting helps the robot escape thresholds and tricky furniture better than average, reducing rescues even when obstacles do slow it briefly.
Across multiple tests, reviewers repeatedly highlighted the X60’s very high suction output and strong real-world pickup, even if one airflow test said raw pressure did not fully translate into the absolute best measured seal.
One negative review said the X60 did not suit a cramped, cluttered home especially well.
Early sentiment in one review was cautious rather than fully confident, citing Dreame’s mixed reputation for long-term reliability and customer support.
Under-furniture cleaning is one of the clearest X60 advantages, with several reviewers saying the low body let it reach places other robots missed.
Its roughly 3-inch height lets it reach under some furniture that bulkier robot vacuums can miss.
Value is where enthusiasm cools: some reviewers liked the product overall but still questioned whether the premium price beats cheaper Dreame or rival alternatives.
The X60 is consistently described as able to vacuum or mop well, but some reviews say the result depends heavily on settings and home layout.
The water tanks are usable but not generous; one review estimated them as smaller than the previous model’s tanks.
The water system is thoughtfully designed, with comfortable tank handling and enough capacity for multiple cleanings before it needs attention.
One review called the overall unit relatively heavy, which could matter for portability.