Segway Navimow i215 LiDAR Mower Drops to $1,399 Price Point
If you've ever stood in your backyard on a Saturday morning, coffee in hand, staring at an overgrown lawn and wishing it would just… handle itself, Segway's Navimow i215 just got a lot more tempting.

Why this particular model matters for your yard
The i215 is part of Segway's newest Navimow i2 generation, and the big story here is how it navigates. Instead of relying on satellite-based RTK positioning like its predecessors, this one uses a LiDAR sensor paired with a dual-vision system — meaning it maps and moves through your yard without needing a clear view of the sky or a boundary wire staked into the ground. That "satellite-free" approach matters if your property has tree cover, fences, or awkward corners that would trip up older navigation tech.
It covers up to 0.37 acres per charge, then picks up right where it left off after recharging. The cutting deck is 7.1 inches wide with a height range you can dial in between two and four inches through the app — so whether you prefer a close-cropped look or a slightly shaggier lawn, you've got control without bending down. And the AI VisionFence obstacle avoidance reportedly detects over 200 obstacle types with sub-inch precision, which means fewer "why is the mower stuck on the garden hose again" moments in your daily routine.
The smart home side and the bundle question
On the connected front, the i215 plays nicely with Alexa and Google Assistant for voice commands, and there's a 3D interactive map in the companion app that lets you set mowing zones and no-go areas with a few taps. Apple Find My support is a thoughtful security touch if you're uneasy about a piece of equipment at this price point sitting unattended in your yard all week.
Now, about that garage bundle at $1,649: you're paying an extra $250 for a shelter that keeps rain, sun, and debris off the mower between sessions. It's not strictly necessary, but if you don't have a covered spot near your lawn — and let's be honest, most of us don't plan our garage layout around a robot mower — it's a practical add-on that quietly extends the life of your investment. Much like choosing between a set-and-forget automated strategy and manually adjusting your approach every week, the bundle is about reducing the number of times you have to think about upkeep.
Who should actually hit "buy"
This $200 discount has only appeared a handful of times since the i215 launched in February — including during last month's Prime Day — so this isn't a clearance situation, but it is the best price currently available. If your lawn sits under a third of an acre and you'd genuinely rather spend your weekends doing anything other than pushing a mower in the heat, this is a legitimately hands-off option. The LiDAR navigation alone sets it apart from budget robots that still need boundary wires or struggle with complex yard shapes.
That said, if your property is mostly flat and wide open, you might not need the satellite-free navigation advantage — a less expensive model could serve you well. But for suburban lots with mature trees, garden beds, and the kind of landscaping that makes a GPS-only mower throw up its hands, the i215 feels like it was designed for exactly that real-world mess.