If you visit the Mammotion website today, the choices are clearer than they have ever been, but they are also more specialized.
Mammotion has officially split their 2026 catalog into two distinct “Teams,” totaling five core models available for purchase:
- The “Mountain Goats” (LUBA Series):
- Luba Mini AWD
- Luba 3 AWD
- The “Janitors” (YUKA Series):
- YUKA
- YUKA mini
- YUKA mini 2
The biggest mistake people make is buying a Yuka for a Luba lawn (it gets stuck), or a Luba for a Yuka lawn (it misses the leaves).
Here is the definitive guide to picking the right team for your property.
Team LUBA: The All-Terrain Specialists
Models: Luba Mini AWD, Luba 3 AWD
You need a LUBA if:
- You have steep hills. This is non-negotiable. The “AWD” (All-Wheel Drive) is standard on both Lubas. They can climb up to 38° (80% slope).
- You have rough ground. Roots, divots, and mud pits are Luba territory.
- You only care about cutting grass. The Luba is a mower, pure and simple.
Which Luba?
- Luba Mini AWD: For small, hilly yards (under 0.5 acres). It’s the unique “Pocket Tank”—the only small mower on the market with true 4×4 capability.
- Luba 3 AWD: For big estates. It features the LiDAR navigation system and the Offset Deck to cut closer to walls.
Team YUKA: The 3-in-1 Sweepers
Models: YUKA, YUKA mini, YUKA mini 2
You need a YUKA if:
- You have trees that drop leaves. The Yuka is famous for its optional Sweeper Kit. It doesn’t just mulch grass; it picks up leaves, acorns, and twigs.
- Your lawn is mostly flat. The Yuka series handles gentle slopes (up to 24°), but it lacks the aggressive off-road tires of the Luba.
- You want a “Manicured” look. Yuka is designed for flatter, smoother lawns where finish quality matters more than traction.
Which Yuka?
- YUKA (Standard): The workhorse. Best for larger flat lawns with heavy leaf fall.
- YUKA mini (Gen 1): The budget option. Great for small, flat city yards.
- YUKA mini 2 (New): The sweet spot. It includes upgraded sensors (VisionFence 2.0) for better obstacle avoidance under trees, making it the smarter choice over the original Mini.
Technical Spec Showdown (Detailed)
Here is the deep-dive comparison for those who care about the numbers.
| Technical Spec | LUBA Series (AWD) (Models: Mini AWD / Luba 3) |
YUKA Series (Sweeper) (Models: Mini / Mini 2 / Std) |
|---|---|---|
| Drive System | 4×4 AWD Hub Motors Independent suspension on Luba 3 | RWD + Omni-Wheels Designed for zero-turn agility |
| Max Slope | 80% (38°) Industry Leader | 45% (24°) Standard Residential |
| Obstacle Crossing | 50mm (2.0 inches) Handles roots & divots easily | 30mm (1.2 inches) Prefers smoother turf |
| Cutting Width | 400mm (Dual Disc) Wide pass = Faster mowing | 320mm (Dual Disc) Narrower for complex shapes |
| Cutting Height | 25mm – 70mm Can tackle overgrown grass | 20mm – 90mm Wider range for “Carpet” look |
| Vision System | Binocular Vision + LiDAR* *LiDAR on Luba 3 only | Binocular Vision + Depth Optimized for identifying leaves |
| Leaf Collection | Not Compatible | Auto-Empty Basket (Optional) Holds ~22L of debris |
| Weather Rating | IPX6 (Washable) Can hose down the deck | IPX6 (Robot) / IPX4 (Basket) Remove basket before washing |
Critical Advice: The “Mini 2” Dilemma
Why are there two Yuka Minis? The Yuka Mini (Gen 1) is currently the budget king, perfect if your yard is simple and open. However, if you have dense trees (which blocks GPS), I strongly recommend the Yuka Mini 2. The updated “2” model features improved camera sensors that handle shadows and low light significantly better than the first generation.
Final Verdict: Pick Your Team
Don’t overcomplicate it. Look at your backyard and answer one question: Is it a hill, or is it a leaf magnet?
- Go Team LUBA if you need traction, power, and the ability to climb steep slopes.
- Go Team YUKA if you want a pristine, leaf-free lawn and your property is relatively flat.