Eufy C15 Review: A Great Robotic Lawn Mower for Beginners
If your weekend has quietly become "mow the lawn, edge the borders, hose down the patio" on repeat, a new hands-on from Basic Tutorials lands at exactly the right moment.

Setup that doesn't eat your Saturday
The marketing line is "Ready to go in 5 minutes," and in practice that's optimistic — the review lands closer to 30 to 45 minutes from unboxing to first mow. Still, for a robotic mower, that's refreshingly short. You screw the charging station into the ground, plug it in, download the Eufy app, pair over Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, and let the robot sketch a map of your lawn on its own. No boundary wire to bury, no RTK antenna to position on a fence post — which is genuinely the biggest reason people abandon these products before they even start.
One snag worth knowing about: the setup leans heavily on a stable Wi-Fi signal in your yard. If your router barely reaches the back garden, budget for the optional 4G module, or that five-minute promise is going to turn into a frustrating afternoon.
What it's actually like to live with
The C15 is the kind of quiet helper that fades into the background in a good way. It weighs around 10 kg, so when you do need to move it — to a second lawn patch, say, or for seasonal cleaning — you can just pick it up without throwing out your back. The compact body squeezes through gaps as narrow as 60 cm, which matters more than you'd think for townhouse gardens hemmed in by flower beds and shed walls.
Build quality reportedly feels solid: tight seams, no creaking when you tilt it, the kind of reassuring weight where the wheels don't dig in and tear up the turf. On top you get physical buttons for Stop, Power, Start/Pause, Home, and OK, plus a chunky dial for cutting height. There's no screen — battery status is just a slim LED strip — which keeps things simple but does mean you'll be checking the app for anything more detailed.
Who should actually click buy
If your lawn tops out around 500 m², you don't relish the idea of laying perimeter wire, and you'd rather not fiddle with RTK calibration, the C15 is the kind of "set it and forget it" entry point that makes sense. The Eufy app lets you carve the garden into multiple zones so the robot trims one patch, trundles to the next, and parks itself — useful if your yard is L-shaped or split by a path.
What to keep an eye on: Wi-Fi coverage at the edges of your garden, and whether the cutting-height range covers the grass type you actually have. For everyone else — anyone with a larger plot, tricky terrain, or a low tolerance for app-only controls — it makes sense to wait and watch how the C15 holds up after a full season of real-world use before committing.