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Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro im echten Kaufcheck: starkes Upgrade oder zu teuer für normale Gärten?

Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro in a real purchase review: strong upgrade or too expensive for regular gardens?

By Trivando on März 21, 2026

Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro in the real purchase check: strong upgrade or too expensive for normal gardens?

The Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro sounds like exactly the lawn mower robot that many have been waiting for: wireless, without a classic antenna in the garden, with LiDAR, Vision, Network-RTK, and all-wheel drive. On the data sheet, it almost seems like the answer to many typical everyday problems of modern lawn mower robots: signal interruptions under trees, weaker performance on slopes, hectic maneuvering, inaccurate mapping, and annoying stumbling in tight spots.

The catch: The model is still very new. That’s exactly why this article is deliberately not an inflated praise text. There are already official data, initial discussions in forums, dealer statements, comparisons, and first purchase decisions from users – but still no broad base of long-term experiences, as found with older models. Anyone looking to make a purchase decision here should therefore clearly distinguish between verified facts, plausible expectations, and still open points.

That’s exactly what we’re doing here. You will learn what the Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro really brings according to the manufacturer, for which gardens the concept looks sensible, where the extra cost is justified, and where buyers should be more cautious.

Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro with LiDAR navigation in the garden

What makes the Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro special

Segway does not simply position the i220 LiDAR Pro as another i-Series model, but as a significantly upgraded variant for more demanding gardens. The central selling argument is the so-called Triple-Fusion system of LiDAR, Network RTK, and Vision. Additionally, it features AWD, a third steering wheel for tighter, lawn-friendly turns, and automatic mapping without boundary wire.

On paper, this is exciting because many competing models, while working wirelessly, often annoy in practice with exactly three things: difficult terrain, shadow/tree zones, and more complex gardens with narrow passages. Segway is trying to address these weaknesses with a very aggressive combination of technology.

The official core data at a glance

  • recommended mowing area: up to 2,000 m²
  • cutting width: 22 cm
  • cutting height: 2 to 7 cm
  • typical mowing time per full charge: approx. 180 minutes
  • charging time: approx. 115 minutes
  • noise level: 59 dB(A)
  • climbing ability: up to 55 %
  • weight: approx. 17.9 kg
  • cutting system: 6-blade cutting disc
  • IP66 for housing and charging station

These data alone already indicate the direction: The i220 LiDAR Pro is not intended as a small entry-level model, but as a robust premium mower for medium to larger private gardens, where a normal 2WD cable replacement can quickly reach its limits.

Why the LiDAR Pro concept might make more sense in everyday life than many standard models

The most interesting question is not whether the lawn mower robot has many features. The most interesting question is: Which of these features solve real garden problems? For the i220 LiDAR Pro, there are indeed a few good arguments for that.

1. Under trees and in difficult spots, it should be significantly more interesting

Segway explicitly markets the i220 LiDAR Pro for use under trees, in tight passages, during the day and at night, and also in open areas. This is not a small detail, but one of the most important points for real gardens. Many properties are not just free, rectangular model areas. There are hedges, house edges, shaded areas, tree canopies, garden furniture, paths, and changing signal conditions.

Here, the combination of LiDAR, Vision, and Network RTK is potentially more sensible than pure RTK or pure camera solutions. Segway speaks of around 200,000 LiDAR scans per second, 70 m range, and stable positioning even under dense tree cover. For buyers, this is relevant because the mower should not just navigate anywhere, but reliably – meaning without constant readjusting, correcting, or remapping.

Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro uses LiDAR, Vision, and RTK in the garden

2. AWD is not just marketing if your garden is really uneven

Many buyers underestimate how much trouble a good lawn mower robot can cause on slightly problematic ground. A little slope, some softer spots, edges, small roots, uneven transitions between lawn and path – and suddenly a sleek data sheet turns into a device that corrects, turns, or gets stuck more often than you would like.

Here, AWD is not a decorative feature. According to the manufacturer, the i220 LiDAR Pro is designed for slopes of up to 55%. Additionally, the Xero-Turn construction with a third steering wheel is supposed to work less aggressively in the lawn during turns than some classic solutions with more slip. If you have a flat, open garden, you may not need this. However, if you have sloped areas, uneven ground, thicker grass, or difficult transitions, you should take AWD much more seriously.

It is also interesting that initial user and community discussions around the new Navimow generation are going exactly in this direction: The Pro approach is primarily understood as a combination of better traction and more robust navigation – not just as “another model.”

3. No wire and no classic antenna in the garden is a real buying reason for many

Segway plays the “No Wires, No Antenna” theme very offensively – and honestly, rightly so. For many buyers, the mowing performance is not the biggest stress factor, but the installation. Boundary wire is labor-intensive, changes in the garden are annoying, and classic antenna setups are not to everyone’s taste. The i220 LiDAR Pro aims to make the entry easier here: set up, automatically map, edit areas, and start mowing.

This sounds trivial, but it is important in everyday life. Those who regularly change their garden, adjust beds, rearrange furniture, or seasonally free up different zones benefit enormously from a more flexible mapping. The GeoSketch function with realistic map representation goes exactly in this direction.

Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro without boundary wire and without external antenna

Where the i220 LiDAR Pro is likely to excel

From the previous information, one can quite clearly derive in which scenarios the i220 LiDAR Pro appears particularly plausible.

Gardens with shade, trees, and changing light conditions

LiDAR has a simple but important advantage over pure camera solutions: It is not dependent on good light. Segway explicitly emphasizes that the system should work stably even in darkness and in shaded areas. If your garden has many trees, hedges, or longer shaded areas, that is a real plus.

Gardens with uneven terrain

With waves, edges, roots, slight steps, and sloped areas, the package of AWD, ESC-supported traction control, and higher climbing ability sounds significantly better than a classic 2WD mower. Not every garden needs this – but if your property is “in reality” more demanding than it looks in photos, that is exactly the point where an extra cost can often be justified.

Gardens where easy installation is more important than absolute frugality

The i220 LiDAR Pro is not a cheap model. But it is also not aimed at buyers who just want to get away from manual mowing as cheaply as possible. It is more aimed at people who want a modern, wireless system that generates as little setup frustration as possible and ideally remains flexible for later garden changes.

Where one should be cautious despite the strong specs

Now the important part: The i220 LiDAR Pro is very new. And that’s exactly why anything other than caution would be unprofessional.

There is still no broad base of real long-term experiences

This is currently the biggest point against a hasty blind purchase. There are initial discussions on Reddit, first dealer statements, first buyers who have ordered the model, and interest from the community. But there is still not this large mass of experiential values needed to confidently say: These are the typical everyday weaknesses, these are the recurring errors, this happens after a few months of continuous use.

So anyone buying today is, in a way, also buying a piece of the early phase. That doesn’t have to be bad – but one should be aware of it.

The strong technology is of little use if your garden doesn’t need it at all

The i220 LiDAR Pro can quickly be overkill. If you have a rather simple, flat, open garden, little shade, hardly any slope, and no particularly complicated structure, then the question arises very directly: Do you really need the Pro variant? Or is a cheaper wireless model from the same family or from another series sufficient?

The extra cost is especially worthwhile if you actually make use of the combination of better traction and more robust navigation. Otherwise, you are paying for reserves that may bring little added value in everyday life.

New model lines often also mean open software questions

Segway has a reputation in the community for developing a lot on the software side and pushing features through updates. That can be good. But it also means: With new models, the software maturity is a point to watch. In forums around older Navimow models, typical topics keep coming up that are known from almost all robotic mower ecosystems – such as mapping adjustments, dock placement, firmware behavior, or seasonal readjustments. Therefore, it would be too optimistic to promise perfect everyday reliability for the i220 LiDAR Pro right now.

What do real voices from forums and the community say so far?

The most important honest answer is: Not much yet – and that is already a relevant piece of information. The i220 LiDAR Pro is currently more of a model with a lot of attention than a model with hundreds of reliable long-term reports.

What is currently being seen:

  • There is noticeable interest in the combination of LiDAR and AWD in Reddit threads.
  • Several users are discussing the i220 LiDAR Pro as a serious purchase option for gardens with slopes, shade, or more complex structures.
  • An authorized dealer reported from early tests of significantly improved mapping with the new LiDAR models.
  • At the same time, there are still community voices who are waiting precisely because of the novelty and hoping for more real experiences.

This is important for a purchase check: The current impression is more “technically very exciting and strong on paper” than “already confirmed by hard long-term experience in the mass market.”

Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro on a slope in the garden

For whom the Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro really makes sense

Yes, if your garden meets these points

  • you have a realistic mowing area of up to about 2,000 m²
  • your property is not just flat and clean, but partly difficult
  • you have trees, shaded areas, or tighter passages
  • you do not want to lay boundary wire
  • you prefer to buy something better once than to struggle with edge cases later
  • you are willing to rely on a very new model without years of collective experience

Rather no, if your garden is simple

  • you have a rather open, flat standard area
  • you primarily want to automate as cheaply as possible
  • you do not need strong slope capability
  • you want a model with already widely documented long-term experience

Is the extra cost worth it compared to simpler models?

This is probably the decisive buyer question. And the answer is: Not in general – but in the right gardens, very likely yes.

If you only look at 2,000 m² range, one can quickly be misled. Range alone says little. The i220 LiDAR Pro is not sold based on pure area size, but on more reserves in difficult situations. AWD, Triple-Fusion navigation, better shadow/night performance, and the positioning as a more robust premium model are the real reasons why this device exists at all.

So, if you have an uncomplicated garden, you should soberly examine the purchase. But if you already know that your property is not ideal for lawn mower robots, then the i220 LiDAR Pro is likely to be much more in the target corridor than a cheaper standard solution.

Are there better alternatives?

A “better” alternative only exists relative to the garden. That’s exactly why the i220 LiDAR Pro should not be viewed in isolation.

Alternative 1: stay cheaper

If your garden is simpler, a less equipped model may be financially more sensible. Then you buy less technology, but possibly exactly the technology you really need.

Alternative 2: even more reserves for complex areas

If your property is very large, highly segmented, or particularly demanding, a higher-tier series may also make more sense. Then it’s less about “just enough” and more about maximum reserves in navigation, area management, and continuous operation.

Alternative 3: wait

This is explicitly a legitimate option here. Especially because the i220 LiDAR Pro is still new, it may make sense to wait a few more months for more real user reports, problem cases, and reliable long-term experiences. Not every buyer has to be an early adopter.

Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro mowing at a lawn edge by the pool

Our honest conclusion on the Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro

The Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro is currently one of the most interesting new lawn mower robots for buyers who want more than just “wireless.” The model directly addresses real weaknesses of many modern robotic mowers: difficult terrain, tight passages, shade, night operation, complicated installation, and lack of traction.

That’s exactly why it appears strong in the purchase check. Not because a hundred users have already confirmed that everything is running perfectly – that would simply not be honest at this point. But because the technical direction makes sense and because the official equipment clearly targets real garden problems.

The honest limitation remains: The i220 LiDAR Pro is still too new for a definitive “blind purchase.” Those who buy today are getting promising technology with strong data and initial positive signals – but not yet the completely secured everyday reliability backed by years of collective experience.

In summary, it applies:

  • very exciting if your garden is uneven, shady, or technically demanding
  • probably too much if you only have a simple, flat standard area
  • the right candidate if you consciously want more reserves instead of just more marketing
  • to be purchased with caution if you only want to rely on existing long-term experiences

So, if you have a real problem garden and don’t want to deal with wire, antenna, and edge cases in everyday life, you should definitely take the Segway Navimow i220 LiDAR Pro seriously. Those who want to buy with maximum security should observe it a little longer. Both are currently reasonable decisions.

Posted inRobotic lawnmower.
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