
Dreame Technology used CES 2026 to announce something bigger than a new vacuum. The company revealed its Whole-home Smart Ecosystem, a unified product lineup spanning cleaning, climate, cooking, personal care, outdoor maintenance, and entertainment. For a brand best known for robot vacuums and cordless floor cleaners, this marks a significant pivot toward becoming a full household technology provider.
The announcement positions Dreame as more than a cleaning appliance company. Every product shown at the Las Vegas Convention Center connects to a single app, which means scheduling a robot vacuum and adjusting an air conditioner now happen in the same place. That shift from standalone devices to an integrated system defines what Dreame wants to become in 2026 and beyond.
Why Dreame Is Expanding Beyond Cleaning
Dreame built its reputation on floor care. Robot vacuums like the L-series and wet-dry vacuums like the H-series earned the company recognition among users who wanted powerful suction and self-cleaning docks. That foundation gave Dreame the engineering base to branch out, and CES 2026 is where the company made that expansion official.
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The ecosystem now covers indoor spaces, outdoor areas, and personal devices. Instead of limiting itself to what happens on floors, Dreame now offers products for kitchens, bathrooms, backyards, and pools. The company frames this as a natural progression: the same motor technology and AI navigation that powers a vacuum can inform how a lawn mower maps a yard or how a hair dryer adjusts heat in real time.

This expansion also reflects a practical bet on convenience. Households already juggle multiple apps for different smart devices. Dreame argues that consolidating control into one platform reduces friction and makes automation more useful. Whether that plays out depends on how well the ecosystem actually connects, but the ambition is clear.
The timing makes sense. CES serves as the traditional stage for companies to signal where they’re headed, and Dreame chose this moment to show it isn’t content staying in one category. The products unveiled aren’t concepts or prototypes. They’re named, spec’d, and positioned for market entry.
What the Whole-home Smart Ecosystem Includes
Dreame organizes its ecosystem into six categories, each covering a distinct area of daily life. The structure keeps products grouped by function rather than lumping everything into a generic “smart home” bucket.

Smart Home includes climate control and large appliances. The lineup features the FizzFresh Refrigerator with a built-in sparkling water dispenser, the Aura Mini LED 4K smart TV series, and the AI Inverter Washer L9. Air conditioners and air purifiers round out the category, handling temperature and air quality automatically.
Smart Cleaning remains Dreame’s core strength. This category includes the robot vacuums, wet-dry vacuums, and cordless stick vacuums the company is already known for. Nothing surprising here, but it anchors the ecosystem with proven products.
Smart Kitchen covers cooking and water. The category includes water purifiers, range hoods, ovens, and dishwashers. These appliances aim to handle meal prep and cleanup with less manual intervention.

Smart Personal Care focuses on individual grooming. High-speed hair dryers, electric toothbrushes, and AI smart rings fall under this umbrella. The hair dryer category in particular gets a flagship product with sensor-driven temperature control.
Smart Garden addresses outdoor maintenance without requiring weekend labor. Robotic lawn mowers and robotic pool cleaners handle grass and water automatically, using mapping and obstacle detection to work independently. Smart Entertainment rounds out the ecosystem with AI smart glasses and an AI printer, adding creativity and media consumption to the product mix.
Flagship Products Readers Will Recognize
The X60 Max Ultra Complete robot vacuum leads Dreame’s cleaning lineup at CES 2026. At just 7.95cm (3.13in) tall, it fits under furniture that blocks most competitors. Dreame’s AI-enhanced OmniSight system enables route planning that the company claims is 200% faster, along with recognition of over 280 object types. Dual robotic legs allow it to climb obstacles up to 8.8cm (3.5in), which handles most raised thresholds and carpet transitions without getting stuck.

The Aero Pro wet-dry vacuum targets a different cleaning problem: hair. Its TangleCut 2.0 system reduces hair tangles during operation, and a 194°F (90°C) Hot Wash Self-cleaning Dock keeps the brush roll clean between uses. The combination addresses one of the most common complaints about floor vacuums in homes with pets or long-haired occupants.
Climate control gets a new entry with the Delta-Wind Air Conditioner, Dreame’s first corner-embedded cabinet air conditioner. This unit installs into wall corners without requiring structural modifications, which preserves floor space and simplifies installation.
The RZ601 Pro gas range combines a 5.0 cubic foot true convection oven with gas burners rated up to 22,000 BTU. Multiple cooking modes include air fry, giving it flexibility beyond traditional oven functions. This marks Dreame’s first serious entry into cooking appliances.

Personal care gets the Pilot 20 AI Smart Hair Dryer, which Dreame claims uses the world’s first bionic dual-robotic-arm system. One arm analyzes scalp health through sensors while the second adjusts temperature, airflow, and speed in real time. A 150,000 RPM motor provides the airflow, while the adaptive system aims to reduce heat damage during drying.
Outdoor products include the Zircon 2 Ultra Robotic Pool Cleaner and the RoboticMower A3 AWD Pro series. The Zircon 2 Ultra is Dreame’s first pool cleaner to master pool step cleaning, using four pumps and dual propulsion jets. Its 3D laser mapping and app-controlled auto-dock system let it work without supervision. The A3 AWD Pro mower uses wire-free mapping for yard navigation and four-wheel drive for uneven terrain, with obstacle avoidance covering over 300 object types.

How the Dreame App Fits Into All of This
Every product in the Whole-home Smart Ecosystem connects to the Dreame app. That single point of control handles scheduling, status monitoring, and adjustments across all device categories. Setting a vacuum to run at 10 AM happens in the same interface as checking whether the air purifier needs a filter change.
The practical benefit comes from consolidation. Instead of switching between a vacuum app, a climate app, and a lawn care app, users manage everything in one place. Dreame describes this as transforming single-device operation into a whole-home system, though how seamlessly that works in practice depends on execution.
Specific examples from the press materials include arranging floor vacuuming schedules and adjusting air conditioning performance. The press materials describe this as transforming single-device operation into a whole-home system, though Dreame positions this as centralized control rather than autonomous device-to-device automation.
For households already deep in one smart home ecosystem, adding another app creates friction. For those starting fresh or specifically buying into Dreame’s product line, the unified approach reduces the app sprawl that plagues multi-brand smart homes.
What This Signals for Dreame in 2026
Dreame’s CES 2026 announcement represents a calculated expansion. The company isn’t abandoning cleaning products, but it’s no longer defining itself by that single category. The Whole-home Smart Ecosystem positions Dreame as a provider of connected household technology across multiple rooms and use cases.
The strategy centers on convenience and time savings. Each product category addresses a routine task that requires effort: cleaning floors, maintaining a pool, drying hair, mowing grass. By offering automated or semi-automated solutions across all of them, Dreame bets that users will value having one company handle multiple chores.
Whether this ecosystem gains traction depends on factors Dreame can’t fully control: pricing, regional availability, and how well the app actually unifies the experience. But the ambition is now public. Dreame wants to be the company that handles your home, not just your floors.
The products shown at CES 2026 aren’t vague concepts. They have names, specifications, and clearly defined functions. That concreteness separates this announcement from the aspirational smart home pitches that often dominate trade show floors. Dreame showed up with finished products and a clear message about where the brand is headed.
For Gadgeteer readers tracking CES 2026, Dreame’s booth demonstrated that the robot vacuum company they might already know is becoming something broader. The ecosystem is real, the products are named, and the app ties them together. What happens next depends on how well Dreame delivers on that unified promise.
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