From 2024 to 2025: Industrial Transformation, Giant Dilemmas, and the Path to “Essential” Breakthrough in the Robot Vacuum Industry
I. Reconstructing the Industry Landscape: From “Duopoly” to “Multi-Power Coexistence”
2024 marked a historic turning point for the robot vacuum industry. The long-standing “duopoly” dominated by Ecovacs and Roborock was shattered, with market share gaps narrowing rapidly. According to GfK data, Ecovacs’ share dropped to 30.5% in the first half of 2024 (a year-on-year decrease of 10.3%), while emerging brands like Dreame and Narwal surged with growth rates of 20.4% and 14.4%, respectively. This shift reflects the collective entry of traditional home appliance giants and cross-industry players: Midea leveraged its 下沉市场 (low-tier market) channel advantages for explosive growth, while DJI quietly entered the high-end market with its drone technology reserves.
Intense competition directly impacted leading companies’ financials: Ecovacs’ net profit plummeted 69% year-on-year in Q3 2024, while Roborock’s single-quarter net profit growth plummeted from 95% to 43%. Despite an overall 19.7% sales increase, profit margins shrank drastically, pushing the industry into a painful phase of “high growth, low profitability.”
II. Giants in Crisis: The Double Shackles of Technological 内卷 and Ecological Deficiency
- Trapped in “Incremental Innovation”
Leading firms increased R&D spending significantly—Ecovacs and Roborock invested 657 million and 640 million RMB in the first three quarters of 2024—but product iterations remained confined to marginal improvements like edge cleaning and anti-tangle brushes. For example, Ecovacs’ “constant-pressure 活水 circulation system” solved mop contamination but was quickly replicated, failing to establish long-term barriers.
Worse, core technologies like LDS laser navigation and all-in-one bases became industry standards, eliminating first-mover advantages. As Ecovacs CEO Qian Cheng admitted: “When product practicality reaches a technological plateau, incremental innovation alone can’t engage consumers.” - The Paradox of Price Wars and Premiumization
To maintain gross margins, leading companies priced new models at 3,500–5,000 RMB, conflicting with market penetration needs. AVC data showed sub-3,000 RMB 新品 (new products) accounted for <10% in H1 2024, while industry penetration stagnated at 5–6%. This mismatch between “premiumization” and “low penetration” created a “high acclaim, low adoption” dilemma. - Weak Ecological Synergy
Compared to iRobot’s integrated ecosystem (Roomba + Braava), Chinese giants lagged in cross-category integration. Ecovacs and Roborock remained focused on standalone vacuums, while Narwal’s “sweeping + mopping” dual-product line drove 1.7 billion RMB sales during 2024 Singles’ Day, proving the value of ecological layouts.
III. Path to Breakthrough: Deep Resonance Between Technological Revolution and User Needs
- Embodied Intelligence: From Cleaning Tool to Home Service Terminal
At CES 2025, Dreame and Roborock unveiled models with bionic manipulators, shifting from “passive obstacle avoidance” to “active object handling.” Dreame’s multi-joint arm, for example, can grasp 400g objects and organize toys/slippers using AI vision, marking the first step toward home service robots capable of environmental management. - Scenario-Based Innovation: Solving User Pain Points
- Hair Tangling: Narwal J4’s cyclonic 导流 (flow guiding) design and Ecovacs T30 PRO’s V-shaped brush achieved “zero tangling” through mechanical innovation.
- Complex Operation: Singaporean brand Redkey R20 integrated a 10.1-inch touchscreen on its base, allowing APP-free map editing and suction adjustment, tailored for elderly users.
- Battery Anxiety: Roborock G30 Space’s modular battery enabled 4-hour 续航 (battery life), catering to 200㎡+ large homes.
- Dual Drive of Policy and Market
China’s “trade-in” subsidy policy, extended to 2025, boosted online sales by 30%. Leading firms accelerated low-tier market expansion: Roborock doubled GMV via Douyin (TikTok China) and broke through iRobot’s patent blockade in North America.
IV. The Next Decade: Transition from “Cleaning King” to “Service Ecosystem”
- Technological Trends
- AI Large Models Integration: Narwal Flow’s binocular vision system recognizes 200+ household items and adjusts cleaning strategies dynamically.
- 3D Vision Breakthrough: Dreame X50 Ultra’s RGBD camera and point cloud reconstruction achieved millimeter-level obstacle recognition.
- Energy Innovation: Ecovacs DEEBOT X9 PRO adopted hydrogen fuel cells, halving charging time and extending battery life to 6 hours.
- Market Structure
The industry will form a “pyramid” hierarchy: at the top, autonomous decision-making home service robots (e.g., Roborock G30 Space); in the middle, scenario-specific products (e.g., Narwal J5 Pet Edition); at the base, cost-effective models by Xiaomi and Midea. - Ecological Reconstruction
Giants must build “hardware + service” ecosystems. Ecovacs could integrate “Deebot + Winbot + Airbot” for 全屋清洁 (whole-home cleaning), while Roborock could expand to home security and health monitoring via its manipulator technology.
Conclusion: Survival Rules for Game Changers
The robot vacuum industry in 2025 is transitioning from “technology-driven” to “need-driven.” To survive the shakeout, companies must focus on three core strategies:
- Technological Depth: Establish generational gaps in AI, robotics, and energy to avoid homogenization.
- User Insight: Shift from “feature stacking” to “precision pain-solving,” such as developing pet-hair-specific models.
- Ecological Synergy: Build smart home moats through cross-category integration and third-party collaborations.
Only by doing so can robot vacuums break through the penetration ceiling of traditional home appliances and evolve into the core gateway for home service robotics.