The Pentair Prowler 920 made headlines when it launched as one of the first mainstream cordless robotic pool cleaners. Eliminating the power cable addresses one of the most persistent frustrations with robotic cleaners — cable tangling, tripping hazards, and the logistical annoyance of managing a 70-foot cord. But does the cordless advantage justify the cost and the battery lifespan trade-off?
| Feature | Prowler 920 |
|---|---|
| Price | $700–$900 |
| Power | Lithium battery (cordless) |
| Battery life | ~2 hours per charge |
| Charge time | 3–4 hours |
| Pool size | Up to 40 ft |
| Wall cleaning | Yes — full wall + waterline |
| Filter | Fine + ultra-fine cartridges |
| App control | No (manual start/stop) |
| Warranty | 2 years |
Yes, and it's more significant than you might expect. The absence of a cable changes the deployment experience entirely. Drop the Prowler 920 in, press the power button on the unit, and walk away. No cord to untangle, no cable to route, no risk of the cable getting caught on ladders or return fittings. When the cycle finishes, pull it out by the handle — no cord to retrieve.
For pool owners who run their robot 3–4 times per week, eliminating cord management saves 5–10 minutes per session. Over a season that's 6–12 hours saved — a real benefit for convenience-oriented clients.
The 2-hour battery life is adequate for most residential pools in the 20,000–30,000 gallon range. In our testing, a 2-hour cycle on a 32×16 foot pool provided 90–95% floor coverage and solid wall coverage. Very large pools (40+ feet) benefit from a second 2-hour cycle after recharging — which is a meaningful inconvenience compared to corded robots that simply run longer cycles.
Battery degradation over time is the long-term concern. After 2–3 seasons of regular use, the battery capacity typically drops 15–25%, reducing effective runtime. A replacement battery pack from Pentair costs $150–$250, adding to long-term cost versus comparable corded models.
The Prowler 920 performs well on all surfaces — plaster, pebble aggregate, fiberglass, and vinyl liner. The dual scrubbing brushes provide effective floor agitation, and the wall-climbing pattern reaches the waterline reliably. Filter capacity is smaller than some Dolphin models, so it fills faster in debris-heavy pools. The cartridge design is easy to clean — pull, rinse, reinstall.
The most direct competitor is the Dolphin Nautilus CC Plus at $550 — similar wall-cleaning capability, similar price range when the Prowler 920 is on sale. The CC Plus has longer effective cycle time (no battery limit), lower lifetime cost (no battery replacement), and has a wider service network. The Prowler 920's cordless advantage is the only significant differentiator.
The choice comes down to: how much does the client value cordless convenience? If they run the robot frequently and the cable annoyance is real, the $150 premium for cordless is reasonable. If they don't run the robot frequently and cable management isn't a pain point, the CC Plus is the stronger value.
Track robotic cleaner battery age in PoolLens. For accounts with a Prowler 920 that's 2+ seasons old, proactively mention the battery degradation possibility during your chemistry visit. Clients appreciate the heads-up before they notice reduced cleaning performance.
The Prowler 920 is a well-built, capable robotic pool cleaner with a genuine differentiating feature in cordless operation. It's the right recommendation for clients who value convenience above all and have pools in the 30,000 gallon and under range. The battery limitation and eventual replacement cost are real trade-offs that should be disclosed when recommending it. At sale pricing ($650–$750), it's excellent value. At full retail ($900), the competition from corded alternatives becomes much stronger.
Log cleaning cycles, filter maintenance, and battery status for every robotic cleaner account alongside chemistry in PoolLens. Free for pool service professionals.
Open PoolLens Free →The Prowler 920 battery provides approximately 2 hours of cleaning time per charge. A full recharge takes 3–4 hours. For most residential pools under 35 feet, one 2-hour cycle provides complete coverage. Larger pools may require two cycles.
The Prowler 920 retails around $700–$900. The cordless advantage is real — no cable management, no tangling, easier deployment. However, the battery limits the cycle length and battery degradation over 2–4 years adds a replacement cost that corded robots don't have. For clients who prioritize convenience, it's worth it; for cost-conscious buyers, corded alternatives perform similarly for less.
The Prowler 920 climbs to the waterline and cleans the walls. The wall-cleaning coverage is thorough compared to floor-only robots. This is one of the Prowler 920's strengths versus similarly-priced corded alternatives.
Lithium battery packs in robotic pool cleaners typically last 2–4 years with regular seasonal use. Replacement battery packs for the Prowler 920 cost $150–$250 from Pentair or third-party suppliers. Factor this into long-term cost comparison versus corded models.
The Prowler 920 navigates pool stairs and ledges with moderate effectiveness. It handles smooth steps well but may struggle with irregular ledge configurations or very steep stair profiles. Manual cleaning of complex step areas may still be needed occasionally.