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Segway Navimow After One Full Minnesota Season: An Honest Review

There are plenty of Segway Navimow reviews written by tech bloggers who ran the mower on a flat suburban lawn in California for two weeks. This isn't that.

There are plenty of Segway Navimow reviews written by tech bloggers who ran the mower on a flat suburban lawn in California for two weeks. This isn't that.

This is a review based on a full Minnesota mowing season — May through October — installing and servicing Segway Navimow systems for homeowners across Forest Lake and the East Twin Cities. Sloped lots. Thick northern grass. Rain delays. The works. Here's what we've actually seen.

What Makes Segway Navimow Different

Before getting into performance, it's worth explaining why we chose Segway Navimow specifically over competitors like Husqvarna Automower.

The biggest differentiator is the wire-free boundary system. Traditional robot mowers require you to physically bury a boundary wire around your entire yard — a process that takes hours, leaves your lawn looking like a construction site, and creates a permanent failure point (cut wire = mower stops working).

Segway Navimow uses a combination of GPS and a proprietary EFLS (Exact Fusion Locating System) to map your yard boundaries digitally. No wire burial. Installation takes a fraction of the time, the yard isn't disturbed, and if you ever want to adjust boundaries — say you add a garden bed — you just update it in the app.

For Minnesota homeowners, this matters more than it might elsewhere. Frost heave and freeze-thaw cycles are hard on buried wire systems. We've seen Husqvarna wire systems fail over winter in ways that require re-running significant sections of wire in spring. Navimow sidesteps that problem entirely.

Performance on Minnesota Lawns

Grass types: Minnesota lawns are typically Kentucky bluegrass, fine fescue, or a blend. These are dense, cold-climate grasses that grow vigorously in spring and early summer. The Navimow handles them well. The mulching cut it produces — cutting frequently in small increments — actually promotes thicker turf over time by returning fine clippings as nutrients.

Slopes: This is where many robot mowers struggle and where Segway Navimow genuinely stands out. The H series handles slopes up to 84% gradient — steeper than most residential yards in the Twin Cities area. We've installed on properties with significant grade changes and haven't hit a slope the mower couldn't navigate.

Rain: The Navimow has a rain sensor and will return to its dock when precipitation is detected. In a Minnesota summer with frequent afternoon storms, this means some days it doesn't complete its full schedule. In practice, because it mows daily in short cycles, missing a day or two doesn't result in the lawn getting out of control the way skipping a week with a traditional mower would.

Obstacles: Trees, garden beds, kids' toys left on the lawn — the Navimow uses ultrasonic sensors to detect and navigate around obstacles. It's not perfect. Small objects close to the ground (like a sprinkler head) can be missed. We always recommend a quick walkthrough of the yard before the season starts to identify anything that needs to be moved or flagged.

The App Experience

The Segway Navimow app is genuinely good — better than most lawn equipment apps, which is a low bar, but it's legitimately useful. You can set mowing schedules, adjust boundary zones, check battery status, and monitor coverage maps from your phone.

Setup through the app takes about 45 minutes for the initial boundary mapping walk. You literally walk the perimeter of your yard with your phone and the mower learns the boundary. It's straightforward enough that most homeowners can do it themselves, though having a professional do the initial setup ensures the boundary is optimized and edge cases (irregular property shapes, obstacles near boundaries) are handled correctly.

What We'd Improve

No product review is worth reading without some honest criticism.

The Navimow struggles slightly with very irregular yard shapes — lots with multiple disconnected zones separated by driveways or pathways require more setup time and occasional manual nudging. Husqvarna's wire system actually handles multi-zone yards more reliably in those specific cases.

Battery life limits runtime per session. On larger lots (approaching the 2.5 acre maximum), the mower needs to return to charge mid-session. It does this automatically, but it means mowing a large lot takes longer than the spec sheet implies.

Customer support from Segway directly is inconsistent. This is a real issue for homeowners who buy online and try to DIY. Having a local installer who knows the product is genuinely valuable — not just for initial setup but for troubleshooting mid-season.

Bottom Line

After a full Minnesota season, the Segway Navimow is the right choice for most Twin Cities homeowners. The wire-free system is the right technology for our climate, the slope performance is best-in-class, and the app is solid. The limitations are real but manageable with proper setup.

The homeowners we've installed for consistently report the same thing after about three weeks: they forget they own a lawn mower. The grass just stays cut. That's exactly what this product promises, and in most cases it delivers.

If you're in the Forest Lake or East Twin Cities area and want to see one running before you buy, we do free demos. No pitch, no pressure — just watch it work on your actual lawn.