Robot Mower vs Push Mower: Which Is Better for Your Lawn?
Robot mowers and push mowers are both designed to mow lawns, but they take fundamentally different approaches. This comparison helps you decide which is right for your situation.
Cost Comparison
Push mowers are dramatically cheaper: $150-$500 for a quality gas push mower, $300-$600 for a self-propelled mower, $250-$500 for a battery-electric push mower. Robot mowers cost $1,300-$3,900 upfront. The robot mower is 4-10x more expensive initially. However, over 10 years, the robot mower is cheaper than a landscaping service and competitive with push mowing when you factor in the value of your time.
Time Comparison
Push mowing takes 30-90 minutes per session, depending on lawn size, plus 5-10 minutes for setup (gas, oil check) and cleanup (rinsing, storing). Robot mowing takes 1-2 hours for initial setup, then 30-60 minutes per month for maintenance. Over a 30-week growing season, push mowing takes 15-45 hours; robot mowing takes 5-10 hours. Robot mowing saves 10-35 hours per year.
Cut Quality Comparison
Push mowers generally produce a cleaner cut than robot mowers — they have wider cutting decks, more powerful motors, and can be adjusted on the fly. However, robot mowers cut more frequently (2-3 times per week vs. once a week for most push mower users), which is healthier for the grass. The result: push mowers produce a sharper-looking lawn; robot mowers produce a healthier lawn.
Exercise Comparison
Push mowing is genuine exercise — 30-60 minutes of moderate cardio, plus upper body work. Robot mowing eliminates this exercise entirely. For some homeowners, this is a downside of robot mowing. If you enjoy mowing as exercise, consider keeping a push mower for occasional use and using a robot mower for the bulk of the work.
Noise Comparison
Gas push mowers are loud — 85-95 dB, loud enough to require hearing protection. Battery-electric push mowers are quieter (70-75 dB) but still noticeable. Robot mowers are the quietest — 58-65 dB, quieter than a normal conversation. Robot mowers can run at 7 AM on a Saturday without disturbing neighbors; gas push mowers cannot.
Environmental Impact Comparison
Gas push mowers are environmental disasters — a single gas mower produces as much pollution in one hour as driving a car 100 miles. Battery-electric push mowers are much better (no emissions during use). Robot mowers are the best — they use small amounts of electricity ($10-$20/year) and produce zero direct emissions.
Which Is Right for You?
Choose a push mower if: (1) Your lawn is under 1/4 acre and you enjoy mowing. (2) You're on a tight budget (under $1,000). (3) You want the exercise. (4) You're uncomfortable with technology. Choose a robot mower if: (1) Your lawn is 1/4 acre or larger. (2) You value your time (4-8 hours/month during growing season). (3) You want a healthier lawn (more frequent mowing). (4) You're comfortable with technology. (5) You want to reduce noise and emissions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is a robot mower better than a push mower?
Does a robot mower cut as well as a push mower?
Is a robot mower worth the extra cost vs a push mower?
Still undecided?
Read our full Wire-Free Robot Mower Buying Guide or browse all mower reviews.