Illustration of self-emptying robot vacuum with arms holding trash bags

The best self-emptying robot vacuums have one huge perk past the obvious act of vacuuming the floor for you. (Spoiler alert: It’s in the name.)

When you outsource vacuuming to a robotic cleaner, your floors get cleaned way more often, right? There’s just one little downside to that extra attention: More debris pulled off the floor means a dust bin that fills up faster, especially if you have pets. You could either empty that dust bin manually multiple times a week, or you could just get a robot vacuum that empties itself.

These vacuum cleaners do the vacuuming and bin emptying for you, storing the debris collected on each trip in a larger compartment that’s located in the charging dock. While you’d typically have to empty a standalone robot vacuum as often as every day or two, self-emptying robot vacuum cleaners are self-sufficient for several weeks. Most brands claim to have capacities averaging between six to eight weeks, but almost every self-emptying dock I’ve tested in my three-bed, three-bath apartment has stretched much longer than that.

The feature is so core to the hands-off cleaning experience nowadays that it’s rare for any new robot vacuum release to arrive to market without a self-emptying dock. (Unless you’re the Dyson robot vacuum, in which case you’re not a robot vacuum that mops nor self-empties — but you still cost over $1,000.)

I’ve been testing the latest and greatest self-emptying robot vacuums from 2025 against the top vacs from years prior. Halfway through 2025, these top five picks offered the most efficient automated cleaning experience in my home.

Are self-emptying robot vacuums worth it?

A robot vacuum that can empty its own dust bin is for sure worth it in just about every home. If vacuuming every day is something you don’t feel like doing manually, you probably also don’t feel like manually dumping a vac’s dustbin into the trash every day. Such is the natural pipeline of being spoiled with technology.

Automatic emptying is particularly valuable in homes with pets. Daily pet hair pickup could easily fill up a vacuum’s tiny onboard dustbin after just a few rooms, but that capacity is significantly expanded when there’s a large alternate dustbin on the dock. If they get full mid-cleaning session, self-emptying vacuums know to head back to the dock to unload, then finish the rest of the session with a clean slate.

Not for nothing, even the most ergonomic upright vacuums are a pain to wrestle out of the closet sometimes. In a pinch, it’s inarguably worthwhile to have the option to start sweeping with a click on an app.

For people with allergies, auto-emptying also spares you from inhaling the inevitable puff of dust that emerges when dumping a dustbin into the trash. Speaking of avoiding the grosser parts of the job, if you’re specifically seeking a robot vacuum that mops, many self-emptying docks also take it upon themselves to wash and dry the dirty mopping pads after the job is done.

Testing updates

I’m currently testing the Roomba 105, Eufy L60, and 3i G10+. If any of these contenders impress me, I’ll update this guide accordingly.