Jigoo C200 (cordless) review and test

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For the last month, I’ve been testing the cordless vacuum cleaner Jigoo C200 for you. It’s light, powerful, and you can buy it for under 100 euro. As usual, in this video I answer the question: is it worth it? I received the vacuum for review from the Zigbuy.pl store, where you can buy this device and other products as well.

First impressions

Imagine a calm, sunny Saturday morning. The alarm rings lazily, a still-warm coffee is waiting on the nightstand, and on the doormat there’s a small, unassuming package. That’s how my adventure with the cordless vacuum cleaner Jigoo C200 began. The box the courier left at my door looked more like a shoebox than a household appliance. I’ll admit, at first a warning light went off in my head: “Is this really a complete device, or just some spare part?”. Those of you who follow my channel know I’ve tested a few stick vacuums before, and they usually arrived in boxes the size of a soundbar.

Curiosity won, so before my coffee had time to cool down, I grabbed a knife and started cutting the tape. First impression? Packed like Tetris: the main unit wrapped in foil, the motorized brush head, the telescopic tube, the battery, two extra attachments – a crevice tool and an upholstery tool – plus a wall mount.

The color made me pause for a moment. The graphite finish is neutral, matte, and looks quite elegant, but the brown accents… well, they remind me of 1990s decor. Looks are a matter of taste, of course, but I couldn’t help thinking that if they replaced the light brown with classic black – or even a bold lime – the vacuum could look twice as expensive. What mattered more than the color, though, was what I felt when I grabbed the main unit – how light it is. On paper, 2.2 kg doesn’t sound extraordinary, but in practice it means I can lift the vacuum with one hand and still use the other to grab my phone or move a plant pot without any wrist discomfort.

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Assembly? Literally a moment. Everything clicks in with a satisfying “click” and holds firmly. I didn’t have to open the manual or look for a screwdriver. I extended the telescopic tube, snapped in the motorized brush, and – small thing, but worth mentioning – I was greeted by a bright green LED light. I felt a bit like I was holding one of the newer Dyson models with laser-style illumination.

Real-world use

After a full charge, the battery shows 100%, and the manufacturer promises 40 minutes of theoretical cleaning time. In practice, with everyday vacuuming of my apartment (62 m², laminate, tiles, and a rug), it looks like this: normal mode uses about 10% of the battery in five to six minutes of intensive work. In other words, a realistic 30 to 32 minutes is achievable if you’re not abusing turbo for every tiny speck. I save turbo for special cases: cat hair in a long-pile rug, the area near the balcony door where sand from shoes collects, or dried potting soil spilled by my indoor jungle.

The 23 kPa suction power isn’t just marketing. The “confetti test” – salt, pepper, tea leaves, and paper bits sprinkled in an even strip on the floor – was a clear pass. One smooth pull picks up everything, and a second pass finds nothing. The vacuum doesn’t push debris to the sides, it just pulls it in immediately, which is not always a given in cheaper models.

The motorized brush head is the star of the show. Along with standard bristles, the manufacturer added soft silicone strips that reach deeper into carpet fibers and pull out dust and crumbs. A set of 35 small teeth cuts hair as it goes, so after a month of use I didn’t find that annoying “blanket” of tangled hair on the roller that usually requires scissors. The green LED lights? Sounds like a gimmick, but after the first cleaning session in low light I got it. Dust on laminate suddenly appears like fluorescent powder – you see what’s normally invisible, and you automatically clean more thoroughly. I actually found myself turning off the hallway ceiling light just to watch the green beam reveal every speck.

Ergonomics are worth noting too. The handle is easy to rotate with your wrist, and the brush joint can almost pivot on the spot, which helps between chair legs in the dining area. Stairs? I hold the main unit in one hand, stabilize the tube with the other, and go step by step. The vacuum is light enough that after fifteen minutes I feel only slight forearm fatigue, not shoulder pain like with heavier models.

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What I didn’t like

On paper, being able to stand the vacuum upright sounds amazing. We all know the moment: your phone rings, you need to open the door for a courier, and the tube slides down the wall with a loud thud. Here the manufacturer added a lock that automatically “closes” the brush joint at a certain angle. The problem is the angle is too small – move your hand a bit wider and the joint snaps into the lock, turning the vacuum into something like an easel. The roller lifts off the floor, the vacuum glides on the small wheels, and mid-clean I have to press the brush down with my foot just to keep going. During longer, rhythmic cleaning sessions it gets frustrating, especially when I want to move smoothly across the living room.

Second: stability when it’s standing upright. With the tube set to the shortest length, the Jigoo is stable enough you could probably rest an umbrella on it. Fully extended – which I use because I’m 182 cm tall – it becomes much easier to tip over. It happened that I parked it upright, and after several seconds it decided to fall hard onto the tiles. Thankfully, the plastic is durable: the logo clip popped out, but the housing didn’t even get scratched. Point for material quality, minus for the lock design.

Finally, the dust cup. It has a convenient latch – open it and everything drops straight into the bin… until you vacuum something that sticks to the walls. Because the container doesn’t come out, sometimes you have to shake it or nudge it with a finger so fine dust drops out of the plastic corners. It’s a small thing, but when you’re doing a quick cleanup before unexpected guests, you notice every unnecessary extra step.

Buy this vacuum with a discount

coupon code: JOTEM4, link: https://jotem.in/link/JigooC200

 

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Summary

After four weeks, I can confidently say the Jigoo C200 surprised me in a good way. For under 100 euro, you get a real half hour of cleaning, enough power for everyday mess, a great motorized brush with lighting, and a removable battery you can charge separately - which is rare at this price. The lightweight build means you don’t get tired even when cleaning stairs or a car, and the green LEDs turn ordinary vacuuming into something like a dust hunt.

Is it perfect? Of course not. The annoying joint lock can throw you off rhythm, stability with the tube fully extended requires some attention, and the dust bin would be better if it could be removed from the housing so you don’t have to shake out leftovers. Add the questionable color scheme - because brown always sparks opinions - and you get the full picture. But when I add up the pros and cons, the scale clearly tips in favor of the C200. If you need a second vacuum for a multi-story home, a device you can keep ready in the garage, or a tool for quick car cleanups, this model does a great job for not a lot of money.

final verdict

Price
10
Functionality
9
Ease of use
9
Build quality
8
Would I buy again
8
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Jakub Markiewicz
Jakub Markiewiczhttps://jotem.in
Hi, I am the author of the Jotem.in blog and series of thematic portals since 2013. I have nearly 15 years of experience in working in the media, marketing, public relations and IT. If you are interested in cooperation, you would like me to write about something or test a product - let me know.
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After four weeks, I can confidently say the Jigoo C200 surprised me in a good way. For under 100 euro, you get a real half hour of cleaning, enough power for everyday mess, a great motorized brush with lighting, and a removable battery you can charge separately - which is rare at this price. The lightweight build means you don’t get tired even when cleaning stairs or a car, and the green LEDs turn ordinary vacuuming into something like a dust hunt. <BR><BR> Is it perfect? Of course not. The annoying joint lock can throw you off rhythm, stability with the tube fully extended requires some attention, and the dust bin would be better if it could be removed from the housing so you don’t have to shake out leftovers. Add the questionable color scheme - because brown always sparks opinions - and you get the full picture. But when I add up the pros and cons, the scale clearly tips in favor of the C200. If you need a second vacuum for a multi-story home, a device you can keep ready in the garage, or a tool for quick car cleanups, this model does a great job for not a lot of money.Jigoo C200 (cordless) review and test