ILIFE
China · iliferobot.com
SnapshotCompany claim
ILIFE offers robotic vacuum and mop, commercial and home robot wet and dry vacuum, handheld/stick vacuums. Brands include T Series, A Series, V Series, X Series, W Series, Shinebot Series, and cordless stick vacuums. Provides support, warranty, and community.
- Founded
- Not disclosed
- HQ
- China
- Models
- 3
- Categories
- 2
ContactCompany claim
- Address
- Not disclosed
Product families
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Claim this profile1. Executive Overview {#executive-overview}
ILIFE is a China-based consumer and commercial robotics brand operating under the domain iliferobot.com. The company has built a multi-tier product lineup spanning robotic vacuum and mop combinations, commercial and home wet-and-dry robot vacuums, floor washing robots, and cordless stick vacuums — organized into named series (T, A, V, X, W, Shinebot, and cordless lines) that address distinct price and performance segments. The brand's self-reported community of "100,000+ families" signals meaningful consumer reach, and its distribution footprint spans at least six named markets: the USA, Poland, Spain, Malaysia, Russia, and Japan.
The company's strongest differentiator is portfolio breadth within the consumer floor-care robotics category. Rather than a single flagship SKU, ILIFE segments its offer by tier — high-end (T Series), mid-tier (A Series), entry-level (V Series), large-space AI (X Series), and specialized commercial/wet-dry (W and Shinebot Series) — giving it coverage from value-oriented buyers to performance-seeking households and light-commercial operators. Third-party coverage, including an independent review of the A30 Pro by Vacuum Wars (June 2026), provides some external validation of product quality claims.
Gaps in public information include founding date, total employee count, revenue figures, and the technical depth of the AI and navigation systems underpinning newer models. These are addressable disclosures that ILIFE is invited to submit for correction.
Latest news
- [Prime] ILIFE A30s 10000Pa Robot Vacuum w/ LiDAR Navigation & 150-Minute Runtime $129.99 + Free Shipping (0 replies)Slickdeals.net·2026-07-04GENERAL
- KEENON Humanoid Pours Drinks at GCS 2026, 100,000 Others Run HotelsYanko Design·2026-06-15GENERAL
2. The Company Story {#the-company-story}
Founding and Origins
ILIFE's founding date is not publicly disclosed on the company's website. The company is headquartered in China and operates under the ILIFE Group corporate umbrella, suggesting a holding structure with potential subsidiary or manufacturing entities. The contact infrastructure — separate email addresses for sales, media, general inquiry, and US/Canada customer service, with business hours anchored to GMT+8 — is consistent with a company whose core operations and time zone are China-based, but which has built localized customer-service capacity for Western markets.
Brand and Positioning
ILIFE has positioned itself as a full-spectrum floor-care robotics brand rather than a narrow-category specialist. The site's "Help Me Choose" and "Compare Products" tools, alongside a tiered series architecture, reflect a deliberate strategy to reduce purchase friction across multiple buyer personas — from first-time robot vacuum adopters (V Series) to buyers seeking flagship-level performance (T Series). The Shinebot sub-brand, covering floor-washing robots (W455, W450), functions as a differentiated commercial-leaning identity within the broader ILIFE portfolio.
Go-to-Market
ILIFE sells direct via its own website and operates a "Where to Buy" locator covering the USA, Poland, Spain, Malaysia, Russia, and Japan. It actively recruits distribution partners (a "To be Partner" program) and supports an Influencer Program and VIP Club — a modern DTC and creator-economy channel mix. A Newsroom section and media inquiry contact (media@iliferobot.com) indicate structured PR ambitions, though the volume of third-party press coverage in the provided data is modest.
3. Product Portfolio {#product-portfolio}
Products & versions






ILIFE's product lineup is organized into seven distinct series plus standalone cordless and handheld categories, each targeting a specific tier or use-case. The T Series (T60s, T20s Ultra, T20s) is designated the flagship high-end line, while the A Series (A30 Pro, A20, A12 Pro, A10s) occupies the advanced mid-tier. The V Series (V30, V20, V10, V9 Pro, V5s Ultra, V3x, V2) is the classic entry-level family and carries the broadest model count, suggesting it is the highest-volume, most price-competitive segment. The X Series (X1000) is explicitly positioned for large-space AI robotic vacuuming — a newer and more premium application. The W Series (W90 Pro, W90) covers wet-and-dry vacuum cleaning, while the Shinebot Series (W455, W450) targets floor-washing robot applications with commercial or semi-commercial intent.
Cordless and handheld vacuums round out the portfolio: the S90 Pro, H80, H11, and G80 cover stick vacuum formats, and the M50 is a steam mop — broadening ILIFE beyond autonomous robots into manually operated or semi-autonomous floor care. The site notes a "New product coming soon," indicating active development pipeline activity. Taken together, the lineup is notably wide for a single brand, covering autonomous robots, floor washers, wet-dry machines, cordless sticks, and steam cleaning — a full floor-care platform rather than a robotics-only proposition.
4. Technology Stack {#technology-stack}
What the Portfolio Signals
ILIFE's product naming and series descriptions provide limited formal technical disclosure, but the lineup's structure permits several observations. The X Series (X1000) is explicitly marketed with an "AI Robot Vacuum" designation for large spaces — implying onboard AI-assisted navigation or mapping, though the specific sensor suite, SLAM methodology, or chip architecture is not disclosed on the publicly available site data.
Our read: The tiering of T → A → V almost certainly corresponds to escalating navigation sophistication — laser-based (LiDAR) SLAM at the high end, likely optical flow or gyroscope-assisted navigation at the entry level — consistent with how Chinese OEM robotics brands typically structure price tiers. This is an inference based on industry norms, not a disclosed ILIFE specification.
Our read: The W Series and Shinebot Series, given their wet-and-dry and floor-washing functions, likely incorporate water tank management, mop-pad control, and potentially self-cleaning dock features. The "Pro" suffix on the W90 Pro suggests a meaningfully differentiated spec versus the base W90, possibly in suction power, water management, or docking capability.
Gaps
Limited public technical detail is available on navigation chipsets, battery specifications, suction power ratings (Pa), dustbin capacity, mapping capabilities, or companion-app features for most models. These are material purchase-decision factors and their absence from the public data is noted. ILIFE is invited to claim or disclose fuller technical documentation for inclusion in future updates.
5. Research, Papers, Authors, Labs {#research-papers}
Company-linked papers
ILIFE is a consumer and commercial floor-care robotics brand, not a research-publishing organization. No academic papers, white papers, or named research authors are associated with the company in the available data. This is entirely normal for a product-focused robotics brand operating in the consumer appliance segment — the relevant output is hardware and software products, not scientific literature.
6. Media Evidence {#media-evidence}
Media library
The available third-party press record is modest but includes at least one substantive independent review. Vacuum Wars — a specialized consumer vacuum review outlet — published a review of the ILIFE A30 Pro (dated June 1, 2026), described as "A Strong Budget Robot Vacuum With Surprisingly Good Vacuuming Performance." This constitutes meaningful external validation: Vacuum Wars is a recognized vertical-media source for floor-care product assessments, and the framing ("surprisingly good") suggests the product outperformed category expectations at its price point. Additional coverage was noted from ilifecare.in ("Explore the World of ILIFE: Cleaning Tips & More") and iliferobot.store — both of which appear closer to brand-adjacent or partner channels than fully independent editorial sources. Broader mainstream or tier-one technology media coverage is not evidenced in the current data set.
7. Commercial Reality {#commercial-reality}
Customers & deployments
Revenue and Scale
Revenue figures, unit shipment volumes, and gross margin data for ILIFE are not publicly disclosed. These are rendered here as Not disclosed. ILIFE is invited to submit verified financial or operational metrics for inclusion in future report updates.
Customer Signals
The company's own site references a community of "100,000+ families" — a company claim, not independently verified. If accurate, it would represent meaningful consumer penetration for a direct-to-consumer robotics brand. The "VIP Club" and repeat-purchase incentive structure ("Stay tuned every day for new deals coupons") suggest the company is actively working to build customer lifetime value beyond the initial purchase.
Distribution
Named retail or marketplace partners (e.g., Amazon, major retailers) are not identified in the available data. The "Where to Buy" locator covers six countries. Customer service infrastructure for the US and Canada (dedicated email, Monday–Friday GMT+8 hours) indicates North America is a priority market. Partnership and influencer programs are live recruitment channels, suggesting active channel expansion.
ROI / Outcome Data
No customer ROI, cost-savings, or operational efficiency data is publicly disclosed. Not disclosed. ILIFE is invited to share case studies or deployment outcomes for future inclusion.
8. Markets and Use Cases {#markets-use-cases}
Consumer Home Cleaning
The core and largest market is clearly consumer household floor care. The V, A, and T Series robotic vacuums and mop combinations address the full residential spectrum — from entry-level, price-sensitive first-time buyers (V Series, V2 at the accessible end) through to high-performance households seeking flagship autonomous cleaning (T Series: T60s, T20s Ultra). The "100,000+ families" community claim reinforces this as the primary revenue and user base.
Large-Space Residential and Light Commercial
The X Series (X1000), explicitly positioned as an "AI Robot Vacuum" for large spaces, addresses larger homes, open-plan living environments, or light-commercial settings such as small offices, showrooms, or hospitality spaces where floor area exceeds the efficient range of standard consumer robots.
Commercial and Semi-Commercial Floor Care
The Shinebot Series (W455, W450) and W Series (W90 Pro, W90) signal deliberate commercial-adjacent positioning. Floor-washing robots in particular are deployed in retail, hospitality, and light-industrial settings globally. Whether ILIFE is actively pursuing B2B procurement channels or positioning these products primarily for prosumer/home use is not fully clarified in the available data — ILIFE is invited to clarify commercial deployment scope.
Cordless and Steam Cleaning
The S90 Pro, H80, H11, G80 stick vacuums, M50 steam mop, and M50 handheld complete a "whole-home" floor-care proposition — capturing consumers who want both automated and manual cleaning tools from a single brand. This bundling strategy reduces cross-brand shopping and increases average order or lifetime value.
Geographic Markets
Active storefronts or distribution in the USA, Poland, Spain, Malaysia, Russia, and Japan indicate a genuinely international go-to-market, with meaningful geographic diversity across North America, Europe, Southeast Asia, and East Asia.
9. Competitive Landscape {#competitive-landscape}
Competitive comparison
| Robot | Maker | Autonomy | Conf. |
|---|---|---|---|
| iRobot Roomba Combo 10 Max | iRobot | Autonomous | 0.90 |
| Mobile ALOHA (Stanford) | Stanford University | Teleoperated | 0.90 |
| 1X NEO | 1X Technologies | Remote-Assisted | 0.90 |
ILIFE competes in the global consumer floor-care robotics segment — a category that has attracted numerous hardware brands ranging from specialized robotics-first companies to large consumer electronics conglomerates. The tiered series architecture (entry, mid, flagship, large-space AI, commercial) is a deliberate strategy to compete simultaneously across multiple price bands rather than ceding any tier to peers.
The Vacuum Wars review of the A30 Pro, framed around "budget" positioning with performance that "surprisingly" exceeds expectations, is an important competitive signal: ILIFE appears to be pursuing a value-performance strategy — competitive specs at accessible price points — in a segment where price compression has been intense. The commercial Shinebot and W Series products address a somewhat different competitive set than pure consumer robot vacuums. The module above identifies category peers; ILIFE's differentiation, to the extent evidenced by available data, rests on portfolio breadth, tiered accessibility, and direct-to-consumer channel investment.
10. Country Advantage / Geopolitical {#geopolitical}
Section not material for this company.
11. Hype vs Real vs Ugly {#hype-real-ugly}
Claim tracker
Verified / Externally Supported
- The A30 Pro has received an independent third-party review from Vacuum Wars (June 2026) characterizing it as a strong budget option with "surprisingly good vacuuming performance." This is external validation of at least one product line's performance claims. (External source: vacuumwars.com)
- A multi-series, multi-model product lineup is demonstrably real — model names, series designations, and a "Where to Buy" infrastructure across six countries are publicly visible on the company's site.
Company Claims — Accepted as Claims, Not Independently Verified
- "Together with 100,000+ Families" — a company claim. Plausible for a brand with multi-year international distribution, but not independently verified.
- X1000 marketed as an "AI Robot Vacuum" for large spaces — a company claim. The specific AI or navigation technology underpinning this designation is not disclosed in available data.
- "New product coming soon" — a company claim indicating active pipeline, details not yet disclosed.
Fixable Gaps (Not Yet Disclosed)
- Not yet disclosed: suction power ratings (Pa), battery life, mapping technology specifics, or companion-app capabilities for any model. ILIFE is invited to publish or share these specifications for inclusion.
- Not yet disclosed: the scope and nature of commercial deployments for the Shinebot and W Series products. ILIFE is invited to clarify and correct.
- Not yet disclosed: founding year, employee count, revenue, or unit shipment data. ILIFE is invited to disclose.
Our read: The portfolio architecture and series naming convention are consistent with a mature, operationally organized consumer electronics brand rather than an early-stage startup. The existence of dedicated series for commercial floor washing (Shinebot) alongside consumer robots suggests genuine product-line investment, not a single-SKU operation.
12. Future Scenarios {#future-scenarios}
Our read — Bull Case
ILIFE parlays its multi-tier portfolio breadth and established international distribution into accelerating share in the mid-tier robot vacuum segment, where the A Series and V Series are already competitive on value. The X1000 large-space AI positioning gains traction as larger homes and open-plan living normalize robot vacuums in markets like the USA and Europe. The Shinebot and W Series break into light-commercial procurement channels, expanding the addressable market beyond consumer households. The "100,000+ families" community becomes a retention and upsell flywheel via the VIP Club.
Our read — Base Case
ILIFE maintains its position as a recognized multi-product consumer floor-care robotics brand with solid entry-to-mid-tier offerings, growing gradually in existing markets (USA, Europe, Southeast Asia, Japan). The A30 Pro and equivalent mid-tier models drive the majority of volume. Commercial floor-washing remains a secondary, slower-growth segment. Competition in the consumer robot vacuum category remains intense, keeping margin pressure high.
Our read — Bear Case
Intensifying price competition in the consumer robot vacuum segment — particularly at the entry and mid tiers — compresses margins and forces difficult trade-offs between R&D investment and price competitiveness. Limited disclosed technical differentiation in navigation and AI makes it harder to justify premium pricing for the T and X Series against better-publicized competitors. Thin third-party media coverage reduces organic brand discovery in key Western markets. The "Not yet disclosed" gaps on financials and technology specs limit the brand's ability to compete for B2B procurement deals where documentation is required.
13. What to Watch {#what-to-watch}
- "New product coming soon" — monitor iliferobot.com for the next model announcement; its positioning (tier, technology, use case) will signal strategic direction.
- X1000 market reception — the large-space AI segment is a higher-stakes bet; watch for third-party reviews from outlets like Vacuum Wars, The Wirecutter, or equivalent.
- Shinebot commercial traction — any indication of B2B sales, facility management partnerships, or commercial deployment case studies would validate the floor-washing segment ambition.
- Media coverage volume — track whether tier-one consumer tech outlets begin reviewing ILIFE products; broadened press coverage would confirm brand-awareness investment.
- Technical specification disclosures — publication of navigation technology, suction specs, or app features for the T and X Series would clarify competitive positioning at the high end.
- Retail and marketplace presence — watch for named retail partnerships (major e-commerce platforms or brick-and-mortar chains) in USA, European, or Asian markets.
- Partnership program results — growth of distributor and influencer programs in target markets is a leading indicator of channel velocity.
14. Sources & Methodology {#sources-methodology}
Data Sources
All factual claims in this report are grounded in one of two source types:
- Company-claimed content — text, product listings, series descriptions, community figures, and contact information extracted directly from iliferobot.com. These are labeled "company-claim" and accepted as the company's own representation, not independently verified facts.
- Third-party press — independently published coverage identified by outlet name and, where available, date: Vacuum Wars (vacuumwars.com, June 1, 2026 — A30 Pro review); ilifecare.in; iliferobot.store. Where outlet independence is uncertain (e.g., iliferobot.store appears brand-adjacent), this is noted in context.
What Is Not in Scope
No revenue, employee, shipment, or financial data was available or has been assumed. No product specifications beyond those explicitly stated by the company have been asserted as fact. Competitive peers are identified by the live module, not asserted in prose.
Methodology Rubric (Applied Uniformly)
- Strength-first presentation in every section.
- Inferences labeled "Our read:" throughout.
- Unsourced negatives converted to "Not yet disclosed:" gaps with an explicit invite to ILIFE to claim, correct, or supplement.
- This rubric is applied identically for every company assessed on this platform, regardless of size, geography, or sector.
To Correct or Supplement This Report
Contact: media@iliferobot.com (as listed on the company's own site) or use the platform's claim/correction workflow.
Technology stackOur read
Inferred from product specs — click through to the technology wiki:
ResearchComputed
Product comparisonComputed
Company announcement
News and Media
The company's official social & video channels · external links
News
From third-party news outlets (China & abroad) · external links


