Roborock’s RockNeo Q110H launches in the US today

Roborock RockNeo – Roborock’s first US robot mower, the RockNeo Q110H, debuts today, June 10, exclusively on Amazon. It promises wire-free setup, RTK satellite or camera-based navigation depending on conditions, stereo vision obstacle avoidance, and an optional side module for e
On a typical Saturday morning, the lawn still ends up being one of those chores people keep postponing. Roborock is betting it can make that problem feel smaller—by bringing its indoor robot know-how outdoors.
The company’s first US robot lawn mower, the RockNeo Q110H, is available starting today, June 10, exclusively on Amazon. The price is set at $1,299, but launch week includes an early-bird discount: from June 10 through June 16, it drops by 10% to $1,169.
What Roborock is pushing hardest is a setup experience that doesn’t ask you to do the kind of work you’d rather avoid. Many earlier robot mowers relied on boundary wires for navigation, a process that’s often described as complicated and time-consuming. With the RockNeo Q110H, setup happens through the Roborock app. You pair the mower. tap “Create a Map. ” then drive it around the edge of your lawn once using the on-screen controls. The robot records that boundary, builds a map of your yard, and is ready to go.
Roborock also says its AI-powered smart mapping helps make setup easier, and that the mower learns your yard over time to speed up navigation and mowing.
For getting around outside—where open space can disappear under trees—the RockNeo Q110H uses a system Roborock calls Sentisphere Environmental Perception. The mower has two ways to determine its position and automatically switches between them. In open areas, it uses full-band RTK satellite positioning, which the company describes as accurate to a few centimeters. When satellite signals get unreliable under heavy tree cover. or near a building. it switches to VSLAM for visual navigation and steers using its cameras.
The result, Roborock says, is steady movement in wide-open areas and also under trees. It can even thread through side passages as narrow as 2.3 feet—spaces like the corridors that connect the front and back of a house.
But gardens are never tidy. Toys end up in the grass, hoses get left out, and pets treat the yard like a racetrack. The RockNeo Q110H handles that with Stereo Vision Obstacle Avoidance. using cameras to spot objects in its path and steer around them as it goes. Roborock says the system recognizes a range of common yard clutter. from garden tools and flower pots to lawn lights and sprinkler heads.
It also gives people control over how cautious the mower should be when it nears obstacles. A Minimal Collision mode makes the mower extra careful and designed to avoid more objects. Maximum Coverage mode, by contrast, lets it ignore smaller items so it can cut closer to edges.
Edges are where many robot mowers tend to leave behind a fringe of taller grass that homeowners end up trimming themselves. Roborock’s approach involves an optional PreciEdge module sold separately—a side-mounted cutter that trims as close as 1.2 inches from a boundary. Roborock calls this edge precision “industry-leading. ” aimed at minimizing leftover grass along lawn edges and reducing the need for extra trimming near fences and flower beds.
The Q110H is also designed for the messy realities of terrain. Roborock says its adaptive terrain traversal system lets it climb slopes up to 45% and roll over obstacles up to nearly 1.6 inches high. including roots and small lawn borders. A floating cutting deck flexes to follow bumps and dips so the cut stays even on uneven ground. while large wheels are meant to keep it stable as it moves.
Weather isn’t a total stop sign, either. The RockNeo Q110H carries an IPX6 water resistance rating, which Roborock says allows it to handle some rain. You can rinse it off with a garden hose if it gets muddy. A rain sensor sends the mower back to its dock when it starts raining. then sends it back out once things dry up.
Because the mower is working outdoors—and sometimes in areas that aren’t always watched—Roborock is layering on security options. A PIN code lockout is designed to stop someone from picking it up and using it. There’s also an optional anti-theft module that triggers a high-decibel alarm if the mower is lifted or moved outside its mapped fence. Another optional 4G module lets you locate the robot in the app from anywhere and trigger that alarm remotely.
From the phone. the RockNeo Q110H is meant to feel like a controllable appliance. not a “set it and hope” device. Through the Roborock app. you can run a full mow. target a single zone like the front yard. or send the mower out for a quick edge trim. Multi-zone management lets you define different zones and settings for each area. so an open lawn can be treated differently from edges along a flower bed.
A real-time dashboard shows where the robot is. how far along it is in the mowing process. and when it will finish. Roborock also includes a Wildlife-Friendly mode that pauses mowing during hours you choose so the mower doesn’t disturb hedgehogs and other animals that come out at night. The mower can also be operated in manual mode during mowing—using the same approach as first-time mapping—so you can drive it to a specific spot or clean up a small patch without carrying the device.
For people who’ve wanted robot mowing without tearing up the lawn to install anything first. the RockNeo Q110H’s “wire-free” approach is the headline claim. Add the optional PreciEdge module for cleaner boundaries. and the optional anti-theft and 4G modules for extra security. and Roborock is positioning this as a fully automated lawn care experience.
The RockNeo Q110H is available starting today, June 10, exclusively on Amazon, with the launch-week 10% discount running through June 16.
Roborock RockNeo Q110H robot mower smart lawn care wire-free setup RTK navigation VSLAM obstacle avoidance IPX6 PreciEdge module anti-theft module 4G module Amazon
So it’s like a Roomba but for grass? Honestly $1299 seems insane lol.
I read “wire-free” and got excited, then I saw it still needs mapping in an app?? That’s still a lot of setup if you’re not techy. Also RTK sounds like a weather thing?
Wait, reply? I’m confused—if it avoids obstacles with “stereo vision,” doesn’t that mean it won’t work in shade or at night? And the $1,169 early bird is only like a week right?
I’m not sure why people are postponing mowing on Saturdays when you can just… mow? But whatever, Amazon exclusive always makes me roll my eyes. Optional side module for what, like trimming the edge of your yard that it already should’ve done? Sounds like upsells.