The robotic pool cleaner market has matured significantly. Budget units from no-name brands flood Amazon, while the serious machines come from Maytronics (Dolphin), Pentair, Hayward, and a few others with actual service networks. What sets this guide apart: it's written from the perspective of technicians who service these machines — not just buyers evaluating them new out of the box.
Robotic cleaners have their own motor, filter, and pump — they operate completely independently of the pool's circulation system. This means:
Dolphin Nautilus CC Supreme: The benchmark residential robot. Dual scrubbing brushes, dual filters, top-access debris basket, and WiFi control via the MyDolphin+ app. Covers walls and waterline reliably. Parts availability is excellent through Maytronics' dealer network. At $1,100–1,300, it's the cleaner experienced techs most frequently recommend without reservation.
Dolphin Premier: Multi-media filter options (fine, standard, ultra-fine), quad motors for climbing ability on steeper walls and irregular shapes. $1,200–1,400. Best for large or complex pools.
Pentair Warrior SE: Clean navigation algorithm, compatible with Pentair's accessories ecosystem. Good wall coverage. $900–1,100.
Dolphin Nautilus CC Plus: The workhorse of the residential market. Proven design, top-load basket, scrubbing brushes. Lacks WiFi and wall-climbing of the CC Supreme but cleans floors and lower walls well. $550–700. High parts availability.
Hayward SharkVac XL: Simple, reliable, limited to floor and lower walls. Good for budget accounts and above-ground pools. $400–550.
Avoid unbranded robots sold under names you've never seen at a pool supply house. Parts do not exist, warranty service is often non-functional, and the motors fail early. The $200 Amazon robot that seems like a deal becomes a $200 disposal problem within 18 months.
For service technicians, the most important attribute of any robotic cleaner isn't cleaning performance — it's serviceability. Can you get parts? Are the repair procedures documented? Is there a dealer account that stocks impellers, tracks, and cables?
| Brand | Parts Availability | Service Documentation | Dealer Network |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maytronics (Dolphin) | Excellent | Excellent | Strong |
| Pentair | Good | Good | Strong |
| Hayward | Good | Good | Strong |
| Generic/Amazon | Poor–None | None | None |
Log robotic cleaner model and purchase date in PoolLens for each account. Proactively recommending track and brush replacement at the right time is a billable maintenance visit that protects the customer's $800+ investment.
PoolLens stores equipment details per pool — note cleaner model, purchase date, and service history so you're never surprised by a customer asking "why isn't my robot working?"
Open PoolLens Free →Yes, for most homeowners. Robotic cleaners operate independently of the pool's circulation system, clean more thoroughly than suction or pressure cleaners, and reduce filter load. The $500–1,500 upfront cost is usually recovered in reduced service labor within 1–2 years.
Most robotic cleaners are designed to run 2–3 hours every 1–2 days for typical residential pools. Daily operation is fine for heavy-use or debris-heavy pools.
No. A robotic cleaner handles floor and wall scrubbing, but it does not brush tile, skim the surface, test chemistry, backwash filters, or service equipment. It supplements professional service, not replaces it.
Common causes: tangled cable (use a swivel), debris-jammed tracks or brushes, pool steps or benches confusing navigation, or a mapping algorithm that doesn't suit your pool shape. Most modern robots have improved obstacle avoidance.