
I tested Eufy's E28 3-in-1 robot vacuum, and it's a triple threat for quick cleaning
After a promising yet clumsy first generation, some of the best robot vacuums are having a second renaissance, with big-name manufacturers getting in on the action and loading them with ever-impressive features and tech.
These auto janitors promise to love the laborious jobs you hate, including vacuuming floors, self-emptying dustbins, and even mopping.
Offering instant appeal, particularly for messy households, time-poor professionals, and those who might not be as mobile as they once were.
I've previously owned the Eufy RoboVac 11S, and while it helped me keep on top of household cleaning, its lack of map function meant it forever needed to be rescued from chair bases and under sofas.
Now, here comes Eufy with the Omni E28, a premium 3-in-1 model that not only vacuums and mops but also spot cleans.
But can it do these jobs well, saving you space, time, and effort?
Prepare your wallets — the Eufy will set you back $999.99, which isn't cheap for a robot vac and mop, though remember, it comes with a detachable spot cleaner. It also undercuts the pricier $1,499 Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni, which only features a dual vac and mop.
You can also opt for the cheaper Eufy E25, which costs $899.99 and is essentially the same as the E28, minus the spot cleaner.
You also need to replace the 3-liter dustbag once full, which Eufy sells for $18.99 for a pack of three. There's also the matter of buying detergent, which is available for $20.99 for one bottle, which reportedly lasts 3-6 months.
The E28 is now available to buy on Eufy's website or via Amazon.
The E28 is quite the unit — unlike smaller robot vacs you can discreetly place under a chair, this one, with its boxy base station and deep cleaner hose compartment, takes a fair bit of space. The recommended clearance area is 20 inches on either side, so consider that in your placement.
Even though it comprises an all-plastic design, the cleaner looks the part, with its transparent water tank and illuminated status ring, which glows red if there's a problem. The detachable deep cleaner sits atop the base and comes with a handle for you to lift, taking the clean and dirty water tanks with you.
Its hose is also hidden from view with a removable cover, so while the base unit isn't exactly subtle, everything looks neat and tidy, with no unnecessary clutter.
The vacuum and mop robot sticks out from the base unit about halfway, taking up nearly all the ramp space. This roundish device packs a dodgem-styled bumper at the front and various sensors at the front and rear, including a top sensor — so it can literally read the room, a detachable, clear plastic plate for accessing the dustbin, plus two illuminated buttons, one to send the unit home and the other to pause or turn off the device.
Underneath are two spinning brushes, two detangling roller brushes, a wide roller mop, and three wheels, two of which are of the chunky variety on a spring suspension system for navigating uneven surfaces. One of the detangling brushes sits on an extendable arm for tackling those pesky hard-to-reach corners.
Cheerios
Kitty litter
Pet hair
Hardwood floor
55
95
85
Carpet
35
72.5
80
We put robot vacuums through their paces using standardized tests so we can objectively measure their performance against different models. Alongside everyday usage, I placed the Eufy E28 within a 5-by-5 foot space with Cheerios, pet hair, and kitty litter on a laminated hardwood floor and low-pile carpet.
I used 20g of Cheerios, 20g of kitty litter, and 5g of pet hair to determine how much the vacuum sucks up and how much remains as a percentage.
While the E28 performed well with the kitty litter and pet hair tests, only missing a few morsels, it weirdly struggled with the Cheerios. It refused to clean the entire marked-off area, leading me to surmise that it confuses bunched-up groups of the cereal as obstacles to avoid rather than objects to suck up. I even ran the same test a few times to make sure the result wasn't an outlier, with similar results.
Finally, I tried a few handfuls of Cheerios across a wider area, and while it still avoided congregations of the hoop-based cereal, it was more eager to pick up smaller groups and strays. Most probably a case of the object detection working against itself.
As you can see from the table, the Cheerios test score puts the E28 way below its rivals, even though it has fairly comparable scores for the kitty litter and pet hair tests. That's a little disappointing and hopefully something Eufy can rectify via a future firmware update.
I have to add that this didn't reflect my experience of the E28 during everyday use, where it had no such issues hoovering up individual bits of dirt and debris, albeit neglecting the odd bit here and there. When in use for the first time, it'll do a quick tour of the rooms to create a map you can see on the app before getting to work cleaning. It can also avoid things like shoes, wires, bins, and other rogue items.
Its CornerRover feature is pretty neat, extending out the spinning brush for corner coverage, which most vacuums have trouble with, let alone circular robo vacs.
Overall score
Cereal
Kitty litter
Pet hair
Eufy E28
70.4
45
83.75
82.5
Ecovacs Deebot X8 Pro Omni
88.6
94.7
98.7
72.5
Shark PowerDetect 2-in-1
94.6
99.8
91.5
92.5
Roborock S7 MaxV Ultra
91.26
99.8
95.73
78.25
Samsung JetBot AI+
89.51
99.63
90.4
78.5
Roomba j7+
91.81
98.33
94.6
82.5
Roomba s9+
96.82
92.5
100
98
Roborock S4 Max
96.25
98.38
96.38
94
At one point, it clambered over the sloped base of a toilet and got itself wedged between that and the wall, Austin Powers style. Still, besides this, it generally does a decent job of getting around and out of tight spaces like under sofas and horizontal chair legs. Another quirk I've noticed is that the sides occasionally bump into things like table legs and other objects, while it has no problem giving bigger obstacles like toys and wires a wider berth.
When done, it'll happily trundle back to its base station to deposit its findings into the base unit's dustbag and to wash its mop. Be aware that its self-clean function is loud, particularly when it's extracting the waste from the vac to the dust bag. The base unit sits in the home office, and it's proved quite a din for 10 seconds or so after cleaning.
Back to the good stuff. The base station takes a lot of the hassle out of the grimy bits of cleaning, like wringing mops dry or emptying a dusty bin. I hate the double chore of a manual vac and mop job, so by combining these functions automatically, you get a floor that's spick and span in a fraction of the time.
You still need to do some supplementary hoovering, such as in tighter spaces, on steps, and with the odd bit it's missed, but the E28 genuinely saves you a lot of time and effort so you can do something else. That's a big tick in my book, even if certain test results were more middling.
The E28 does a great job of mopping solid floors with a comprehensive level of coverage, leaving surfaces shiny and not too wet. The mop can also distinguish between hard floors and carpets or rugs before automatically lowering and raising the roller accordingly. You can also adjust the level of water used for a lighter or deeper clean, and the base unit discharges detergent automatically into the robot, so there's no need for continual top-ups.
The detachable deep cleaner also does well on stains on carpets and fabrics. I tried it on some stains on a rug and delicate soda fabric, and it's lifted them right out. Be aware that the brush head is just over 3 inches wide, so it's suited more for spot cleaning rather than whole carpets.
The Eufy E28 cleverly integrates into the Eufy's main app, which I have for its security cameras, so you're able to control both systems in one. The app allows for an impressive level of customization, including how much suction you want the vac to use, whether you want to mop, vac, or both, and setting no-go areas and auto-cleaning schedules.
The map editor is also fairly intuitive and flexible, letting you save up to five maps, where you can select which rooms to clean and which to avoid.
While it won't replace your standard vacuum anytime soon, the Eufy E28 does an acceptable job of hoovering floors, even if there's some work to do with object identification, causing it to be overzealous when avoiding certain debris. At nearly a grand in price, I was expecting it to nail all the tests and be a no-brainer purchase, but it fell short with the Cheerios, even though its day-to-day work was generally good.
The star of the show is undoubtedly its mop, which removes most of the inconveniences of manual mopping, leaving floors shiny and clean as if you're running around with a mop head several times per week. Its deep cleaner is also a worthwhile addition, particularly if you don't own one.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Android Authority
25 minutes ago
- Android Authority
Samsung Galaxy Ring drops to its all-time low price from Prime Day
Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority The Samsung Galaxy Ring is an awesome wearable, but it's expensive, and deals are hard to come by. It's rarely on sale! The best discount we've seen on it takes it down to $299.99, which is $100 in savings, and this only happened during Prime Day. Today, the same record-low price is available for everyone! Buy the Samsung Galaxy Ring for just $299.99 ($100 off) This offer is available from Amazon as a 'limited time deal.' The discount is applied automatically to all color versions of the Galaxy Ring. This includes Black, Silver, or Gold. Samsung Galaxy Ring Samsung Galaxy Ring Fancy Titanium ring, with fancy sensors The Samsung Galaxy Ring is a leap into a new device segment for Samsung. Available in nine sizes 5 through 13, this jewelry-inspired wearable is packed with sensors to track your health and fitness, and some basic controls for your smartphone. Designed for 24/7 wear. See price at Amazon Save $100.00 Limited Time Deal! As much as I like the Samsung Galaxy Ring, and everyone I know who uses one feels the same way, I find it hard to pay almost $400 for a smart ring. This $100 discount makes the price much more enticing. I am personally not much of a flashy person, which is one of the things that made me like the Samsung Galaxy Ring so much. It is really made to go unnoticed, with a minimalist design that doesn't make it look much like a high-tech gadget. It sure is more than a cheap, simple band, though. It is made of titanium, which is known for being a very light and resistant metal. It's only 7mm wide and 2.6mm thick, so it will also be very comfortable to wear. While it looks simple, there's a lot of technology inside this little ring. It has features to throw around! The Samsung Galaxy Ring can track your heart rate, blood oxygen levels, skin temperature, sleep, activity, and more. It can even help women predict their menstrual cycles! Lanh Nguyen / Android Authority This is a great health tool, but smart home enthusiasts will also love its smart home functionality. It integrates with Samsung SmartThings, and you can use it to control your smart home devices. For example, you can program it to turn off the lights when the rung detects that you are asleep. Pretty fun, right?! You can use it with any Android device, but some of the features are exclusive to Samsung. Some of these include the ability to use pinch gestures, Samsung Health data integration, access to Energy Score, and Wellness Tips. The battery life is pretty nice, as it can last about four days on a charge. You can conveniently charge it using the carrying case. As an added benefit, there is no subscription needed to use the Samsung Galaxy Ring. Kaitlyn Cimino / Android Authority Again, this is a record-low price for this product, so you might want to sign up for yours before the offer disappears. These discounts don't tend to last long. By the way, you'll have to find out and pick your ring size. Samsung has its own guide to figure out which size works best for you, so check it out before you make the purchase. Follow


CNET
25 minutes ago
- CNET
GPT-5 Is Coming. Here's What OpenAI Has Said So Far
Close followers of OpenAI's model releases are probably tired of hearing about GPT-5, the next big step in the company's line of flagship large language models. It's been expected seemingly all year. But the hints are getting stronger. Already this week, the ChatGPT maker has unveiled its open-weights models -- gpt-oss -- that have also been teased for months. These models, unlike the GPT models and other popular LLMs like Google's Gemini, offer transparency into how they work and think. Just before that release, however, CEO Sam Altman hinted that something bigger was coming too: "something big-but-small today," he posted on X, "and then a big upgrade later this week." (Disclosure: Ziff Davis, CNET's parent company, in April filed a lawsuit against OpenAI, alleging it infringed Ziff Davis copyrights in training and operating its AI systems.) The work on GPT-5 hasn't been a secret, and the hype has been intense. In a July interview with the podcaster Theo Von, Altman said he was testing the new model and asked it to interpret and write an email he had trouble understanding. "I felt useless relative to the AI in this thing that I felt like I should've been able to do and I couldn't," Altman said. (It must have been a very impressive email.) It's been a long time coming. GPT-4, current generation of the complex program behind ChatGPT and many other tools, came out in March 2023, an eternity ago in the world of large language models. There have been a lot of iterations since: GPT-4.5 rolled out in February of this year. Reasoning models have also emerged in the gap, including o3 and o4 families. GPT-5 was originally expected to happen in the early part of the year, but Altman said in April that it would be delayed a few more months. Developers found it harder than expected to integrate all of the elements they wanted, and Altman said they also wanted to be sure they had the capacity to support "what we expect to be unprecedented demand." Read more: ChatGPT Will Start Asking If You Need a Break. That May Not Be Enough to Snap a Bad Habit On Sunday, he doubled down on the capacity worries, posting on X that "although it may be slightly choppy, we think you'll really love what we've created for you!" OpenAI's rivals haven't been sitting around twiddling their thumbs. Google's Gemini 2.5 models, released in March, incorporate reasoning while also being able to handle huge prompts. Anthropic's Claude 4 models, which debuted in May, include one designed specifically for coding and complicated tasks. But it's ChatGPT that fronts the pack as the most popular default tool for users, and a new version could extend that lead. It also might not be perfect. OpenAI had to pull an update to its GPT-4o model earlier this year because it was way too nice -- like, codependent nice, like it might not push back even if you're asking about something harmful to yourself or others.


CNET
25 minutes ago
- CNET
8 Security Home Hacks For People Living Alone
Spending time alone in your home comes with perks, from setting whatever temperature you like to blasting your favorite song. But living solo is also scary if you're worried about break-ins, trespassing or scams. When it comes to home security, a bit of prep goes a long way. I've kept watch for home security technology and smart home tricks that are especially useful when no one else is around. New locks, well-placed motion detectors, the right kind of smart lights and other devices can help you feel safer and give you info about what's happening around your house or apartment. Here's what I recommend. Read more: Essential Security Tips When Staying at an Airbnb or Rental 1. Install a motion sensor or tinkly bell A basic motion sensor is a cheap way to tell if anyone is around. Amazon/HTZSAFE/CNET One of the best safety measures to take when living alone is to know when someone else is around. A traditional option is attaching a string of bells to your door handle, but we have more dependable choices these days like this $12 light-up LED motion sensor. If you prefer an outdoor alert or a motion sensor that can cover a long hallway/open floor plan, then you can choose this $35 weather-resistant sensor and hub with an adjustable chime instead. This tip works especially well for those living alone because detectors old or new can be easily triggered by kids or partners, creating more confusion than confidence. You'll want to put them at locations and heights pets can't reach or activate too. 2. Grab a portable door lock to give a room extra protection Portable locks aren't just for traveling: They can make bedrooms, home offices and other areas feel safer. Amazon/PASSDONE/CNET Portable locks can give any traditional, non-deadbolt door an extra lock that's harder to force through, for people truly worried about a violent breakin. You can easily put them on bedroom doors, rental doors or any other door where you want more defense – no matter what other security the house has. It's a useful, versatile solution if you're not sure how long you'll be living alone and you want something extra for a specific room. Portable locks are affordable too. Here's a two-pack for only $16. And if you want a more substantial upgrade, you can always choose a smart lock with app controls. 3. Pick a portable cam you can move wherever you need Ring's battery cam is on the higher-end but offers a versatile, weather resistant option to watch from any location. Tyler Lacoma/CNET A security cam can be a welcome eye on your home if you're living alone, but our experts recommend a portable, wireless indoor model in this case. You can move a portable cam to watch over whatever room you want or any particular hallway, corner or shadow that's giving you the creeps. Our favorite cams for these purposes include the Google Nest indoor/outdoor camera ($176) and the Ring Stick Up Cam Battery ($80). Both these cams can work outside as well if you're worried about a dark yard. 4. Equip the main door with a video doorbell Blink's affordable doorbell is well-rounded cheap pick. Blink/Amazon A video doorbell alerts you when someone is approaching, allows you to talk with a visitor remotely and can even sound sirens or speak up with automated messages. It's an all-in-one security device that's especially useful if you're home alone, and we have a full guide on the best models for your door. If you're keeping an eye on your wallet, we can also recommend several excellent cheap video doorbells. Keep in mind, most doorbells require a subscription or microSD card to store video footage. Some even allow you to set the doorbell to recognize familiar faces and warn about an unfamiliar face, which users may prefer. 5. Set your indoor/outdoor lights to turn on at night Ring smart lighting lets a home seem active and full. Ring Most random trespassers or burglars don't know you're home alone. You can make the illusion even more convincing with smart lighting that turns on at scheduled times to make it look like more people are arriving home and active in multiple rooms. It's a lot more effective than trying to mimic a flashing TV or other old-fashioned tactics. Smart bulbs are more affordable than ever, with options like this Amazon Basics 4-pack available for $36. They're made to fit into standard home sockets, and many no longer require hubs to work so they're very flexible. Set and forget a "turn on" schedule to keep your home looking busy no matter what's happening. And take a look at my picks for the best LED floodlights for larger options. 6. Change the passwords for your device and lock logins Change the password on your wireless network for extra security. CNET People living alone, especially women, are far more likely to be attacked by someone they know when they are at home. So I recommend that when your living situation changes, you should prioritize changing the passwords on your security apps, Wi-Fi routers, security cameras and even your phone. Don't forget to change codes for your locks and garage door, if necessary. This is a basic security step that's all-too-easy to forget when you're getting used to living alone. Read more: We Asked a Criminologist About The Most Common Ways Burglars Break In 7. Choose a high-quality keychain pepper spray A keychain pepper spray isn't only useful outside if you're living alone. Sabre You never want to be in a situation where you feel physically threatened by someone, but if it happens it's great to have a little can of Mace or pepper spray close by. This Sabre spray is available for $10 and attaches to your keychain so you always have it nearby. You could even loop it to some phone cases, purses or belts. It has a quick detach clasp for easy access, plus a twist lock for safety. Set up a voice assistant emergency service Echo's Dot speaker can perform many functions in the smart home. Tyler Lacoma/CNET Many voice assistants can call 911 for you or perform other tasks if you're not near your phone. But some go further. One of the best current examples is Alexa Emergency Assist, which can store your health information and emergency contact, put you in touch with an urgent response agent, and give you notifications about fire alarms or breaking glass when you aren't at home. The service starts at $6 per month. Other home security monitoring can offer similar services, but Alexa Emergency Assist is one of the more affordable options if you already have an Echo speaker. Bonus tip: Invest in a panic button A panic button is a more expensive option for solo living, but gives you immediate emergency access. Ring If you want to go the extra mile for solo safety, you pick up a panic button that you can carry with you or set nearby to immediately contact responders whenever you need to. These panic buttons are a common part of home security systems. Ring Alarm offers one for $30, while SimpliSafe has a wall-mounted $20 model. Systems like ADT Plus combine panic buttons with their access fobs, and you can even find standalone models from brands like Silent Beacon. These devices take a subscription to work properly and aren't for every wallet, but they do complete your home security when no one else is around (or home safety for a loved one in a similar situation). For more spot-on security tips, check out if you can use a security cam in an apartment building, how to deter burglars from your home, if a dog is good for home security and the worst places to put a security camera.