

Dreame has introduced its new L60 Series, a four-model robot vacuum lineup built around a pretty familiar promise: less time vacuuming, less time mopping, and fewer moments rescuing a robot from a doorway, rug, or pile of cables, with one model designed to actually lift itself over obstacles.
The new lineup includes the L60 Pro Ultra ($1,399 at Amazon), L60 Ultra ($1,299), L60 Ultra PE ($1,099), and L60 Ultra FE ($999). The basic idea is that Dreame is bringing a lot of its higher-end robot vacuum features into a slightly wider range of models, including high suction power, hot-water mop cleaning, self-emptying docks, anti-tangle brushes, edge-cleaning arms, and smarter obstacle detection.
That does not mean all four robots are identical. The L60 Pro Ultra sits at the top of the range, the L60 Ultra keeps the high suction but changes the design and obstacle-crossing setup, while the PE and FE versions scale things back a little to come in at lower prices.
The Dreame L60 Pro Ultra is the flagship of the new series, priced at $1,399.99. It comes with 35,000Pa Vormax suction, hot-water mopping, liftable LiDAR navigation, and Dreame’s ProLeap robotic legs, which are designed to help the robot cross obstacles up to 3.47 inches high.

That last part is probably the most interesting thing here. Robot vacuums have gotten much better at mapping rooms and avoiding furniture, but raised thresholds, thick rugs, and awkward transitions can still stop them in their tracks. Dreame’s answer is to let the robot physically lift itself higher, so it has a better chance of moving through more of the house without needing you to pick it up and move it manually.
The Pro Ultra also uses AI-based obstacle detection that Dreame says can recognize more than 280 types of objects. That means it should be better at spotting common floor clutter like shoes, cables, toys, and other things you probably meant to pick up before starting the robot, but forgot about.
It also has an extendable mop and side brush, which are meant to help it clean closer to walls, corners, and furniture edges. That matters because edge cleaning is still one of the areas where robot vacuums can struggle. A robot can do a solid job in open floor space, but dust and crumbs love to collect along baseboards.
The L60 Ultra sits just below the Pro Ultra at $1,299.99. Like the Pro model, it offers 35,000Pa suction, but it focuses more on a lower-profile design and AI-enhanced object detection than the taller obstacle-crossing system.

Dreame lists the L60 Ultra at 3.2 inches tall, which should help it fit under more furniture. That may sound like a small detail, but in everyday use, it can make a big difference. A robot vacuum is a lot more useful when it can actually reach the dusty spaces under sofas, media cabinets, and beds.
The L60 Ultra also includes 3D ToF object detection, Dual Flex Arm edge cleaning, hot-water mop self-cleaning, and Dreame’s HyperStream detangling DuoBrush. The idea is to give you much of the cleaning hardware of the higher-end model, but in a robot that is a little more focused on low-clearance cleaning than climbing over taller obstacles.
So the choice between the Pro Ultra and Ultra may come down to your home layout. Raised thresholds and tricky transitions? The Pro Ultra is the more obvious fit. Low furniture and a need for a slimmer robot? The L60 Ultra may make more sense.
The L60 Ultra PE, or Performance Edition, comes in at $1,099.99. It lowers suction slightly to 30,000Pa, but still keeps several of the big convenience features, including hot-water mop self-cleaning at 212°F, Dual Flex Arm technology, anti-tangle brushes, and Dreame’s EasyLeap system for crossing obstacles up to 1.57 inches.

That makes the PE feel like the middle-ground model. You lose some of the more advanced climbing ability and headline suction figure of the top two models, but you still get a self-maintaining dock and strong cleaning hardware.
The L60 Ultra FE, or Fine Edition, is the entry point in the lineup at $999.99. It also uses 30,000Pa suction, but it is the most simplified version of the four. It includes Smart Pathfinder navigation, TriCut Brush 3.0 anti-tangle technology, Dual Flex Arm reach, app control, and voice control.
Here’s the simple version:
Robot vacuum mops are useful, but they can also be annoying to maintain. The robot can drag mop pads across your hard floors, sure, but those pads still need to be washed, dried, and kept from smelling bad. That is where the dock becomes a big part of the story.

Several L60 models include hot-water mop self-cleaning, with Dreame listing 212°F / 100°C mop washing on models such as the L60 Ultra and L60 Ultra PE. The dock can wash the mop pads after cleaning, dry them, refill the robot’s water tank, and empty the dustbin depending on the model.
That does not mean you can completely ignore the robot. You will still need to replace dust bags, refill clean water, empty dirty water, clean filters, and deal with brush maintenance from time to time. But compared with older robot vacuums that needed more hands-on attention after every few runs, this type of dock can make the whole process feel much less like a chore.
Hot-water mop cleaning also matters because mopping performance is only half the issue. Keeping the mop pads clean between runs is just as important, especially if you have pets, kids, or a kitchen floor that sees a lot of traffic.
The suction numbers on the L60 Series are big: 35,000Pa on the L60 Pro Ultra and L60 Ultra, and 30,000Pa on the L60 Ultra PE and L60 Ultra FE. Those figures are well above what many robot vacuums advertised just a few years ago.

But suction alone does not guarantee better cleaning. What matters is how that suction works with the rest of the system. Brush design, carpet detection, floor contact, navigation, edge reach, and hair management all play a role.
That is why Dreame is also leaning heavily on brush and arm systems across the lineup. Depending on the model, the L60 Series includes:
These are the kinds of features that can matter more day to day than a spec sheet number. A robot vacuum with strong suction is useful, but a robot vacuum that does not get tangled, miss corners, or get stuck under furniture is usually the one you actually keep using.
The bigger theme with the L60 Series is not just more power. It is fewer interruptions.
The Pro Ultra is built to handle taller room transitions. The Ultra is slimmer, so it can reach under more furniture. The PE keeps hot-water mop cleaning while lowering the price. The FE strips things back to the essentials while still offering strong suction, navigation, hair handling, app control, and voice control.
That makes the L60 Series feel less like one robot vacuum and more like four versions of the same idea. Dreame is giving buyers a way to choose based on the actual problems in their home.
For some people, the main issue is pet hair. For others, it is thresholds between rooms. Some people want better mopping, while others just want a robot that can vacuum daily without needing constant attention.
The L60 Pro Ultra is the one to watch if your home has raised thresholds, thick rugs, or awkward transitions that usually confuse robot vacuums. The L60 Ultra makes sense if you want the high suction figure but care more about a slimmer design. The L60 Ultra PE looks like the value-minded pick if hot-water mop cleaning is a priority. And the L60 Ultra FE is the more affordable entry point for buyers who want the L60 platform without paying for every extra feature.
In other words, Dreame is not just selling one new robot vacuum here. It is trying to cover several different types of homes with one lineup. And for a category where every room layout seems to create a different problem, that approach makes sense.
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