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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2026
Consumer Tech2 min read

Eufy Omni C28: Longest Mop for the Price

By Riley Hart

Eufy's Newest Robot Vacuum Has the Longest Roller Mop We've Seen for the Price

Image / cnet.com

Eufy’s new Omni C28 ships with the longest roller mop we’ve seen at this price point.

In hands-on terms, the Omni C28 aims to turn a humble mop into a feature of its own: a notably extended roller meant to spread cleaning action across more floor in a single pass. The pitch is simple: more coverage per sweep, fewer passes, and less time wrestling pet hair and grime into corners. The device is pitched as bringing premium-feel features—think solid navigation, versatile cleaning modes, and a more ambitious mop solution—without the premium sticker shock that often accompanies high-end robotic vacuums.

From a consumer lens, the key draw is the practical tradeoff between mop length and maintenance. A longer roller can mean better initial coverage on open floors and larger rooms, which is meaningful for households with pets, kids, or open-plan living spaces. But a longer mop also raises questions about maintenance: how easy is it to dislodge hair, fibers, or pet fur that can wrap around the roller? Real-world use will reveal whether the C28’s mop design stands up to daily grime and whether it’s easy to rinse and reattach between cycles.

Two concrete practitioner angles matter here. First, the maintenance overhead matters more than it appears: a longer mop is more exposed to hair wrap and residue, so owners should expect periodic detangling and roller cleaning between cleans. Second, the absence or presence of “subscription” friction remains a practical consideration for many buyers; while premium-feel features are highlighted, the core cleaning experience often hinges on reliable mapping, scheduling, and app stability—areas where Eufy’s ecosystem has generally shown steady, if not flawless, performance.

Industry context is telling: the market for robotic vacuums with integrated mopping is increasingly crowded, with brands competing on smarter navigation, multi-room mapping, and convenience extras such as auto-empty docks and self-cleaning stations. Eufy’s angle with the C28 is to bundle a notably long roller mop into a more approachable price tier, trading some potential gadgetry for tangible cleaning reach. Buyers should compare this against obvious alternatives that pair strong suction with self-emptying bases or more mature mopping features from established brands, paying careful attention to how the mop system holds up under daily wear.

For households weighing the choice, the C28 makes the most sense if you want higher mop coverage without stepping into the steeper price of premium self-emptying setups. It’s likely appealing to pet owners who value fewer passes over hard floors and larger rooms where a single sweep can do more work. If you’re chasing more AI-driven mapping refinement, deeper carpet-pulling suction, or a hands-off emptying routine, you may want to evaluate other models that lean more heavily into those areas.

Verdict: buy if you prize value with a substantive mop design that offers broad floor coverage and are prepared for routine upkeep. Wait or skip if you want the stealthy, hands-off convenience of auto-empty docking paired with aggressive AI navigation or if you dislike any extra maintenance on a cleaning device.

Sources

  • Eufy's Newest Robot Vacuum Has the Longest Roller Mop We've Seen for the Price

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