Worx Landroid Vision Cloud WR303E Review UK: No Base Station Required
Last updated: 2026-07-05 · Prices checked against UK retailers on this date
This review is based on manufacturer specifications, UK retailer data and published third-party review information. We have not personally tested this model.
Quick verdict
The WR303E solves the two classic wire-free headaches in one move: no boundary wire and no RTK base station to site, because its satellite correction comes from the cloud (no subscription) while camera VSLAM handles local navigation. For small lawns — especially tree-shaded ones where conventional RTK struggles — £699.99 buys a genuinely clever machine. Its one hard limit is written on the box: 300m².
Worx Landroid Vision Cloud WR303E
£699.99Best for: Small lawns with tree cover or awkward satellite reception — cloud-corrected navigation with no antenna to site.
Avoid if: Your lawn is over 300m² or has a real slope.
Pros
- No physical RTK base station — correction data comes from the cloud, no subscription
- Camera vision copes where pure satellite navigation struggles
- 20V PowerShare battery works across Worx tools
Cons
- 300m² ceiling
- 2WD only — Worx's 4WD Vision models cost considerably more
Data checked 2026-07-05 against Amazon UK listing (ASIN B0FVG36W3Z, sold by Amazon). Affiliate link — as an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.
Why "cloud RTK" matters
Conventional RTK mowers need a base station with open sky view — the single most common wire-free installation problem in leafy UK gardens. Worx moved that correction data to the cloud: the mower gets centimetre-level positioning with nothing to install, and its cameras handle the local detail (edges, obstacles, shaded corners). AI-powered auto-mapping means it detects lawn boundaries itself rather than needing a boundary walk.
Which gardens suit it
- Ideal: lawns up to ~250m² (headroom rule), tree cover that would starve a base-station RTK mower, buyers already in the Worx 20V PowerShare ecosystem.
- Wrong machine: lawns over 300m² (→ larger Vision Cloud models or a Navimow i208), real slopes (2WD — Worx's own 4WD Vision exists for that), or budgets under £500 (→ OcuMow).
Alternatives to consider
- Navimow i105E (£699): same money, 500m² coverage — the better pick if your sky view is open.
- LawnMaster OcuMow 16 (~£292): half the price if your lawn is small, simple and well-edged.
- Navimow i208 LiDAR (£1,099): the other tree-cover answer, with 800m² coverage.
Related: How wire-free navigation works · 300m² guide · Budget guide
FAQs
Does the Worx Vision Cloud need an RTK antenna in my garden?
No — that's its defining feature. RTK correction data comes from the cloud rather than a base station you install, and there's no subscription for it. Combined with camera VSLAM navigation, there's nothing to site and nothing blocking sky view to worry about.
How big a lawn can the WR303E handle?
Up to 300m². Worx sells larger Vision Cloud variants (including 4WD models) for bigger and steeper gardens at higher prices.
Is the Worx battery compatible with other tools?
Yes — it uses the Worx 20V PowerShare platform, so the battery interchanges with Worx drills, trimmers and other garden tools.
Product data checked
This guide is based on manufacturer specifications, UK retailer listings and published expert reviews — we have not personally tested every model listed, and we clearly separate manufacturer claims from third-party review findings. Sources checked on 2026-07-05:
- Amazon UK listing (ASIN B0FVG36W3Z, sold by Amazon) — £699.99, 300m², VSLAM + RTK cloud navigation, AI obstacle detection
- Worx UK official pages (uk.worx.com) — Vision Cloud range details, 20V PowerShare platform
- EasyLawnMowing — Vision Cloud in-depth review coverage
How we compare products
- UK-first: only models actually sold in the UK, priced in pounds.
- No invented claims: specs come from manufacturer data sheets; hands-on findings are credited to the reviewers who tested them.
- Placeholders marked: if we haven't verified a price or spec yet, we say so rather than guess.
- Use case beats hype: we recommend by garden size, slope and budget — not by commission rate.