
Worx Landroid L
Boundary-wire robotic mower for larger lawns up to ~0.5 acres with AIA navigation through narrow passages and Power Share batteries.
Excellent robot mower (82/100). It stands out most for coverage (84/100). Highlight: larger capacity. Main trade-off: boundary wire.
Score breakdown
Rated across 6 criteria
Specifications
- Coverage
- 2000 m²
- Max slope
- 35 %
- Cut height
- 30-60 mm
- Runtime
- 120 min
- Navigation
- Boundary wire
- Noise
- 65 dB
Pros
- Larger capacity
- Cuts narrow passages
- Shared 20V batteries
Cons
- Boundary wire
- Bumps obstacles
Owner reviews
A top-tier robot mower we recommend without hesitation
In our independent assessment, the Worx Landroid L earns 82/100 — an excellent robot mower.
Its strongest area is coverage (84/100), followed by run time (80/100). In practice, larger capacity.
The main caveat is quietness, where it scores 64/100. Specifically, boundary wire.
At €1400, it's priced around the category average. For most buyers in this category, it's one of the best choices you can make.
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Sign in to write a reviewFrequently asked questions
Do I need to install a boundary wire?
Older mowers use a perimeter wire; newer wire-free models use RTK-GPS and/or vision to map the lawn — check the navigation spec above.
Can it handle slopes?
Yes, up to the max-slope rating shown. All-wheel-drive models climb the steepest inclines; standard models handle gentler grades.
Is it safe around kids and pets?
Robot mowers have lift/tilt sensors and bumper stops that halt the blades instantly, plus PIN locks and theft alarms.
How big a lawn can it mow?
See the coverage spec. Most models cover their rated area on a single charge, then return to the dock to recharge and resume.
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