Worx Landroid M700 Plus review
The proven boundary-wire workhorse. Old tech, deeply refined.
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Sold via Amazon and Worx.com. Prices are approximate and change often, so always confirm at the retailer.
Verdict
If you'd rather have boring reliability than bleeding-edge navigation, the Landroid M700 Plus is the budget tier's safest pair of hands. Just go in knowing that wire installation is part of the deal.
Pros and cons
What we like
- Cut-to-Edge design trims closer to borders than most wire-free rivals
- Massive parts, accessory, and community ecosystem
- Shares 20V PowerShare batteries with Worx tools
- Handles narrow passages that confuse vision mowers
What to know
- Boundary wire installation takes an afternoon (or an installer)
- Wire breaks are an ongoing maintenance risk
- App and navigation feel dated next to RTK rivals
Full review
The Landroid line predates the wire-free revolution, and that heritage cuts both ways. Installation means pegging a perimeter wire around the lawn, which is two to four hours of honest work. In exchange you get navigation that never loses satellite lock, never gets confused by shade, and threads passages as narrow as two feet that stall camera-based mowers.
Worx's Cut-to-Edge geometry places the blade disc off-center so it mows closer to boundaries than nearly anything else in the tier, which cuts your string trimmer time meaningfully. The 20V PowerShare battery works across Worx's whole tool line too, a quiet long-term saving. It isn't the future, but it is a very good present.
Who it's for: Buyers who value a decade of reliability data over wire-free convenience.
Alternatives in the budget tier
- Segway Navimow i206 AWD~$799
Small suburban lawns up to about 0.15 acre with uneven ground or modest slopes
- ECOVACS Goat O800 RTK~$699
Flat, open lawns up to about 800 m² where price matters most
- Anthbot M5~$749
Value hunters with simple quarter-acre lawns who want wire-free without the brand tax