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Best Memorial Day Vacuum Deals Still Available: Last Chance to Score Up to $500 Off Dyson, iRobot, Shark and More

Best Memorial Day Vacuum Deals Still Available: Last Chance to Score Up to $500 Off Dyson, iRobot, Shark and More

CNET27-05-2025
If you didn't shop Memorial Day sales this weekend, don't fret. Last-minute shoppers can still find lingering Memorial Day deals you can snatch up, and if you've been considering upgrading your old vacuum cleaner now's the time. Many offers are now back to full price, but if you act fast you can still score savings. Whether you're looking for a robot vacuum that'll do the work for you, a middle-of-the-pack cordless vacuum or a traditional corded cleaner, there are plenty of excellent vacuum deals available to fit your needs, especially from big retailers like Amazon and Best Buy. Just note that these deals are now in their final hours, so don't dilly-dally.
Hey, did you know? CNET Deals texts are free, easy and save you money.
We've made your hunt a bit easier by rounding up our favorite Memorial Day vacuum discounts that are still available below. We'll continue to update this page with the latest last-chance deals, so check back often. Also keep an eye out for lingering deals on everyday essentials, headphones, TVs and other tech gear.
Levoit LVAC-200 cordless stick vacuum: $150
Another one of our favorite cordless vacuums, the LVAC-200, is a super affordable option that just got a nice price cut. It cleans well on different types of floors. It also comes with five-stage filtration for particles. Best of all, it has an LED light on the front of the vac, a feature usually seen in more expensive options.
Details
Save $50 $150 at Amazon
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Dreame L10 Ultra robot vacuum (2nd generation): $460
This beast of a robot is now almost half off. Not only does it vacuum around the house without you needing to lift a finger, it also mops too. It features automatic mop washing, drying and auto empties for 75 days. Plus it has an extremely powerful suction power of 10,000Pa, ensuring every spec of debris is gone.
Details
Save $440 $460 at Dreame
Close
Bissell CleanView compact upright vacuum: $50
This Bissell vacuum is a traditional vacuum but at less than 8 pounds, it's not too difficult to push around. It has an easy empty dirt bin so you can clean the vacuum easily. It's also pretty compact, great for those with less storage for the vacuum.
Details
Save $10 $50 at Amazon
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Dyson V15 Detect: $700
The Dyson V15 Detect is one of our favorite cordless vacs. It is extremely lightweight but still has 230W of power and 14 cyclones, ensuring every last piece of dirt and debris is picked up. It's definitely a high-end option but now you can snag it for $700. That's a $50 price increase over what it was discounted to previously, but still a nice $100 discount.
Details
Save $100 $700 at Best Buy
Close
Shark Wandvac handled vacuum: $89
If you're looking for a vacuum to take on the go or keep in your car, this is a great option. Although small, it can pick up every speck of dirt. It has a charging dock for quick and quiet charging. The vac weighs less than 2 pounds and comes with a crevice tool for those hard-to-reach spots.
Details
Save $27 $89 at Walmart
Close
Yeedi M12 Pro+ robot vacuum and mop: $400
Our favorite robo vac and mop combo for hardwood floors is now well over 50% off. We love it because it smartly navigates around furniture and other objects and it's great at picking up pet hair. The hair doesn't get tangled in the vac, either.
It even comes with one liter of cleaning solution for free.
Details
Save $500 $400 at Yeedi
Close
More Memorial Day vacuum deals:
What else is on sale for Memorial Day?
We saw many different discounts across multiple categories this Memorial Day. A lot of deals have ended, but you can still score savings on appliances, TVs, mattresses and more. Here is a roundup of the best Memorial Day deals still available to shop right now.
How we choose the best Memorial Day deals
Our team of expert shoppers and deal hunters has spent years sorting through major sales and deals, helping readers understand which are legitimately good. That includes Black Friday, Prime Day, Memorial Day and countless other shopping events. We've become good at weeding out scams and superficial deals, so you only get the best available.
We look for real discounts, quality reviews and remaining sale time when choosing a deal to include.
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Last week's big winners and losers reveal where the stock market is headed
Last week's big winners and losers reveal where the stock market is headed

CNBC

time16 minutes ago

  • CNBC

Last week's big winners and losers reveal where the stock market is headed

You can learn an awful lot by looking at the list of stocks that made new highs last week — and the list of stocks that hit new lows. Foremost, they can tell you what is and isn't working in this market, especially during earnings season. We saw many groups roll over and only one, the data center, really advance. The combination of Friday's weak employment number , more discriminatory tariffs , and President Donald Trump's anger, brought out sellers after a very long run up. The selling is real and it will take an end to speculative excess and endless tariff news to get us to restart, and I don't see it happening. I hear the usual geniuses talk about how dip-buying is as stupid as ever, even as though it has been fabulous since 1982. I see a landscape that wants to go lower, but I also see earnings that don't justify big declines, just a drift until something great happens. And I don't mean Fed Chair Jerome Powell quitting. Let's start — and end — with some cracks in the Magnificent Seven. The growth in Microsoft's Azure cloud business and the breakout of Meta's multiple revenue streams explain the incredible gains of those two Club names — gains strong enough that they both made the list of new highs. The perceived weakness of Amazon's 17% gain in web services versus the whopping 39% gain in the smaller but all-powerful Azure certainly helped. Amazon put up $30.9 billion in revenues in its AWS cloud unit. That's obviously a ton of business, but it was flat with the previous quarter and only equal to the estimates. Microsoft's cloud acceleration in the quarter was jaw-dropping. The staggering distance between Azure's triumphant growth and Amazon's perceived slowing led to a rally in Microsoft's stock and a sell-off in Amazon shares — losses which triggered immense soul-searching. Was Microsoft real? Or was it inflated by its partnership with OpenAI and its ChatGPT function, which reigns supreme? The burgeoning ChatGPT roster was a big reason why OpenAI was able to raise $8.3 billion this week at a $300 billion valuation. That little-noticed fact should have turned more heads, and that alone could explain some of this week's craziness. After all, design software company Figma only raised $1.2 billion in its initial public offering Thursday, a puny deal, but it still managed to capture everyone's attention. (More on that later.) There was lots of grousing about Microsoft benefitting from the surge in OpenAI business. Some experts liken the partnership to that of Trump and Tesla CEO Elon Musk, and predict it too will soon flame out, meaning that huge stream of Open AI revenue could go away. But the amount of fear instilled by AWS critics was behind the huge sell-off in Amazon . As I made my calls to sources Friday, I kept hearing that AWS, built to sell product, isn't built to help create new businesses based on AI. There is some truth here. AWS has fallen behind Microsoft in the cloud. I also believe that it doesn't have enough Nvidia product and has too much of its own chips, which are considered inferior by the fresh-faced AI developers even as it regarded as darned good for DevOps. Amazon is underspending its competitors. That's highly unusual and not good, and it's all that people cared about last week. I wish it didn't matter, but after this quarter Amazon's status as one of the greatest companies on Earth is now going to be considered suspect. The conference call was dispiriting, with CEO Andy Jassy giving a long and unnecessary soul-searching answer to Morgan Stanley analyst Brian Nowak's question about Amazon falling behind in generative. A do-over on that question would help, but there are none. All of the great data about retail meant nothing. Sure, we own Meta and Microsoft, but the stock of Amazon now worries me, even though I would never count these guys out in a gunfight. 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IKEA Will Start Selling Its Products at THIS Big-Box Store for the First Time Ever
IKEA Will Start Selling Its Products at THIS Big-Box Store for the First Time Ever

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IKEA Will Start Selling Its Products at THIS Big-Box Store for the First Time Ever

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Watch These Amazon Stock Price Levels After Post-Earnings Tumble
Watch These Amazon Stock Price Levels After Post-Earnings Tumble

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timean hour ago

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Watch These Amazon Stock Price Levels After Post-Earnings Tumble

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