Robot mowers have been around long enough that most homeowners generally understand what’s on offer: less time cutting grass and more time doing pretty much anything else. The catch, for early generations, had been the setup. Boundary wires, buried cables, patchy navigation, and the occasional mower wandering off like it has its own weekend plans have kept them from feeling truly plug-and-play.
The ANTHBOT M9 looks to solve that with a wire-free setup built around RTK positioning, dual HDR vision cameras, AI obstacle detection, and app-based mapping. In essence, it is designed to know where it is, see what is around it, and mow in clean, efficient patterns without needing a buried perimeter wire.
That puts the M9 in a compelling spot for homeowners who like the idea of robotic lawn care but do not want their first weekend with the product to turn into a landscaping side quest.
Design

The ANTHBOT M9 has a compact, practical design that feels suited for typical residential yards rather than oversized commercial lawns. Likewise, its smaller footprint helps it move through tighter areas, narrow passages, and garden paths where larger robotic mowers can feel a little clumsy.
The chassis uses high-impact synthetic materials and carries an IPX6 waterproof rating, meaning it can handle heavy rain and hose cleaning. That matters more than it might sound. Robot mowers live outside, roll through wet grass, and collect plenty of lawn crud underneath. Being able to rinse the underside and blade disc with a garden hose makes routine maintenance easier and less precious.
The ANTHBOT M9 brings robotic mowing closer to the promise homeowners actually want: less setup, cleaner coverage, smarter navigation, and fewer Saturdays lost to lawn duty.
The mower uses large rear wheels with a brushless motor, giving it the traction needed for uneven patches and sloped yards. The front houses the vision system, including dual HDR cameras that help the mower maintain awareness when satellite positioning is less reliable.
Setup
The biggest appeal of the M9 is the lack of boundary wire. Older robotic mowers often required physical perimeter cables, which can be time-consuming to install and annoying to repair later if they break. ANTHBOT skips that approach in favor of digital mapping.

Setup, in essence, involves placing the charging station, positioning the RTK reference station, and pairing the mower with the ANTHBOT mobile app. From there, owners can map the yard using automatic mapping or remote-control mapping.
Automatic mapping works best for yards with clear physical boundaries like fences, walls, or defined edges. Remote-control mapping, on the other hand, lets the user guide the mower around the perimeter manually using the app. This is the better choice for more complex lawns with flower beds, trees, curved borders, or no-go zones.
The app supports up to 30 mowing zones, which is useful for front yards, back yards, side sections, or separated lawn areas. Owners can also create virtual pathways across driveways, patios, or walkways so the mower can move between zones without being carried.
Have parts of the yard where grass tends to grow quicker? Separate things by zones and have it focus on the spots where you might appreciate tending to more often.
Features

The ANTHBOT M9 uses a layered navigation system built around Full-Band RTK and dual HDR vision. RTK provides centimeter-level positioning when satellite visibility is strong. When the mower moves near walls, under trees, or into areas where satellite signals become less reliable, the vision system helps it continue tracking its location.
That redundancy is one of the M9’s strongest selling points. Some robotic mowers lean heavily on one type of navigation, which can lead to hiccups in real-world yards. The M9’s combination of satellite positioning and visual awareness gives it a better chance of staying on task when the yard throws a few curveballs.
The mower also includes AI obstacle detection trained to recognize a wide range of objects. That includes furniture, pots, pets, children, and small wildlife. Instead of bumping into objects and then reacting, the M9 is designed to identify and avoid them ahead of time.
There is also a headlight for low-light operation, though most users will still likely prefer daytime mowing for visibility, safety, and neighborly peace. That being said, it is quiet enough that you can run the M9 at just about any time of the day.
Cutting Performance

The M9 uses a systematic U-shaped mowing pattern rather than random bouncing. That helps it cover the lawn more efficiently and leaves behind a cleaner, striped finish. It also feels closer to how a person would mow than the older “bouncing DVD logo” style some early autonomous mowers or vacuums used.
The cutting system uses a disc with five titanium-coated pivoting blades. More blades can help create finer clippings, which improves mulching and allows grass to break down more easily back into the lawn. The pivoting design also helps protect the system if the mower hits a small stone or hard object.
Cutting height is adjusted electronically through the app, with a stated range of 30 mm to 70 mm. That is a welcome touch because it removes the need to walk out and twist a manual dial on the mower. It also allows different zones to use different cutting heights depending on the lawn condition or season.
ANTHBOT also includes an edge-mowing feature that lets users define how much the mower overlaps onto level adjacent surfaces like patios or paths. That can reduce trimming around boundaries, though it will not completely eliminate the need for manual cleanup in every yard. Robot mowers are smart, but you’ll still want to edge with a trimmer for the finer details.
App and Connectivity

The ANTHBOT app handles mapping, schedules, zone management, cutting height, task progress, and mower status. For homeowners who want automation without babysitting, that is where much of the product’s value lives.
Connectivity includes Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, and 4G LTE support. Wi-Fi and Bluetooth cover most basic control needs around the house. The 4G connection is useful for remote monitoring, alerts, and features that depend on a connection outside the home network.
There is also rain sensing, which lets the mower return to base when precipitation is detected. The app can be configured to resume mowing after a delay once the weather clears. Weather-aware scheduling helps prevent the mower from cutting wet grass, which can be messy for the blades, the deck, and the lawn itself.
Security features include an anti-theft digital fence. If the mower is moved well outside its mapped area, it can trigger an alarm and send a notification.
Battery and Maintenance

The M9 uses a 5Ah lithium-ion battery pack rated for roughly 70 to 90 minutes of mowing per charge, depending on grass height, density, terrain, and slope. When the battery runs low, the mower returns to its charging dock, recharges, and resumes from where it left off.
That resume feature is important. If you’re like me, you won’t care whether the mower finishes the yard in one charge, as long as it reliably completes the job without starting over or missing sections. It might take a few hours or more to do the yard, but it’s better than the 90 minutes I would have spent myself.
A full recharge takes about 90 minutes. For medium-sized residential lawns, that should be manageable, especially since robotic mowers are designed to cut more frequently rather than wait for grass to become tall and unruly.
Long-term maintenance is another bright spot. The battery is user-replaceable and accessible by removing four screws, which is better than designs that require factory service for a basic battery swap. Blades, tires, and other wear items will still need attention over time, but that is expected in this category.
Value






The ANTHBOT M9 sits in an increasingly competitive robot mower market, but its feature set gives it a strong case. Wire-free setup, RTK plus vision navigation, AI obstacle detection, app-based cutting height, multi-zone support, and a serviceable battery make it feel more polished than an entry-level model.
It is best suited for homeowners with medium-sized lawns who want a more automated approach without committing to buried wires or a fully manual routine. It also makes sense for people with multiple lawn zones, mild slopes, and enough yard complexity to benefit from smarter mapping.
The ongoing 4G service is worth noting. Users who want full remote connectivity after the trial period should factor in the annual subscription cost. It is not a deal-breaker, but it is part of the ownership math.
Warranty
ANTHBOT offers a tiered warranty, of sorts, including three years of limited coverage for the main device, charging station, RTK base station, drive motors, mowing motors, camera system, and internal logic boards. The lithium-ion battery receives two years of coverage, while consumables like blades, tires, and ground nails are not covered.
That is a reasonable structure for a product that lives outdoors and has moving parts. Owners should also pay attention to the support process, including proof of purchase and documentation for shipping damage or missing parts.
Verdict

Pinnacle Selection represents our highest honor, one reserved for products that stand out in design, performance, and overall value.
Products earning this distinction exemplify excellence across the board, delivering an experience that truly rises above the rest.
When you see the badge, you’re looking at the best of what’s available in its category.
The ANTHBOT M9 is a strong option for homeowners who want a smarter, lower-maintenance way to keep the lawn under control. Its biggest win is the combination of wire-free setup and layered navigation. RTK gives it precision, dual vision helps when signal conditions get messy, and AI obstacle detection adds a useful layer of safety.
It is not completely hands-off. Owners still need to map the yard carefully, clean the mower, replace blades, and occasionally handle edge trimming. But compared with traditional mowing or older robotic systems that rely on perimeter wires, the M9 feels like a much more modern approach.
For the right yard, this is the kind of smart home product that quietly earns its keep. It does not need to be flashy. It just needs to cut the grass, find its way home, and avoid turning the flower bed into confetti.
At its standard price of $899 it feels like a good price for the M9; however, it’s currently listed at just $769, making it a pretty great little bargain.
The Review
M9 Robot Mower
PROS
- Wire-free setup with app-based mapping
- RTK plus dual HDR vision navigation
- Supports up to 30 mowing zones
- App-controlled cutting height
- IPX6 rating makes cleanup easier
- User-replaceable battery
- Strong warranty coverage for core components
CONS
- Edge mowing can reduce trimming, but not eliminate it
- RTK station placement still matters
- 4G connectivity may require an annual subscription after the trial
- Results depend on careful initial mapping
Review Breakdown
- Design
- Features
- Setup
- Performance
- Battery
- Warranty

