I Tested Roborock's First Roller-Mop Robot

General|June 21, 2026|By Matthew Moniz|
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review9 min read

Full Written Review

Roborock Qrevo Curv 2 Flow review plus the Qrevo S Pro and F25 GT: the SpiraFlow roller mop that pulls dirty water up instead of smearing it, the day-one setting that fixes streaking, 18,500Pa value pick under $500, and a lay-flat wet/dry vac — all discounted for Prime Day.

I Tested Roborock's First Roller-Mop Robot — Qrevo Curv 2 Flow, Qrevo S Pro & F25 GT

This is the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow — Roborock's first ever roller-mop robot — and I've been living with it for a couple of weeks now. Quick disclosure upfront: this video is sponsored by Roborock, but everything you're about to see is from my actual floors and my actual testing. There's one thing about this robot nobody's really talking about, including a setting you need to change on day one — so stick around for that.


Quick Verdict

The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow's SpiraFlow roller mop is genuinely a different category of mopping — clean water goes down, dirty water gets pulled up continuously, so your last room gets the same clean water as your first. It needs one day-one settings tweak to avoid streaking, but once that's done it's the do-it-all flagship. If you don't need the roller mop, the Qrevo S Pro is the value play — 18,500Pa of suction under $500. And if you'd rather wash your own hard floors, the F25 GT is a budget lay-flat wet/dry vac that gets under everything. All three are discounted for Prime Day.

💸 Canada Prime Day Deal: Use code MATTHEWRRPD for an extra 5% off the Qrevo Curv 2 Flow from June 23–26.


Qrevo Curv 2 Flow — The Roller Mop Changes Everything

Here's the thing about basically every robot mop until now: they use spinning pads, and spinning pads have one fundamental flaw. They get dirty in the first room, then drag that same dirty water across the rest of your house. You're not mopping at that point — you're redistributing.

The Qrevo Curv 2 Flow flips that with what Roborock calls a SpiraFlow self-cleaning roller mop. Clean water goes down onto the roller, the roller scrubs the floor, and the dirty water gets pulled up into a separate tank continuously the entire session. The last room gets the same clean water as the first.

The numbers matter: you get 2.5x the mopping pressure compared to spinning pads, and the roller itself is 270mm wide — basically edge-to-edge across the robot. It even extends out the side to get right up against walls and cabinets, so that strip of grime along your baseboard that every robot mop ignores actually gets hit. And honestly, the shot that sold me was the dirty water tank after one run on floors I thought were clean — that was all just sitting there, and a spinning-pad robot would have pushed it around instead of pulling it out.

The Day-One Setting You Need to Change

I want to be straight with you, because some early reviewers and buyers ran into this out of the box: some people saw water streaks left behind, or the roller not wetting evenly. I saw a little of this in my first couple of runs too, and it turns out it's a simple settings fix:

  1. In the app, set the water tank level between 25 and 30.
  2. Set the mop refresh interval to every 10–15 minutes, so the robot returns to the dock and rinses the roller mid-session.

I did both and the streaking basically disappeared. Is it ideal that you have to change a setting? No. But it's a two-minute fix, not a hardware problem — and I'd rather you know about it so you get the best experience from day one.

Carpets, Pets, and Maintenance

My biggest worry with a constantly wet roller was carpets — my place is mixed flooring, hardwood into area rugs, and a wet roller rolling onto a rug is a nightmare scenario. But when it detects carpet, the roller lifts and a cover automatically extends underneath it — a physical barrier between the wet roller and your rug. It vacuums the carpet dry, mops the hard floor next to it, and the transition just works. I watched for damp rug edges for two weeks and it handled it perfectly.

If you've got pets (I don't, so trust the spec sheet here), there's a dual anti-tangle system so hair doesn't wrap the brush or roller. And maintenance is the part that surprised me most: the roller folds out at 75°, pops off, and rinses in the sink in about 30 seconds. The multi-functional dock handles the rest — auto-empties the dust bin, washes the roller, and dries it, so nothing funky grows in there.


Qrevo S Pro — The Value Play

Not everybody needs the do-it-all roller mop, and not everybody wants to pay for it — and that's exactly where this one comes in. The Qrevo S Pro is, in my opinion, one of the best value robot vacuums you can get under $500 during Prime Day.

Here's what you're getting: 18,500Pa of suction (more than a lot of robots that cost twice as much), dual spinning mops that lift themselves when the robot detects carpet, an anti-tangle side brush, and the same self-emptying, mop-washing, mop-drying multi-functional dock. The hands-off experience is mostly intact — you're just trading the roller mop for spinning pads.

A quick real-world test: rice on the floor, gone in one pass. In the app I set up a smart-plan routine so it knows the kitchen gets hit daily after dinner and the rest of the place every other day. I set it up once in week one and haven't touched it since.


Roborock F25 GT — If You'd Rather Do It Yourself

Some of you don't actually need a robot at all. If your real problem is washing your hard floors yourself, the F25 GT is on sale for Prime Day, and it's a different tool — their entry-level wet/dry vac that you push yourself.

The party trick: it lays completely flat, a full 180°, so it slides right under the couch, the bed, and the kick plate of your cabinets — the places you ignore until you move furniture once a year. It vacuums and mops in the same pass, picking up dry crumbs and wiping up wet spills at once, then washes its own roller at the dock when it's done. It's not the flagship and isn't trying to be, but for the price, if you've got hardwood and actually like doing a quick clean yourself, it's an easy add to the cart.


Who Should Not Buy These

I don't think enough reviews say this. If you've got a tiny apartment that takes five minutes to sweep, a robot is a fun gadget but it won't solve a real problem — and that's okay. If you're someone who's never going to open the app and set up a routine, you're paying for smarts you won't use; a simpler robot would make you happier. The roller mop and self-washing dock earn their keep if you've got real square footage, mixed flooring, or you're just tired of mopping. If that's not you, save your money — I'd rather you skip it than buy it and feel like it didn't change your life.


The Bottom Line — Which One Is for You?

After two weeks, here's the one thing I liked most about each, which is usually more useful than a spec sheet:

  • Qrevo Curv 2 Flow — the roller mop, hands down. Seeing clean water go down and dirty water come up every pass, instead of one filthy pad smearing my place, changed how clean my floors actually feel. Buy this if you want the absolute best and never want to think about your floors again.
  • Qrevo S Pro — the suction for the money. 18,500Pa on something this affordable is kind of ridiculous, and it lifts its own mops onto carpet and empties itself. Buy this if you want the smartest money you'll spend this Prime Day — best value under $500.
  • F25 GT — how far under the furniture it gets. The lay-flat design is weirdly satisfying. Buy this if you'd rather wash your own hard floors and want the budget wet/dry vac that gets under everything.

All three are discounted for Prime Day, so check current pricing at the links below — these deals are some of the best of the year on these machines.


Where to Buy

Qrevo Curv 2 Flow (use code MATTHEWRRPD for an extra 5% off, June 23–26 in Canada)

Qrevo S Pro

Roborock F25 GT


This was a sponsored review — Roborock provided the products for testing.

Affiliate Disclosure: This article contains affiliate links. If you purchase through these links, we may earn a commission at no extra cost to you.

Published: June 2026

Tags

RoborockQrevo Curv 2 FlowQrevo S ProF25 GTRobot VacuumRobot MopPrime Day2026

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