Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A Hits Record $600 Low

Roborock Qrevo Edge S5A Hits Record $600 Low

> At a Glance

> – Roborock’s flagship robot vacuum-mop drops to $600 on Amazon and Roborock.com

> – $400 cut from the usual $1,000 tag-one of the steepest discounts to date

> – 18 500 Pa suction, hot-water mop wash, 60-day hands-free bin

> – Why it matters: Premium automation for pet hair and mixed floors is suddenly mid-range money

A one-day-only vibe is surrounding Roborock’s top-tier robot helper. The Qrevo Edge S5A-normally a four-figure splurge-can be bagged for $600 right now, matching the lowest price News Of Los Angeles has tracked.

What the Deal Delivers

Inside the circular chassis is 18 500 Pa of suction paired with zero-tangle DuoDivide and FlexiArm Arc brushes. Dual 200 RPM pads lift automatically when carpet is sensed, so rugs don’t get soggy.

The 3.0 dock handles the dirty work:

  • Hot-water mop washing
  • Warm-air drying
  • Auto dust emptying into a 2.7 L bag (good for 60 days)
  • Water-tank refills on demand
robot

Smarts Under the Hood

PreciSense LiDAR maps rooms while Reactive Tech dodges stray shoes. Through the app you can:

  • Draw no-go zones
  • Set 30 water-flow levels
  • Tweak drying times
  • Get maintenance pings

Voice control? Alexa, Google Home and most smartwatches are supported.

Key Takeaways

  • $600 matches the robot’s all-time low; both Amazon and Roborock.com honor it
  • 18 500 Pa suction and hair-safe brushes target pet owners
  • 60-day self-emptying plus hot-water mop wash rival machines that cost far more

If you’ve waited for a do-it-all cleaner without the four-figure sting, this markdown is the cue to finally let a robot take the chore load into 2026.

Author

  • My name is Sophia A. Reynolds, and I cover business, finance, and economic news in Los Angeles.

    Sophia A. Reynolds is a Neighborhoods Reporter for News of Los Angeles, covering hyperlocal stories often missed by metro news. With a background in bilingual community reporting, she focuses on tenants, street vendors, and grassroots groups shaping life across LA’s neighborhoods.

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