ROBOFAULTS

About RoboFaults

RoboFaults is a fault database for home robots. It is not a blog. Every error code is a structured record: what it means, how often each cause shows up, how to fix it, and which part fits your model.

The site started from an uncomfortable observation: when a robot fails, the manufacturer answers with a 90-page PDF or a chatbot. And when the manufacturer disappears — as is happening with iRobot — nobody answers at all. Someone has to keep the record.

Everything here exists in English and Spanish. Not as decorative machine translation: safety steps get reviewed sentence by sentence, because a mistranslated repair step can cause real harm.

How we verify each entry is documented in the editorial policy. If you find a mistake, write to us — corrections ship within 48 hours.

RoboFaults is independent. We have no relationship with iRobot, Roborock, or any manufacturer. We are funded by clearly marked affiliate links and, later, advertising. Neither changes what a fault entry says.