Stop the Fur Storm: The AIRROBO Grooming Vacuum That Grooms Your Dog or Cat and Cleans Up the Mess Itself

You brush your dog or cat, and the hair ends up everywhere except where you want it — on the couch, the carpet, your clothes, and somehow your dinner. Professional grooming helps, but at $80 to $150 per session for large breeds, the costs pile up fast. This review covers the AIRROBO PG100 grooming vacuum, a home kit that captures shed hair directly into a 2-liter dust cup as you groom, using 12,000 Pa of suction and a whisper-quiet motor that runs below 50 decibels. You will learn exactly how it works, what makes it safe for anxious dogs and skittish cats, and which of the two available versions makes sense depending on what your pet actually needs.

DVD (David)

Stop the Fur Storm: The AIRROBO Grooming Vacuum That Grooms Your Dog or Cat and Cleans Up the Mess Itself

You Know That Moment Right After You Vacuum the Couch

You spend twenty minutes cleaning every cushion. You step back, feel good about it, and then your dog shakes once and it looks like it never happened. Pet hair is on the couch, the carpet, your black jeans, your food, your face. If you have a husky, a golden, a maine coon, or pretty much any double-coated animal, you know this cycle by heart.

Grooming helps, but traditional brushing sends loose hair flying in every direction. You end up with more on the floor than in the trash. And professional grooming? A single session for a large breed can run $80 to $150, and most dogs need it every four to eight weeks. That adds up fast.

Golden retriever sitting relaxed on a modern living room couch covered in visible pet hair and fur showing the everyday shedding problem that pet owners face at home
The reality most pet owners know too well: one shake and the couch looks like it was never cleaned. Heavy shedders like goldens and huskies can shed enough fur daily to fill a dust cup on their own.

The AIRROBO PG100 grooming vacuum takes a completely different approach. Instead of brushing hair off your pet and onto your furniture, it captures it at the source — inside a 2-liter dust cup — while your dog or cat is being groomed. One tool. No flying hair. No cleanup afterward. Here is what it actually does and which version makes the most sense for your home.

What Makes This Different From a Regular Brush

Most grooming tools work in one direction: they pull hair off your pet and drop it somewhere nearby. The AIRROBO PG100 uses 12,000 Pa of suction to capture loose hair directly into a sealed dust cup as you groom. The brand claims it captures up to 99% of shed hair before it ever leaves the tool. Owners with German Shepherds, Golden Retrievers, Huskies, and Springer Spaniels report the difference is immediate and obvious.

The feature that makes this work for nervous pets is the noise level. At its lowest setting, the unit runs below 50 decibels — quieter than a normal conversation. That matters a lot when your cat bolts the second it hears a vacuum, or your dog panics at anything louder than a fan. Multiple verified buyers with anxious dogs say their pets tolerated the AIRROBO on the first try, simply because it does not sound like the vacuum cleaner they fear.

A few things that stand out in the design:

  • 4.9-foot detachable hose: Keeps the motor unit farther away from your pet, which reduces perceived noise and gives you more flexibility to reach hard-to-groom areas.
  • 3 adjustable suction levels: Use a gentler setting for sensitive areas like the face and ears, and full power on thick coats and stubborn shedding.
  • 6 guide combs (3mm to 24mm): Let you trim at different lengths without switching tools or guessing which size to use.
  • 2-liter dust cup with quick-release snap: Large enough for even the heaviest shedders. Empty it without touching the hair — just press the release and it drops clean.
Person using white AIRROBO PG100 grooming vacuum attachment on calm fluffy dog coat indoors capturing loose pet hair directly into the tool during home grooming session
The grooming head works directly against the coat, capturing loose hair before it reaches the furniture. The 4.9-foot hose keeps the motor unit away from the pet, which helps anxious dogs stay calm during the session.

Two Options: Standard or Pro

AIRROBO sells two versions of this system. Both share the same motor, suction power, dust cup, hose, and guide combs. The difference is in the toolset included.

AIRROBO PG100 — The Core Kit ($65.44)

This is the 5-in-1 version. It includes a grooming brush, electric clipper with guide combs, crevice cleaning tool, and an upholstery brush for furniture. It handles the full grooming routine for most dogs and cats — brushing, trimming, and basic home cleanup. This is the right pick if your main goal is shedding control and a clean coat without the added cost. Over 7,000 units sold per month at this price point tell a clear story.

AIRROBO PG100 Plus — The Full Kit ($77.97)

The Plus version adds three tools the standard kit does not include: a deshedding brush built to penetrate thick undercoats, a paw care trimmer for the fur between toe pads, and a nail grinder. If your dog or cat needs paw maintenance or if you want to skip the nail trim appointment on top of the grooming appointment, the Plus bundle covers all of it in one purchase. For the $12 difference, most owners with dogs over 30 pounds will find the upgrade pays off immediately.

Both versions work for dogs and cats, short-haired and long-haired. The guide combs and suction settings handle the full range.

What Real Owners Are Saying

One owner with a German Shepherd and a Boxer said her dogs let themselves be groomed every single day because the unit is so quiet they treat it like a back scratch. The fur tumbleweeds rolling across her floors disappeared within days. Another owner used the PG100 on two overgrown Springer Spaniels on the first day it arrived — filled four canisters with dog hair — and said the kit had already paid for itself in that one session compared to what a groomer would have charged.

A third owner managing a 10-year-old Golden Retriever and a young Bernese Mountain Dog praised the suction for trapping hair and the adjustable clipper for handling thick, long coats with control. The one consistent note across buyers: work slowly through thick hair, especially on larger double-coated breeds. The clipper is not an industrial unit, but for home maintenance between groomer visits, it consistently gets the job done.

Happy fluffy cat and medium-sized dog sitting side by side on a clean fur-free couch in a modern living room after being groomed at home showing calm well-groomed pets
The end goal: two freshly groomed pets and a couch with zero visible hair. Owners report that consistent at-home grooming with a vacuum kit reduces the need for professional grooming visits by half or more.

Is It Worth It at This Price?

A single professional grooming session for a large breed often costs more than either version of this kit. If you have a dog or cat that sheds heavily, visits the groomer every six to eight weeks, or both, the math is easy. The PG100 pays for itself on the first or second use for most households.

The quiet motor and adjustable suction make it realistic for cats and anxious dogs — not just the pets that would sit still through anything. The 2-liter dust cup means you finish a full grooming session without stopping to empty it. And the detachable hose means you can keep the unit on the floor and bring just the attachment to your pet, which feels more like a brushing session and less like a vacuum attack.

If you want the basics, the PG100 at $65.44 covers everything you need. If paw care and nail maintenance are already part of your routine, the PG100 Plus at $77.97 bundles it all in one kit and saves a separate trip to the groomer or the vet. Either way, the fur tornado ends here.

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