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RoboticsSmart HomeTech

Honda’s ProZision Autonomous mower can mow lawns by itself after you teach it

Honda is bringing teachable autonomy to lawn care with a riding mower that learns your mowing patterns before working independently.

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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Oct 19, 2025, 3:57 AM EDT
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Honda ProZision Autonomous mower
Image: Honda
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If you’ve ever watched a robot lawnmower on auto-pilot and thought, “cute, but I wouldn’t trust it with my hydrangeas,” Honda has an answer: don’t just program it — sit on it, drive it, show it the ropes, and then let it do the rest.

Honda is rolling out the ProZision series — a line of battery-powered zero-turn riding mowers — at Equip Exposition 2025 next week in Louisville, Kentucky. The headline-grabber is the ProZision Autonomous, a commercial-sized riding mower that can operate without an onboard human, but only after a human teaches it the ideal routes and patterns for a property. That teaching phase explains why this “robot” still comes with a seat.

Honda’s approach is simple and human-centered: an experienced operator rides the mower and mows the way they would for a given site — the tight passes, the headlands, where to avoid delicate planting beds — while the machine records that route. The ProZision Autonomous stores those lessons and uses satellite-guided positioning and onboard sensors to replay the same pattern later, with sub-decimeter accuracy, through a companion app. Operators can select routes and playback settings from a tablet or phone once the teaching is done. It’s less about replacing human skill than copying it.

Under the hood, the mower isn’t just a GPS box. Honda equips the Autonomous with multiple sensor modalities — GNSS receivers for satellite positioning, LiDAR and radar for obstacle detection, and a telematics control unit to manage the data flow — plus emergency-stop systems and dual authentication (a physical key and a digital passcode) to guard against theft and misuse. Those redundancies make it sound much more like a small autonomous vehicle than the lawn-robot toys you see cutting tiny yards.

This isn’t a weekend-gardener gadget. Honda’s specs place the ProZision Autonomous firmly in the commercial world: a 60-inch cutting width, runtime figures that translate to coverage of up to about 14–15 acres under ideal conditions, and charging times designed around heavy-duty cycles. Honda is selling the non-autonomous ProZision ZTR models with an MSRP of $32,999, while pricing for the autonomous unit itself is yet to be announced. The lineup is slated to reach U.S. customers in summer 2026.

Honda says it designed the Autonomous with professional landscapers in mind, hoping to ease the load on businesses that face labor shortages and an aging workforce. “Developed to help reduce various burdens on landscaping businesses facing challenges such as an aging and workforce shortages,” the company’s power-products leadership explained when announcing the line. In short: think grounds crews at universities, resorts, and corporate campuses — places where scale and repeatability matter.

Why this matters

There are two practical ideas behind Honda’s choice to make the operator teach the mower. First, it leverages the tacit knowledge of skilled equipment operators — the little habits and instincts that aren’t easy to encode in a generic map. Second, it sidesteps thorny problems in full autonomy: edge cases, one-off obstacles, and the need for local judgment. Teach it once, let the machine replicate your best operator’s work every time.

That said, the model raises fresh questions. How often will a site need re-teaching after landscape changes? How will Honda and customers handle fenced properties, pets, or unexpected human traffic? Honda’s safety features (multiple sensors, remote e-stop devices, and authentication systems) address many of those concerns on paper — but real-world testing on diverse job sites will be the true proving ground.

There’s also the economics. A $33k entry price for a manual model signals this is capital equipment for businesses that expect efficiency gains, not a consumer impulse buy. For landscaping companies stretched thin on staff, a predictable, repeatable autonomous system could pay back over seasons — but the math depends on utilization, maintenance, insurance, and how much value managers place on replicable operator skill versus hiring more crews.

Honda says the ProZision will be produced in North Carolina, drawing on the company’s experience in both mobility and power equipment. The design team has emphasized operator comfort and serviceability in the manual models, and — crucially for adoption — an interface and workflow that operators can learn quickly during the “teach” phase. Expect dealers and demo events to be the main route for skeptical businesses to see one in action before buying.

For years, the lawn-care market has seen two parallel trends: smaller domestic robot mowers that slowly hack at suburban lawns, and larger OEMs electrifying heavy equipment. Honda’s ProZision attempts to stitch those trends together — heavy-duty electric powertrains plus autonomy that’s not trying to out-think human operators, but to copy them. If the “teach and reproduce” model works, it could be a pragmatic path toward wider acceptance of autonomous equipment in commercial landscaping.

At Equip Exposition next week, Honda will be judged not only on glossy specs but on whether crews find the teaching workflow intuitive, whether the hardware holds up in daily abuse, and whether insurance and safety regs keep pace with an operatorless mower rolling across public grounds. If that all goes well, you might soon find your neighborhood sports field being mown by the digital replica of the crew’s most trusted driver — the lawn-care equivalent of a cover band that never misses a beat.


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