Roborock arrived at CES 2026 with more than a single headline product. Alongside the newly announced Saros 20, the company outlined a broader slate of home robotics aimed at tackling spaces that have traditionally been off-limits for automated cleaning. The updates span experimental robot vacuums, refinements to existing product families, and the brand’s clearest push yet into robotic lawn care for North America.
For readers curious about the Saros 20 itself, that model anchors the lineup as Roborock’s latest flagship robot vacuum and mop, focusing on adaptive mobility, stronger navigation, and hands-free maintenance. The announcements below round out what else Roborock has in store.
Saros Rover Pushes Robotic Vacuums Beyond Flat Floors

The most unconventional reveal is the Roborock Saros Rover, a concept robot vacuum built around a wheel-leg architecture. Instead of rolling exclusively on wheels, each leg can lift, extend, and adjust independently, allowing the robot to navigate stairs, slopes, and complex transitions while actively cleaning them.
Roborock positions Saros Rover as a solution for multi-story homes where traditional robot vacuums stop at the first staircase. The system blends AI-driven motion control with 3D spatial awareness to adapt its movement in real time. While still in development with no confirmed release window, Saros Rover signals where Roborock sees the category heading: fewer “no-go” zones and far more autonomy across varied floor layouts.
Saros 20 Sonic and Qrevo Curv 2 Flow Broaden the Indoor Lineup

Beyond the standard Saros 20, Roborock introduced the Roborock Saros 20 Sonic, which takes a different approach to flagship cleaning. It features an ultra-slim body paired with a sonic mopping system designed to scrub floors at high frequency while reaching closer to edges. Like Saros 20, it relies on Roborock’s high-power HyperForce suction and an upgraded RockDock that handles hot-water mop washing.
The familiar Qrevo family continues with the Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Flow. This model introduces a roller-style mopping system with real-time self-cleaning, combined with edge-adaptive reach that extends the roller toward walls and corners. It is aimed at users who prioritize consistent wet cleaning performance on hard floors while still protecting carpets during mixed runs.
Roborock Enters the Robotic Lawn Care Space
CES 2026 also marks Roborock’s formal expansion into robotic lawn mowers for the North American market. Leading the charge is the Roborock RockMow X1 LiDAR, which uses LiDAR-based environmental perception, four-wheel drive traction, and active steering to manage uneven terrain and complex yard layouts. A standard Roborock RockMow X1 variant pairs RTK positioning with visual navigation for precise coverage and edge control.
For smaller yards, Roborock plans to offer the Roborock RockNeo Q1, positioned as a more accessible option that still uses stereo vision and RTK-assisted navigation. The mower lineup reflects Roborock’s intent to apply its indoor robotics experience to outdoor maintenance with minimal setup and ongoing intervention.
A Broader View of Roborock’s Direction



Taken together, these announcements frame Roborock’s CES presence as less about a single hero product and more about expanding what home robotics can reasonably handle. From stair-cleaning experiments to smarter mopping systems and autonomous lawn care, the company is clearly testing the boundaries of where robots fit into daily household routines.
The Saros 20 may be the most immediately relevant product for near-term buyers, but the surrounding lineup offers a preview of Roborock’s longer-term ambitions. Pricing, availability, and regional rollout details across the range remain to be shared, with more information expected as 2026 progresses.

