Quick Answer: Yarbo is the only yard robot you can buy in 2026 that mows, blows snow and clears leaves with one machine — a tracked, self-driving Core that hot-swaps between modules. The Yarbo Lawn Mower Pro ($5,999) is the one to get: current-generation hardware, coverage for up to 6 acres, a 70% (35°) slope rating and a 20-inch dual-disc cut, per Yarbo. The standard Lawn Mower ($4,999) is the same chassis with older 2024-generation components. The killer bundle is Lawn Mower + Snow Blower for $6,199 — the snow module clears a 21-inch path and throws snow 6–40 feet, per Yarbo, something no Husqvarna, Mammotion or Navimow can do. Budget a 1–4 week tuning period and know that support is remote-only: this is a machine for large, multi-season properties and tech-patient owners.
Every other robot mower on this site does one job. Yarbo’s pitch is different: buy one tracked robotic Core, then snap on the module the season demands — the M1 mower in summer, the S1 snow blower in winter, the leaf Blower in fall and a Trimmer for edges. With ‘yarbo snow blower’ now one of the most-searched robot-yard-tool queries in the US, the concept has clearly landed. Below we break down the full 2026 lineup, the Lawn Mower vs Lawn Mower Pro decision, real-world caveats owners report, and whether the modular premium beats a dedicated mower like the Mammotion Luba 2 AWD or Segway Navimow for your yard.
One Core, four modules: how the Yarbo system works
The heart of the system is the Yarbo Core — a tracked, all-wheel-drive robot base with the battery, drivetrain and navigation brain on board. Modules lock onto the Core with a hot-swap mount, so switching from mowing to snow-blowing is a hardware click, not a second purchase of wheels, motors and electronics. Navigation is Yarbo’s PPVS fusion system: RTK-GPS for centimeter positioning plus binocular cameras, ultrasonic radar, IMU and odometry for obstacle avoidance, per Yarbo. Like the Mammotion and Navimow systems in our robot lawn mower without perimeter wire guide, it needs a base antenna — Yarbo’s Data Center — mounted with open sky view; there’s no boundary wire, and RTK plus 4G cellular are included with no subscription, per Yarbo.
Two things set the Core apart from every wheeled mower we cover. First, rubber tracks: traction on wet grass, gravel transitions and snow that wheels can’t match, backing the 70% (35°) slope rating — same territory as the AWD climbers in our robot lawn mower for hills guide. Second, sheer scale: Yarbo rates coverage at up to 6 acres, mowing up to 1.7 acres per day and about 0.25 acres per charge, per Yarbo — numbers that put it against the large-estate machines in our robot mower for 3 acres and best robot lawn mower for large yards guides.
Yarbo 2026 lineup at a glance
| Configuration | Best for | What you get | Key spec | Price (per Yarbo) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yarbo Lawn Mower Pro | Best overall | Core (2026 hardware) + mower module | 6 acres, 70% slope, 0.8–4.0" cut | $5,999 |
| Yarbo Lawn Mower | Value pick | Core (2024 hardware) + mower module | 6 acres, 70% slope, 1.2–4.0" cut | $4,999 |
| Lawn Mower + Snow Blower | Best-value 2-season bundle | Core + M1 mower + S1 snow blower | 21" clearing width, 6–40 ft throw | $6,199 |
| Lawn Mower Pro + Snow Blower | Best 2-season bundle | 2026 Core + M1 + S1 | Same, current-gen hardware | $7,199 |
| Multi-module packages | Full-property automation | + leaf Blower and/or Trimmer | 4-in-1 / 5-in-1 yard robot | up to ~$8,749 |
1. Yarbo Lawn Mower Pro — Best Overall
Yarbo Lawn Mower Pro (2026-generation Core + mower module)
- Current 2026-generation hardware with an upgraded battery — the standard model uses older 2024-generation components, per Lawn Care Guides.
- 20-inch dual-disc cutting system with 5 blades per disc and a wide 0.8–4.0 inch electronically adjusted height range.
- Rated for up to 6 acres, mowing up to 1.7 acres per day and ~0.25 acres per charge, per Yarbo.
- Rubber tracks + real-time traction control climb 70% (35°) slopes — flagship-AWD territory.
- Hot-swap mount accepts the Snow Blower, leaf Blower and Trimmer modules — the whole point of the platform.
- 2-year limited warranty, extendable to 5 years total in select regions; RTK + 4G included, no subscription, per Yarbo.
If you’re buying into a $5,000-plus platform, the extra $1,000 for the Pro is the easy call: same chassis, same specs on paper, but the current hardware revision with the better battery — and owner reports tie most documented problems (lawn trampling, deck clogging) to the older revision, per Lawn Care Guides. This is the configuration we’d put against the Husqvarna Automower flagships and the Mammotion Luba 3 for large acreage.
2. Yarbo Lawn Mower — The $1,000-Cheaper Value Pick
Yarbo Lawn Mower (2024-generation Core + mower module)
- Identical coverage (6 acres), slope rating (70%) and 20-inch dual-disc deck as the Pro, per Yarbo.
- Slightly narrower 1.2–4.0 inch cutting-height range and the standard battery (~120-minute sessions, per Lawn Care Guides).
- Best understood as the Pro's chassis with older hardware at a $1,000 saving — not a separately engineered budget unit.
- Accepts every module the Pro does, so you can still build toward the snow blower later.
3. The Snow Blower — Yarbo’s Killer App
Yarbo Snow Blower module (S1) — bundled from $6,199 with the Lawn Mower
- 21-inch clearing width and 12-inch intake height — real two-stage-style snow clearing, not a plow blade, per Yarbo.
- Throws snow an adjustable 6–40 feet through a 0–180° rotating chute with an 18–62° deflector, so you aim exactly where the snow lands.
- Clears about 6,000 sq ft of 1-inch snow — or roughly 2,000 sq ft at 5 inches — per charge, per Yarbo.
- Runs autonomously on the same RTK map as the mower: schedule the driveway like you schedule the lawn.
- Bundle math: Lawn Mower + Snow Blower is $6,199 ($7,199 with the Pro) — versus $4,999 for the standalone snow robot, the mower module effectively costs ~$1,200 extra, per Yarbo.
No Husqvarna, Mammotion, Segway or Kress does anything in winter. If you live in the snow belt and were pricing a $1,500–$3,000 two-stage snow blower and a flagship robot mower anyway, the Yarbo bundle stops looking expensive: it’s one robot doing both jobs for $6,199. That’s the calculation that sells most Yarbos — search interest for the snow blower actually outstrips the mower, and it’s the configuration we’d buy.
4. Leaf Blower & Trimmer modules — rounding out the 4-in-1
The Blower module turns the Core into an autonomous leaf-clearing robot for fall cleanup, and the Trimmer module handles borders and edges the mower deck can’t reach. Both snap onto the same Core; multi-module packages (4-in-1 and 5-in-1 configurations) top out around $8,749, per Yarbo. These are nice-to-haves rather than reasons to buy — the mower and snow blower carry the value case — but they’re unique in the category: nothing else in our best robot lawn mower pillar does anything besides mow. Browse Yarbo modules on Amazon →
Who should buy a Yarbo — and who shouldn’t
- Buy it if you have 2–6 acres and real winters. The mower matches flagship coverage and slope specs, and the snow blower replaces a machine you’d buy anyway. See how it stacks against the field in our large yards guide.
- Buy it if you want one platform, not three machines. Mow, snow, leaves, edges — one Core, one app, one RTK map.
- Skip it under ~2 acres with no snow. A Mammotion Luba 2 AWD or Segway Navimow mows a suburban lot beautifully for $1,000–$2,500 — half the money, none of the tuning curve.
- Skip it if you want plug-and-play. Owners consistently report a 1–4 week tuning period of map refinement and firmware iteration before it runs hands-off, per Lawn Care Guides. Support is remote (no US dealer network), and there’s no Home Assistant API — Yarbo confirmed as much in March 2025.
- Steep, complex terrain? The 70% slope rating and tracks are genuinely class-leading — compare the AWD alternatives in our hills guide.
Yarbo by the numbers
- 6 acres / 1.7 acres per day: rated mowing coverage of the Lawn Mower and Pro, per Yarbo — large-estate class, alongside the biggest machines we track.
- 70% (35°): maximum rated slope on rubber tracks, per Yarbo — matching the best AWD climbers in our hills guide.
- 6–40 feet: the Snow Blower’s adjustable throwing distance through a 0–180° chute, per Yarbo — the only autonomous snow-clearing option from any robot-mower brand.
- $4,999–$8,749: the 2026 price ladder, per Yarbo — from the standard Lawn Mower to full 5-in-1 multi-module packages, with the $6,199 Lawn Mower + Snow Blower bundle the value sweet spot.
- $0/month: RTK and 4G cellular connectivity are included with purchase, per Yarbo — no subscription, plus a 2-year warranty extendable to 5 years total.
The bottom line
Yarbo isn’t the best pure mower for most lawns — it’s the only yard robot, and that’s a different purchase. On 2+ acres with real winters, the Lawn Mower Pro plus Snow Blower bundle replaces a flagship mower and a two-stage snow blower with one tracked, RTK-guided platform — and nothing else on the market can make that claim. On a normal suburban lot, spend half as much on a dedicated mower instead: start with our best robot lawn mower pillar or the wire-free picks in our GPS robot lawn mower guide.