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iRobot has filed for bankruptcy – here’s what that means for Roomba owners

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iRobot, the company which invented robot vacuum cleaners, has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy some 23 years after it first launched the Roomba range.

While such company failures can often be extremely bad news for owners of smart home technology, there is reason for optimism in this case …

iRobot has filed for bankruptcy

iRobot announced the Chapter 11 yesterday.

iRobot and certain of its affiliates voluntarily commenced a pre-packaged chapter 11 process in the District of Delaware (the “Court”). The Company expects to complete the pre-packaged chapter 11 process by February 2026.

It’s a sad development in the long history of the company which first invented the category, and which launched its first Roomba cleaner way back in 2002. Since then, however, growing competition in the field has left the company struggling.

Amazon had hoped to buy iRobot but was forced to withdraw on antitrust grounds. Regulators argued that the e-commerce giant had enough power to place competitor companies at a significant disadvantage.

Usually, this would be bad news for customers

Often when a smart home company goes bust, that can have significant consequences for customers. We’ve seen multiple examples of smart products being either completely bricked or turned into dumb ones by the loss of servers.

The most recent example was the closure of Neato, which saw its own robot vacuum cleaners turned into dumb products just over a month ago.

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