Pet hair vacuum

What’s the Best Vacuum for Pet Hair

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Pet hair vacuum

Tackle tough messes without worrying about hair wrap!

Collection: Pet Vacuums

Need to get a handle on heavy shedding? Our pet vacuums deliver the power and performance you need to keep up with the daily messes that come along with being a pet parent.

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*Discount codes are not valid on product bundles, select items, parts and accessories, and commercial items. Discounts cannot be combined with other offers. *Source: Circana, Retail Tracking Service, units sold of deep carpet cleaners/extractor style compact carpet cleaner among brands tracked, 12 ME April 2023

Techtronic Floor Care

Technology Limited.© 2023

All Rights Reserved.

*Discount codes are not valid on product bundles, select items, parts and accessories, and commercial items. Discounts cannot be combined with other offers. *Source: Circana, Retail Tracking Service, units sold of deep carpet cleaners/extractor style compact carpet cleaner among brands tracked, 12 ME April 2023

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What’s the Best Vacuum for Pet Hair?

The iRobot Roomba i3 robot vacuum.

After new rounds of testing, we’re replacing our current recommendations with four new picks: the Black+Decker Dustbuster AdvancedClean+ HHVK515JP07 handheld vacuum, the Ryobi 18V One+ HP Cordless Pet Stick Vac Kit with Dual-Roller Bar, the SEBO Airbelt K3 canister vacuum, and the Roborock Q5+ robot vacuum.

As any pet owner knows, even if you own a good vacuum, there always seems to be some pet hair around. So instead of asking ourselves what’s the best vacuum for pet hair, we asked something more to the point: What’s the best way to keep pet hair to a minimum in your home?

Any good vacuum—upright or canister, corded or cordless—will do an excellent job of picking up pet hair, on both hard floors and carpets. We’ve tested all these styles, using bagfuls of genuine cat and dog hair, and all our picks have excelled at the task. Some models with “pet” or “animal” in their name come with extra features or tools that help clean hair off a couch or prevent hair from tangling around the brush, for example, and they’re sometimes helpful (more on those later).

That said, no matter how good your traditional vacuum is, you’re unlikely to keep up with the rate of shedding—unless you have a vacuum that can work constantly. In other words, a robot vacuum is the best vacuum for pet hair.

Our pick

Pet hair vacuum

iRobot Roomba i3 EVO

A reliable, tangle-resistant robot

This sturdy robot vacuum won’t get bored or distracted, so it’ll do a better job keeping pet hair off your floors than anything driven by a human. The i3 is better than competitors at getting pet hair out of rugs, and its nimble nav system consistently and thoroughly cleans large spaces.

Buying Options

Any robot vacuum can keep up with pet hair, but the iRobot Roomba line is particularly noteworthy because of how durable and fuss-free the vacuums are for the money. The super-basic Roomba 694 or the Eufy RoboVac 11S are fine choices. But paying more for our top pick, the Roomba i3, will get you extra suction, a nimble navigation system, and tangle-resistant brushes that can make the life of a pet owner even easier. (The iRobot Roomba i3+ EVO includes the i3 EVO robot, plus a charging dock that automatically sucks the debris out of the robot and stores it in a disposable bag, which you’ll only have to change once a month.) The Roborock Q5 (or the Roborock Q5+, which has a self-emptying dock) is slightly easier to automate–for example, using Amazon Alexa, Google Assistant, or Siri Shortcuts–and has a larger dustbin and longer battery life. It’s not quite as good at cleaning as the Roomba i3, though, especially on carpets.

Sizing up the problem of pet hair

According to Cats International, a typical domesticated cat has 60,000 hairs per square inch of skin on its back (and as many as 120,000 per square inch on its belly). Each hair is shed two or three times per year. If you conservatively estimate that a typical cat has about 227 square inches of surface area (that’s a 5-by-12-inch cylinder) and use the lower of the per-square-inch and hairs-shed numbers given above, that works out to at least 27,240,000 shed hairs per cat per year, or almost 75,000 per day.

Even if you vacuum daily, you can see the problem: By the time you vacuum again, 75,000 new hairs are coating your floor and upholstery. If you vacuum weekly, the number tops half a million.

A close-up of a pile of cat hair on a white plate, with the nozzle of the Dyson v7 behind it.

Of course, not all cat breeds are alike—imagine the numbers for a Maine coon—and we haven’t even attempted to figure out the number for a “typical dog.” But the fundamental concern holds true: Most cats and many dogs shed continuously, and few pet owners can manually vacuum frequently enough to keep up.

That’s why a robot vacuum is a particularly useful tool for pet hair. If you run one daily or at least a few times a week, it will keep your floors tidy pretty much all the time.

However, pet hair also has a way of clinging to furniture and embedding itself in thicker rugs—two places today’s robot vacuums can’t reach. At a minimum, you need a lint roller to get hair off your couches and chairs, if not a handheld vacuum (which can come in handy for all kinds of other jobs, too). And if you want to deep-clean your rugs, you need a more traditional vacuum, whether it’s a plug-in or a cordless machine.

Are pet vacuums worth it? What makes it a “pet” vacuum anyway?

Pet hair vacuum

Shark Navigator Lift-Away NV352

Great for most jobs, including pet hair

Any decent vacuum can clean up pet hair, so don’t fret about this. The Shark Navigator is our favorite vacuum overall, and it’s great whether you have pets or not. As a plug-in vacuum, it’s a much better value for the money than a cordless machine.

Buying Options

Pet hair vacuum

Dyson V8 Animal

One of our favorite cordless vacs

Pet-oriented vacuums aren’t always especially great at getting hair out of rugs, but some excellent models come in such variants, like this Dyson, which has an extra upholstery-cleaning brush. The V8 is cordless and especially convenient, but it costs a lot more than a plug-in over the short and long term.

Buying Options

When a vacuum includes “pet” or “animal” or “cat and dog” in its model name, that usually means it comes with a small brush attachment that helps get hair off upholstery, a brush roll that resists tangling, or (less commonly) an odor-reducing air filter, or some combination of those features.

All of those extras can be useful, though none of them actually make the vacuum better (or worse) at getting pet hair off the floor. Even the cheapest vacuums can pick up pet hair off a bare floor, and any vacuum that’s good at getting dust out of rugs should also be good at digging pet hair out of rugs. Your best bet is to first look for a vacuum with all-around great cleaning ability—such as our favorite all-purpose upright, the Shark Navigator Lift-Away NV352—and then see if the company has any pet-oriented variations of that vacuum (Shark offers a special upholstery brush that you can buy separately).

Although our favorite cordless stick vacuum, the pet-agnostic Tineco S11, is a decent cleaner and a good all-around vacuum, our runner-up pick, the Dyson V8 Animal is better for this particular use. In our tests the Dyson just picked up more pet hair than the Tineco, particularly from carpets. We also found that pet hair was more likely to get wrapped around the Tineco’s brush or jammed somewhere in the intake than with many other models. Plus, the Dyson comes with a mini motorized brush attachment that’s great for getting hair off of upholstery.

One note about tangle-resistant brushes: They aren’t all equally effective. We haven’t tested them extensively, but we have found that the anti-tangle system in certain Shark vacuums seems to make the vacuum more prone to clogging. Vacuum Wars, the best vacuum-review channel on YouTube, has suggested that the brush on the Bissell IconPet cordless vacuum is one of the best (video) at avoiding tangles without causing clogs. All that said, the Dyson picks up much more pet hair than the Bissell, and it’s easy to detangle any ol’ brush roll with scissors as long as you do it pretty regularly.

And here’s an edge case to consider: If you have a lot of hairy pets, like four golden retrievers or a half-dozen long-haired cats, you might want to avoid bagged vacuums. Pet hair stuffs a bag pretty quickly, and the cost of replacements can add up over the years.