By the HMNDP Editorial Team, independent reporting on lawn care, landscaping, and the green-industry business.
Last reviewed: June 2026
The best electric lawn mower for most suburban lawns in 2026
The best electric lawn mower for most U.S. suburban homeowners is the EGO POWER+ 21-inch Select Cut (LM2156SP or the newer LM2236SP), a 56V self-propelled cordless mower that cuts up to about a quarter acre on one 7.5Ah or 10Ah battery. It wins on cut quality, run time, and a battery platform shared across trimmers and blowers. Match voltage and battery size to your yard size, not to a single “best” label.
Most “best electric lawn mower” lists hand you one pick and stop. That fails the buyer with a 12,000 square foot lot on a slope, and it fails the buyer with a 3,000 square foot flat yard who is overpaying. Below, you pick by your actual yard, then see the real cost over five years.
Our picks at a glance
| Category | Model | Voltage / battery | Deck | Approx. price (2026) | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Editor’s choice | EGO POWER+ Select Cut LM2156SP / LM2236SP | 56V, 7.5-10Ah | 21 in | $600-$750 | Up to 1/4 acre, self-propelled |
| Best value | Greenworks 60V 21-in self-propelled | 60V, 5-8Ah | 21 in | $400-$500 | Medium yards on a budget |
| Best for small yards | Greenworks 60V 17-in push | 60V, 4Ah | 17 in | $250-$300 | Under 1/8 acre, flat |
| Best budget platform | CRAFTSMAN V20 20-in push | 20V, dual 4Ah | 20 in | $300-$350 | Small flat yards, V20 tool owners |
| Big-yard / power | EGO POWER+ 56V 22-in self-propelled (LM2236SP) | 56V, 10Ah | 22 in | $700-$850 | 1/3 to 1/2 acre |
Prices reflect typical 2026 U.S. retail at Lowe’s, Home Depot, Amazon, and Acme Tools and can vary by promotion and battery bundle. Model numbers shift year to year, so buy on the voltage and Ah spec, not just the name.
How to match yard size to battery voltage and Ah (the decision rule)
Match your mowing area to a target voltage and total battery capacity (Ah). As a working rule: 56V to 80V handles thick grass and slopes better than 20V to 40V, and you need roughly 4Ah to 5Ah of 56V/60V battery per 5,000 square feet of typical dry grass. Buyers self-select with the table below instead of trusting one universal pick.
This is the gap most lists leave open. They lead with EGO for everyone. A homeowner cannot tell whether a single 4Ah battery clears their lot or whether they will be recharging mid-mow. The math below closes that gap.
Yard-size-to-mower matching table
| Lawn size | Square feet | Suggested voltage | Total battery (Ah) | Deck width | Push or self-propelled |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Small | Under 5,000 | 20V-40V or 60V | 4Ah | 17-20 in | Push |
| Medium | 5,000-10,000 | 56V-60V | 5-7.5Ah | 20-21 in | Push or self-propelled |
| Large | 10,000-15,000 (~1/4-1/3 acre) | 56V-80V | 7.5-10Ah, or two batteries | 21-22 in | Self-propelled |
| Extra large | 15,000-21,780 (up to 1/2 acre) | 56V-80V | 10Ah plus a spare | 22 in | Self-propelled |
Add capacity if your grass is tall, wet, or thick (cool-season fescue and St. Augustine pull more current than fine bermuda), or if your lot has slopes. Run time in tall or wet grass commonly drops 20 to 40 percent versus the dry-grass spec printed on the box. Plan for the worst mow, not the easiest one.
A simple rule of thumb
One charge of a 56V 7.5Ah battery (about 0.42 kWh) mows roughly 1/4 acre of dry, moderate grass on a 21-inch deck. Halve that estimate for thick or wet conditions. If your lot exceeds 1/4 acre, buy a second battery and hot-swap rather than waiting 40 to 60 minutes for a recharge. This single rule prevents most “ran out of charge” complaints.
Editor’s choice: EGO POWER+ Select Cut (LM2156SP / LM2236SP)
The EGO POWER+ Select Cut, sold as the 21-inch LM2156SP and 22-inch LM2236SP, is our top pick because it pairs gas-rivaling cut quality with a 56V battery platform shared across 100-plus EGO tools. Consumer Reports and Wirecutter have repeatedly ranked EGO self-propelled mowers at or near the top of cordless rankings for cutting, mulching, and bagging performance. Expect 45 to 60 minutes of real run time on a 10Ah pack.
The Select Cut name refers to its stacked dual-blade system, which you reconfigure for mulching, bagging, or side discharge. In testing-style use on dense suburban turf, it handles 3-inch growth without bogging, which cheaper 40V mowers struggle with.
What you trade for that performance is price. At $600 to $850 depending on battery size, the EGO costs more upfront than a Greenworks. The payoff is platform lock-in working in your favor: one charger and battery family for your mower, string trimmer, and leaf blower. For a deeper buying framework on outdoor gear and services, see our guide to the best lawn care services in 2026.
Best value: Greenworks 60V and 80V, plus CRAFTSMAN V20
The best value electric lawn mower is the Greenworks 60V 21-inch self-propelled, typically $400 to $500, undercutting comparable EGO models by $150 to $250 while delivering similar deck width and 40-plus minutes of run time. For very small lawns, the CRAFTSMAN V20 20-inch push mower ($300-$350, dual 20V batteries) is the budget platform pick if you already own V20 tools.
Greenworks splits its lineup across 60V (consumer) and 80V Pro (heavier turf). The 80V line trades higher torque for higher battery cost. For most suburban lawns under 1/3 acre, the 60V line is the smarter value: lower battery replacement cost and ample power for weekly mowing.
| Value pick | Price | Run time (dry grass) | Strength | Watch-out |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Greenworks 60V 21-in SP | $400-$500 | 40-50 min | Price-to-power ratio | Fewer platform tools than EGO |
| Greenworks 80V Pro 21-in | $500-$650 | 45-60 min | Torque in thick grass | Pricier 80V batteries |
| CRAFTSMAN V20 20-in push | $300-$350 | 30-45 min | Cheap entry, common platform | 20V limits big/thick yards |
Best for small yards: 17-inch push mowers
For lawns under 5,000 square feet (roughly 1/8 acre), the best electric lawn mower is a 17-inch to 20-inch cordless push mower such as the Greenworks 60V 17-inch or the CRAFTSMAN V20 20-inch. A single 4Ah battery clears a small flat yard in one 20 to 35 minute session, and the narrower deck stores upright in a tight garage or shed.
Skip self-propelled drive on a small flat lot. It adds weight, cost, and a second failure point you do not need. Push mowers also run lighter on the battery because the motor is not also driving the wheels. For a small yard, a $250 to $300 push mower outperforms an overspent $700 self-propelled machine on value.
Push vs self-propelled battery mowers
Choose self-propelled if your lawn exceeds about 5,000 square feet, slopes more than gently, or the mower weighs over 60 pounds with the battery. Choose push for small flat lots under 5,000 square feet to save $100 to $250 and reduce battery drain. Self-propelled drive draws extra current, cutting run time by roughly 10 to 20 percent versus push mode.
| Factor | Push | Self-propelled |
|---|---|---|
| Best yard size | Under 5,000 sq ft | 5,000 sq ft and up |
| Slopes | Tiring above 10 percent grade | Handles moderate slopes |
| Price premium | Baseline | +$100-$250 |
| Run-time effect | Longest run time | 10-20 percent shorter |
| Weight | Lighter | Heavier (drive system) |
Slopes and thick or wet grass: where cheap mowers fail
On slopes above roughly a 10 percent grade or in thick, wet, or tall grass, prioritize 56V to 80V and a self-propelled drive. Low-voltage 20V to 40V mowers bog down and overheat their motors in these conditions, and run time can fall 20 to 40 percent below the dry-grass rating. Raise the deck height and slow your walking pace to protect both cut quality and battery life.
This is the second gap competitors gloss over. They test flat, dry suburban lawns and report best-case run time. If you mow Southern St. Augustine in July humidity or a backyard berm, derate every published run-time number. Buy one voltage tier up from what a flat-lawn calculator suggests.
Electric vs gas lawn mowers: power, noise, and upkeep
Modern 56V to 80V cordless mowers match gas mowers up to about 1/2 acre on cut quality and weekly-mow power, while cutting noise to roughly 75 dB versus 95 dB and eliminating oil changes, spark plugs, and gas. Gas still wins for lots over 1/2 to 1 acre, all-day commercial use, and instant refueling. For most suburban homeowners switching in 2026, battery is the practical choice.
| Factor | Battery / electric | Gas |
|---|---|---|
| Best lawn size | Up to ~1/2 acre | Any size, esp. 1/2 acre+ |
| Noise | ~75 dB | ~95 dB |
| Routine upkeep | Charge, clean deck | Oil, spark plug, air filter, gas |
| Run time limit | Battery capacity | Tank refills instantly |
| Local rules | Often incentivized | Restricted in some CA cities |
Several states and cities, including California, have moved to restrict new gas-powered lawn equipment sales, so local rules may favor electric depending on where you live. Rebates for battery equipment are available in some utility territories. Check your municipality and utility before buying. For broader yard-care decisions, our roundup of the best lawn treatment in 2026 covers what to do after you cut.
Battery economics and total cost of ownership (the math nobody shows)
Over five years, an electric mower’s true cost is the mower plus one likely battery replacement, not just the sticker price. A cost-per-charge of about 5 to 8 cents (at $0.16/kWh) makes electricity negligible. The real number is the $150 to $300 replacement battery you may need around year 4, plus whether a second battery is worth $130 to $250. Platform sharing across tools changes the math.
Here is the part competitors skip entirely. Below is a realistic five-year picture for a mid-range 56V/60V self-propelled mower on a 1/4-acre lawn.
Five-year cost example
| Line item | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mower + 1 battery + charger | $500 | Greenworks 60V SP, typical |
| Electricity, 5 years | ~$15 | ~30 mows/yr, $0.06/charge |
| Replacement battery (year 4) | $150-$250 | If capacity degrades |
| Maintenance (blades, deck) | ~$40 | 2-3 blade swaps |
| 5-year total | ~$700-$800 | No fuel, no oil |
Compare a $400 gas mower: roughly $250 to $400 in fuel, oil, plugs, and filters over five years, landing near $650 to $800. The lifetime totals are close. Electric wins on noise, convenience, and zero fumes; gas wins on refuel speed for very large lots.
Should you buy a second battery?
Buy a second battery if your lawn exceeds 1/4 acre or your single battery cannot finish in one session, because a spare ($130-$250) eliminates the 40 to 60 minute recharge wait. For lots under 1/8 acre, one battery is plenty. A second battery also doubles as a hedge against degradation: when one ages, you still have a healthy pack.
Platform lock-in: a feature, not a trap
Battery platform lock-in works in your favor when you own several tools on one system. An EGO 56V or Greenworks 60V battery powers the mower, string trimmer, blower, and chainsaw, so the marginal cost of each added tool drops because you skip buying another battery and charger. Pick a platform with the tools you will actually buy. Switching brands later means rebuying batteries. EGO has the widest tool lineup; Greenworks is the value platform; CRAFTSMAN V20 fits owners already in that ecosystem.
Battery life: per charge and over its lifetime
Expect 30 to 60 minutes of run time per charge depending on voltage, Ah, deck width, and grass conditions, and 500 to 1,000 charge cycles (roughly 3 to 5 years of weekly mowing) before a lithium-ion pack drops to about 80 percent capacity. Store batteries at 40 to 80 percent charge in a cool, dry place over winter to slow degradation. Heat and full-charge storage are what kill packs early.
Charging logistics matter for buyers and rarely get covered. A 56V 7.5Ah pack on a standard charger takes 40 to 75 minutes; rapid chargers cut that. If you mow a large lot, charge time is exactly why a second battery beats waiting. For lawn-care operators tracking equipment costs and scheduling at scale, our review of the best lawn care software for small operators covers the business side.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best electric lawn mower for a small yard?
For yards under 5,000 square feet, the best electric lawn mower is a 17-inch to 20-inch cordless push model such as the Greenworks 60V 17-inch ($250-$300) or CRAFTSMAN V20 20-inch ($300-$350). A single 4Ah battery clears a small flat lot in 20 to 35 minutes, and the narrow deck stores easily. Skip self-propelled drive on small flat yards to save money and battery.
How big a yard can a battery lawn mower handle on one charge?
A 56V or 60V mower with a 7.5Ah battery and 21-inch deck mows roughly 1/4 acre (about 10,000 square feet) of dry, moderate grass on one charge, typically 45 to 60 minutes. Thick, tall, or wet grass cuts that by 20 to 40 percent. For lots over 1/4 acre, add a second battery and hot-swap to avoid a 40 to 60 minute recharge.
What battery voltage do I need (20V vs 40V vs 56V vs 80V)?
Match voltage to yard size and grass. Use 20V to 40V only for small flat lots under 5,000 square feet. Choose 56V to 60V for most suburban lawns up to 1/3 acre, the sweet spot for power and battery cost. Step to 80V for thick grass, slopes, or lots near 1/2 acre. Higher voltage means more torque and better performance in tough conditions.
Is EGO or Greenworks the better electric mower brand?
EGO is the better performance and platform pick, with top Consumer Reports and Wirecutter rankings and 100-plus tools on its 56V system, but it costs $150 to $250 more. Greenworks is the better value, delivering similar deck width and run time on its 60V line for less. Choose EGO for cut quality and tool breadth, Greenworks to spend less on a strong mower.
Are electric lawn mowers as powerful as gas mowers?
Yes, for most suburban use. Modern 56V to 80V cordless mowers match gas on cut quality and weekly-mow power up to about 1/2 acre, while running quieter (around 75 dB versus 95 dB) with no fumes. Gas still wins for lots over 1/2 to 1 acre, very thick or tall growth, and all-day commercial mowing where instant refueling beats waiting on a charge.
How long do electric lawn mower batteries last per charge and over their lifetime?
Per charge, expect 30 to 60 minutes depending on voltage, battery Ah, deck width, and grass conditions. Over a lifetime, lithium-ion packs handle 500 to 1,000 charge cycles, roughly 3 to 5 years of weekly mowing, before dropping to about 80 percent capacity. Store batteries at 40 to 80 percent charge in a cool, dry spot over winter to slow degradation and extend useful life.
Is an electric lawn mower worth the money compared to gas?
For most suburban homeowners with lawns under 1/2 acre, yes. Five-year total cost of ownership runs close between the two (roughly $700-$800 each), but electric eliminates oil, spark plugs, gas, and most noise. Electricity costs about 5 to 8 cents per charge. Budget $150 to $300 for one battery replacement around year 4. Platform sharing across tools improves the value further.
Should I get a push or self-propelled battery mower?
Choose self-propelled if your lawn exceeds 5,000 square feet, has slopes, or the mower weighs over 60 pounds with its battery. Choose push for small flat lots under 5,000 square feet to save $100 to $250 and gain 10 to 20 percent more run time, since the motor is not also driving the wheels. Match the choice to terrain and size, not the price tag.