Our Worx Landroid M700 Review — 2026
The Worx Landroid M700 is best budget modular in the Robot Lawn Mowers category. 100+ modular accessories including edge cutter and off-road wheels. At $999–$1,199, it delivers a focused set of features aimed at serious buyers in this category.
This category has matured significantly over the past few years — what was once only available through expensive professional services or specialized retailers is now accessible to home users at multiple price tiers. The Worx Landroid M700 reflects this evolution, delivering $999–$1,199 pricing with performance that rivals equipment at twice the cost.
The key to getting the most from the Worx Landroid M700 is understanding what it does best. AIA algorithm escapes narrow passages automatically. This focus means it excels at specific use cases while potentially making trade-offs in others. For buyers who align with those use cases, the value proposition is strong.
Community and third-party support matter for long-term ownership. The Worx Landroid M700 benefits from a growing ecosystem of accessories and community resources. This makes it easier to maintain, repair, and optimize over time.
Our verdict on the Worx Landroid M700: best budget modular. 100+ modular accessories including edge cutter and off-road wheels The build quality and feature set hold up under scrutiny. The trade-off is 0.17-acre limit — only suitable for small yards — and whether that matters depends on your specific use case.
Technical Specifications
| Price | $999–$1,199 |
| Coverage | Up to 0.17 acres |
| AI | AIA anti-stuck technology |
| Expandable | Yes (100+ accessories) |
| Slope | 35% gradient |
Pros & Cons
- 100+ modular accessories including edge cutter and off-road wheels
- AIA algorithm escapes narrow passages automatically
- WiFi + app control with zone scheduling
- 0.17-acre limit — only suitable for small yards
- Wire boundary installation still required
Our Verdict: Worx Landroid M700
Best Budget Modular
Worx Landroid M700 earns its position as best budget modular. 100+ modular accessories including edge cutter and off-road wheels The device delivers where it counts — price: $999–$1,199. The main trade-off is 0.17-acre limit — only suitable for small yards. For anyone serious about this category, Worx Landroid M700 is a strong candidate worth serious consideration.
How to Choose the Right Robot Lawn Mower
1. Lawn Size and Cutting Capacity
Match the mower’s coverage capacity to your lawn size. Most consumer robot mowers handle 0.5–1.5 acres per charge, then return to the charging station and resume. If your lawn is 2+ acres, look at commercial-grade models (Husqvarna Automower 450XH EPOS handles up to 5 acres). The key spec is “sqm coverage per charge” and whether the mower can handle slopes (most handle up to 20–24 degree slopes; some handle 35+ degrees). Flat suburban lawns are straightforward; sloped or uneven terrain requires higher-spec models.
2. Wire vs. Wire-Free Setup
Traditional robot mowers require a boundary wire installed around the perimeter of your lawn (pegged into the grass or buried). Wire installation takes 3–5 hours for a typical suburban lot. Newer models (Husqvarna NERA, Gardena Sileno) offer wire-free options using RTK GPS for boundary mapping — no wire needed, but GPS requires clear sky access and is less reliable in areas with tree cover. Wire-free is more convenient but less reliable than wired; wired is more reliable but requires installation work.
3. Cutting Quality and Height
Robot mowers cut little and often (every 1–3 days) — this produces a healthier lawn than weekly human mowing. Most support cutting heights from 0.8” to 2.5” and handle most grass types. The cutting width (how wide a path the mower cuts per pass) affects speed: 22cm is standard; 25cm+ covers more ground per pass. Edge cutting is the main weakness — most robot mowers leave a strip of uncut grass along fence lines and borders. Some models have edge-mode features that minimize this.
4. Smart Features and Connectivity
WiFi-connected mowers (Husqvarna, Gardena) work with smartphone apps for scheduling, zone management, and firmware updates. Some integrate with Alexa and Google Home for voice commands. The most useful smart feature is zone management — the ability to set different cutting schedules and heights for different areas of your lawn. GPS tracking (anti-theft) is available on premium models. If your WiFi does not reach the lawn, look for models with cellular connectivity or an offline scheduling option.