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Beatbot Sora 30 Pool Robot Vacuum Hits $749 with Floor/Wall/Waterline 4-in-1 Cleaning

Beatbot Sora 30 is a cordless 4-in-1 pool robot vacuum with 6800 GPH suction, 5L capacity, 5-hour runtime, and coverage for pools up to 3230 sq ft. $749 sale.

Beatbot Sora 30 Pool Robot Vacuum Hits $749 with Floor/Wall/Waterline 4-in-1 Cleaning

What it is

The Beatbot Sora 30 is a cordless robotic pool cleaner from Beatbot's 2026 Sora series. It delivers 4-in-1 cleaning across floor, walls, waterline, and shallow platforms with 6,800 GPH suction power, a 5L dirt capacity, three cleaning modes (Floor, Standard, Eco), up to 5 hours of runtime per charge, coverage for pools up to 3,230 square feet, and automatic surface parking (floats to the surface when done for easy retrieval). Weight is 8.9 kg (19.6 lbs), dimensions 434 × 386 × 267 mm, and the unit ships with a 2-year warranty.

Pricing: $749 on Amazon (down from $999 MSRP). A bundle with the larger Sora 70 is available at $1,298.

What's interesting

4-in-1 cleaning across all pool zones is the feature that distinguishes Beatbot from most consumer-grade pool robots. Cheaper alternatives handle floor only; some midrange models add walls; the Sora 30 also handles waterline (the ring around the pool where scum accumulates) and shallow 8-inch platforms (entry steps, tanning ledges). Newsclip's review measured 95% coverage rate in pool testing, premium performance at midrange price.

6,800 GPH suction is the technical headline. Leaves, sand, and organic debris are all captured without clogging. The 5L dirt basket holds a full week of typical pool debris before emptying is needed.

Surface parking eliminates the underwater fishing problem. Traditional pool robots often sit on the bottom when finished, forcing owners to fish them out with a pole. The Sora 30 detects completion and automatically floats to the surface, where a grip-handle makes retrieval trivial.

Three cleaning modes let users match intensity to conditions. Eco Mode extends battery runtime for routine daily maintenance; Standard Mode handles typical weekly cleaning; Floor Mode aggressively targets the bottom for heavy-debris situations (post-storm, pool opening, etc.).

At $749, the Sora 30 sits below premium competitors (Dolphin Nautilus CC Supreme at $1,299, Maytronics M600 at $1,899) while delivering comparable cleaning coverage. For cost-per-square-foot cleaning value, it's the category sweet spot.

What's missing or unverified

Newsclip noted that the Sora 30 "occasionally struggles in tighter corners due to its non-intelligent navigating method." The pool robot doesn't map the pool; it uses random-pattern navigation that eventually covers most surfaces but misses narrow alcoves and stair corners. Premium competitors (Dolphin Explorer E70, Maytronics M600) use systematic mapping for complete coverage.

No Wi-Fi or app control on the base Sora 30. The Sora 70 ($999) adds app control and scheduling; the Sora 30 is a button-only unit. For users who want remote activation or cleaning schedules, the Sora 70 upgrade matters.

Charging takes roughly 4-5 hours from empty. For large pools requiring 2+ cleaning cycles per week, users may need to plan charging around usage or keep the unit docked continuously.

The 2-year warranty is standard for the category. Dolphin and Maytronics offer 3-year warranties on their premium lines; for long-term ownership, the warranty gap matters.

Basic Tutorials flagged that the smaller Sora 10 model in the series ($549) is the more value-focused option for smaller pools (under 1,500 sq ft). Buyers with modest pools should verify the Sora 30's extra suction power is actually needed.

Who it's for

Pool owners with mid-to-large in-ground pools (up to 3,230 sq ft) who want serious cleaning at midrange pricing. Users who have been hiring pool services and want to automate weekly maintenance. Buyers upgrading from basic floor-only robotic cleaners to full 4-in-1 coverage.

Not for: premium-tier users who need systematic navigation (Dolphin Explorer E70 or Maytronics M600 are the right tier), small-pool owners (the Sora 10 at $549 covers most use cases), or buyers wanting app control (step up to Sora 70).

Verdict

The Beatbot Sora 30 at $749 is one of the best-value 4-in-1 cordless pool robot vacuums of 2026. 6,800 GPH suction, 4-zone cleaning, automatic surface parking, and 5-hour runtime deliver premium performance at a midrange price. Against the Dolphin Nautilus CC Supreme at $1,299 and Maytronics M600 at $1,899, Beatbot wins on price; it loses on navigation intelligence and warranty length. For typical pool owners, this is the right pick.

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HOW THIS ARTICLE WAS MADE

This article was written by Dev, ProDrop’s Builder desk. It was fact-checked with a confidence score of 90%.

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