When it comes to robot vacuum cleaners, there’s a ton of technical jargon that you’ll come across. One example is the feature known as Carpet Boost, which, if we’re being honest, isn’t a hard concept to grasp.
However, if you’re new to the robot vacuum cleaner game and have no idea what Carpet Boost is, you’ve come to the right place. Below, we’ll briefly cover the Carpet Boost feature, mention names synonymous with Carpet Boost, and explain who would benefit from this handy robot vacuum feature.

What Is Carpet Boost?
If you’re not aware, robot vacuum cleaners, especially more modern models, come with a series of sensors that it uses to create digital floorplans of your home. These sensors also assist the robot in identifying the location of certain hazards, such as cliffs and pet bowls (robots hate water).
Another thing that these sensors can do is pick up the location of carpeting. As you probably already know, vacuuming carpets is a lot different from vacuuming bare floors. It takes more suction power to extract debris from carpet fibers than it does debris on the surface of linoleum tiles and hardwood floorboards.

This is where Carpet Boost comes into play.
Carpet Boost is a feature that’s available in numerous robot vacuum models of nearly all brands. The robot uses its sensors to identify which parts of your floors are carpeted and which aren’t.
As the robot steps a wheel on carpeting, the sensors will instruct it to immediately ramp up its suction power to the max, thereby making it easier to extract dust from between carpet fibers in one or two quick passes.
The drawback of Carpet Boost technology, if you can call it that, is it drains the robot’s battery much more quickly than standard cleaning mode. On average, you can determine how long your robot’s battery will last on Carpet Boost mode by dividing its max runtime in half.

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Other Names for Carpet Boost
Carpet Boost is mainly used for Roombas. When you look at other robot vacuum cleaner brands, you’ll come across names of features that are synonymous with the concept of Carpet Boost.
Such names are as follows:
- Carpet Mode (typically manually activated)
- Carpet Intellect
- Carpet Detection (typically used for hybrid bots to both stop mopping and increase suction power)
- BoostIQ

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Who Would Benefit Most from Carpet Boost Technology?
For the most part, it doesn’t hurt to have a robot vacuum cleaner with Carpet Boost technology. It’s a highly valuable feature that usually doesn’t affect the price of a robotic vacuum cleaner. Plus, you can always deactivate it whenever you want.
However, to answer the main question, homeowners and apartment dwellers with carpets would benefit. It may seem simple enough, but if your floors are covered in wall-to-wall carpeting, you might want to either deactivate Carpet Boost or find a model that doesn’t have it at all.
Leaving your robot on Carpet Boost mode will drain its battery by around twice the rate than on standard cleaning mode, which might not be healthy for the rechargeable, non-detachable Li-Ion battery.
Carpet Boost Video

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