Quick Answer: The Worx Landroid Vision is Worx’s boundary-wire-free robot mower that navigates with a front-facing 4K camera and onboard AI instead of a buried perimeter wire or an RTK antenna. Worx says its vision system recognizes more than 200 types of objects, so it tells grass from flowerbeds and obstacles and decides where to mow in real time — and setup takes only about 15–30 minutes. The US WR208 model covers up to 1/5 acre (8,712 sq ft / ~800 m²) with a 19 cm cutting width, while Europe’s L1600 stretches to 1,600 m². It handles slopes of about 30–35% and typically costs $1,000–$1,400 in the US. Buy it if you have a small-to-mid lawn, especially a shaded or tree-covered one where RTK struggles; step up to a Segway Navimow or Mammotion Luba 2 AWD for a large or steep yard.

The Worx Landroid Vision is the most interesting answer Worx has to the wire-free revolution that swept robot mowers in the last few years. While Segway, Mammotion, and Husqvarna chased centimeter-accurate RTK satellite positioning, Worx went the other way and bet on a camera. There is no boundary wire to trench, no antenna to mount on a pole, and no satellite fix to lose under your oak tree — the mower simply looks at the lawn and figures out where the grass ends. That makes it one of the easiest robot mowers to install in 2026, and a genuinely different option for the shaded, tree-covered yards that frustrate RTK machines. Below we break down the real specs, the US and European models, the pricing, and exactly how the Vision stacks up against the RTK crowd.

Worx Landroid Vision at a glance

ModelNavigationRated coverageCutting widthMax slopePrice
Landroid Vision WR208 (US "M800")4K camera + AI (wire-free)1/5 acre (~8,712 sq ft / ~800 m²)~19 cm (7.5 in)~30–35%~$1,000–$1,400
Landroid Vision L1600 (EU)4K camera + AI (wire-free)up to 1,600 m² (~0.4 acre)~20 cm~30–35%~€1,599–€2,050
Segway Navimow i110NRTK + vision~1,000 m² (~0.25 acre)~18 cm~30%~$1,199
Mammotion Luba 2 AWDRTK + vision (AWD)~3,000–5,000 m²~16 in (40 cm)~80% (AWD)~$2,499+

Worx Landroid Vision — wire-free AI mowing

Worx Landroid Vision (WR208 / L1600)

Best for small-to-mid & shaded lawns · 4K camera + AI · wire-free · ~$1,000–$1,400 (US WR208)
  • Fully boundary-wire-free and antenna-free — navigates with a front 4K camera and onboard AI, not RTK satellites.
  • Worx says the AI recognizes more than 200 types of objects, so it separates grass from beds, paths, leaves, and obstacles.
  • Setup takes about 15–30 minutes: no trenching a perimeter wire and no mounting a reference antenna.
  • US WR208 covers up to 1/5 acre (~8,712 sq ft); Europe's L1600 reaches 1,600 m² (~0.4 acre).
  • Cut-to-Edge border cutting reduces manual trimming along lawn edges.
  • A floating cutting deck follows uneven ground to avoid scalping; runs on the 20V Power Share battery platform.
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The Vision’s whole pitch is that it removes the two things buyers dread about robot mowers: the boundary wire and the install. A traditional Worx Landroid — like every wired mower — needs a perimeter cable pinned or buried around the lawn and every flowerbed, a job that can take an afternoon. The Vision skips all of it. You set the dock, drive it once or let it learn, and the camera does the boundary-keeping. For a homeowner who wants robot mowing without the commitment of trenching wire, that is a real advantage, and it’s why the Vision belongs in any robot lawn mower without a perimeter wire shortlist.

How the camera actually navigates

The single most important spec on the Vision isn’t coverage — it’s the camera. A 4K front-facing camera feeds an onboard AI that, according to Worx, recognizes more than 200 types of objects. In practice that means the mower can tell the difference between grass and a flowerbed, a path, a fallen branch, a pet, or a child’s toy, and decide in real time where it’s safe to cut. This is a fundamentally different bet from the RTK approach used by the GPS robot mowers we cover: RTK is brilliant on a big open lawn but goes blind under a dense tree canopy or beside a tall house where the satellite signal drops. The Vision has the opposite profile — it doesn’t care about satellite coverage at all, but it does need daylight to see, so it won’t run in the dark and can struggle in heavy rain or deep shade. For the broader camera-based category, see our best AI lawn mower and LiDAR robot mower guides.

Worx Landroid Vision by the numbers

Landroid Vision vs Segway Navimow

The Vision’s most direct wire-free rival at the small-yard end is the Segway Navimow i-Series, and the choice comes down to how your yard is shaped and shaded. The Navimow uses RTK plus vision, which is more precise on a large, open lawn and scales up dramatically in the Navimow X3 line. The Landroid Vision is camera-only, so it shrugs off the tree cover and tall buildings that degrade RTK, and it installs in minutes without an antenna. As a rule of thumb: a small, shaded, or cluttered yard favors the Vision’s camera approach; a big, open lawn favors the Navimow’s RTK precision and coverage headroom. Our Navimow vs Luba comparison goes deeper on the RTK side.

Landroid Vision vs Mammotion

Against Mammotion, the gap is mostly about scale and terrain. The Mammotion Luba 2 AWD covers several times more ground, climbs roughly 80% slopes on all-wheel drive versus the Vision’s 30–35%, and uses RTK plus vision for large properties. The Vision counters with a far simpler install, a lower price, and immunity to satellite dead zones. If you have steep or large acreage, the Mammotion is the right tool; if you have a modest, possibly shaded lawn and want the easiest setup on the market, the Vision wins on value. For the full mid-range field, see our best budget robot lawn mower guide.

Who should buy the Landroid Vision (and who shouldn’t)

The Landroid Vision makes sense if you have a small-to-mid lawn (up to ~1/5 acre in the US, up to ~0.4 acre in Europe), want a genuinely wire-free, antenna-free install you can finish in half an hour, and especially if your yard has tree cover or buildings that would confuse an RTK mower. The camera approach, fast setup, and Cut-to-Edge trimming make it one of the most hassle-free robot mowers of 2026.

It’s not for you if your lawn is large — the Vision tops out well below an acre, so acreage owners should read our best robot lawn mower for large yards guide — or if it’s steep, where the 30–35% slope limit will leave banks uncut. Heavily shaded yards that get little daylight, or owners who want night mowing, are also better served by an RTK machine that doesn’t depend on the camera seeing the grass.

The bottom line

The Worx Landroid Vision is the most compelling camera-navigated robot mower for small-to-mid lawns in 2026: no boundary wire, no antenna, a 15–30 minute setup, and a 4K-camera AI that Worx says recognizes 200+ objects to keep to the grass. It won’t cover acreage or climb steep banks like an RTK or AWD flagship, and it needs daylight to work — but for a modest, possibly shaded yard, it removes the two biggest pains of robot mowing in one purchase. For the full ranking of every model we’ve tested, start with our best robot lawn mower guide, or compare the wider lineup in our Worx Landroid review.