Save $250 on an iRobot Roomba i4+ EVO Robot Vacuum

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
Deal pricing and availability subject to change after time of publication.
Irobot Roomba I4 Evo Featured

There are just too many great things to do to spend all your free time cleaning your home. That’s why you need to let technology do it for you. Get an iRobot Roomba i4+ EVO Robot Vacuum, and you won’t need to worry about vacuuming for up to two months. Act now and save $250!

This improved Roomba has a 20 percent larger battery than the i3/i3+ Roomba, leading up to a longer runtime for your house. It will take care of all the dirt and messes in your home with a premium three-stage cleaning system and 10 times the power-lifting suction when compared to the Roomba 600 and its system. The dual multi-surface rubber brushes adapt to different floor types and won’t get tangled up with pet hair.

Amazon I3 Carousel 1464x600

The iRobot Roomba i4+ EVO Robot Vacuum will create an Imprint Smart Map as it learns your home, allowing you to direct it to clean just the rooms that need it. You can either do so on a schedule or have it clean on demand. The Clean Base Automatic Dirt Disposal allows you to completely forget about cleaning your floors for up to two months, as you can set it on a schedule, and the vacuum will empty all the dirt into the base, holding up to 60 days worth of dirt before you have to empty it.

Along with learning your home, the i4+ will even learn about you as it picks up your habits and routines to clean the way you need it to too. To continue the intelligence, it will clean in straight lines yet navigate around your furniture. If the longer-running battery does run low, it will return to the base to recharge just enough to finish cleaning your home. Alexa or Google Assistant can be integrated as well to take even more of the workload off you.

Take 39% off the price of this Roomba and pay just $399.

iRobot Roomba i4+ EVO Robot Vacuum

Make Tech Easier may earn commission on products purchased through our links, which supports the work we do for our readers.

Subscribe to our newsletter!

Our latest tutorials delivered straight to your inbox

Laura Tucker Avatar

Read next

A species of jellyfish called Turritopsis dohrnii can revert its adult cells back to a juvenile polyp stage when injured or starving, effectively restarting its life cycle, and biologists have so far failed to identify any natural limit to how many times it can do this.
French scientist Michel Siffre spent two months alone in a cave with no clock, no calendar, and no sunlight — and when his team finally told him the experiment was over, he thought he still had nearly a month left underground
When Cingular chief Stan Sigman backed the original iPhone before its 2007 unveiling, he accepted terms American carriers usually refused: no logo on the device, no control over its software, no preloaded apps, and a share of monthly subscriber revenue flowing back to Apple, after signing on without seeing a prototype
In 2016, archaeologists dated two rings of snapped stalagmites in France’s Bruniquel Cave to 176,500 years ago, evidence that Neanderthals had walked 336 metres into darkness with fire and built architecture deep underground long before modern humans reached Europe
Otto von Bismarck was 74 when Germany adopted the world’s first national old-age social insurance program in 1889, setting the pension age at 70 after years of fighting socialists with bans, laws, and a promise few workers would live long enough to use
When cosmonaut Valeri Polyakov stepped out of his Soyuz capsule in March 1995 after 437 consecutive days aboard Mir, doctors recorded him at several centimetres above his pre-flight height, and his spine had become so unaccustomed to gravity that the recovery team carried him to a chair rather than risk the compression of letting him walk.
When Harvard astronomer Cecilia Payne submitted her 1925 doctoral thesis arguing that the Sun was made almost entirely of hydrogen, the field’s senior figure Henry Norris Russell talked her into adding a line calling the result ‘almost certainly not real,’ and then published the same conclusion himself four years later to widespread acclaim.
When Edme Mariotte stared at marks on a wall in the 1660s, one mark vanished inside a six-degree hole where the optic nerve leaves the eye and the brain has been filling in wallpaper, sky, and faces ever since