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CESRoboticsSmart HomeTech

Narwal Flow 2 robovac spots valuables before cleaning accidents happen

Narwal Flow 2 robovac might be the first vacuum you thank for saving your earring.

By
Shubham Sawarkar
Shubham Sawarkar's avatar
ByShubham Sawarkar
Editor-in-Chief
I’m a tech enthusiast who loves exploring gadgets, trends, and innovations. With certifications in CISCO Routing & Switching and Windows Server Administration, I bring a sharp...
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Jan 5, 2026, 11:56 AM EST
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Narwal Flow 2 robovac
Image: Narwal Robotics
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If you have ever watched a robot vacuum trundle past a dropped earring and thought, “You had one job,” Narwal’s new Flow 2 is trying to rewrite that story. On paper, this robovac is still a cleaner first, but at CES 2026, it is being positioned as something closer to a roaming, AI-powered floor scout that can spot valuables, check on your pets, and quietly tiptoe past a sleeping baby.​

At the heart of the pitch is a deceptively simple promise: the Flow 2 can notice things you care about before it destroys them. Using dual 1080p RGB cameras and Narwal’s new NarMind Pro autonomous system, the robot continuously scans your floors and tags objects it believes are important — jewelry, phones, wallets, keys, and other small items that usually disappear into couch cushions or the dustbin. When it spots something, it automatically gives it a wide berth, keeping at least about 5 centimeters away, and sends a notification to the Narwal app with a photo and a pin on a map of your home so you can go retrieve it yourself. You cannot yet dispatch the bot on a dedicated “find my earring” mission, but it is effectively creating a breadcrumb trail of the valuables it encounters during regular cleaning runs.​

That alone nudges the Flow 2 beyond the usual “don’t eat my socks” obstacle avoidance that most premium robovacs already attempt. Instead of treating everything on the floor as generic clutter, Narwal is trying to teach the robot to understand context: this cable is dangerous to get tangled in, this ring probably matters a lot to someone, this toy can be ignored, but maybe logged for later. The company says the system can recognize a broad range of household objects and will offload tricky cases to the cloud, sending an image for further analysis so the model can improve over time. In other words, your vacuum is quietly contributing to a shared visual dictionary of domestic life, one stray AirPod at a time.​

Where Narwal really leans into the “family robot” narrative is with its dedicated modes for pets and kids. Pet Care Mode focuses on the areas where your animals actually live — their beds, feeding corners, or that one spot under the window where fur mysteriously accumulates — and can automatically deep clean those zones while avoiding your cat or dog when they wander into frame. Narwal’s own materials even tease “find my pet” and remote video features, turning the Flow 2 into a low-slung, roaming pet cam you can peek through while you are away. For parents, Baby Care Mode dials back the chaos: the robot slows down, drops into a quieter profile near a crib, avoids crawling mats, and can ping you if it keeps seeing toys strewn where they should not be. The idea is less “terminator with a mop” and more a subtle, semi-aware appliance that behaves differently in a nursery than it does in a mudroom.​

Underneath all the AI gloss, the Flow 2 is still trying to flex as a serious cleaning machine. Narwal has bumped suction up to 30,000Pa, a sizable jump from the original Flow’s already aggressive 22,000Pa, putting it firmly in the “carpet punisher” tier of flagships. It supports hot-water mopping at around 158 degrees Fahrenheit, using that heat to better lift grime and sanitize floors, and pairs with an all-in-one dock that can wash the mop, dry it, collect dust, and optionally hook into your home’s plumbing for automatic refill and drainage. Narwal is also moving to a reusable dust bag and a washable, replaceable debris filter, a small but welcome nod to both long-term costs and the environmental guilt that comes with constantly throwing out vacuum bags.​

In the broader CES landscape, the Flow 2 is arriving at a moment when robovacs are under pressure to feel less dumb. Obstacle avoidance has become table stakes at the high end, and everyone is looking for a fresh spin: lidar that maps your yard for robot lawnmowers, under-counter docks that disappear into cabinetry, or AI that can tell the difference between a power strip and pet waste before a disaster strikes. Narwal’s bet is that “AI that notices your life” is the next hook — an appliance that not only cleans around you but also pays attention in a way that occasionally saves the day. If it works in real homes the way it does in demos, the Flow 2 will not just keep your floors cleaner; it might be the first robot vacuum you actually thank for not swallowing that tiny, easy-to-lose piece of your everyday life.


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