The Zynet DP2 is the most interesting budget cordless vacuum I've tested this year, and it's entirely because of the dual-battery system. At $129, you get roughly 48 minutes of runtime on low and 35 on high — numbers that embarrass plenty of vacuums twice the price. Suction tops out around 10 KPa in real-world use, which is modest compared to Dyson or Dreame flagships, but perfectly adequate for daily maintenance of hard floors and low-pile carpet. If you live in an apartment or need a lightweight daily driver, this is a genuinely smart buy. If you need deep carpet extraction, look elsewhere.
One-liner verdict: "The Zynet DP2 trades raw suction for marathon runtime — and for most apartments, that's the right trade."
Key Specs at a Glance
| Spec | Detail |
|---|---|
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Weight
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2.2 kg / 4.85 lbs
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Suction
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~8 KPa (Eco) / ~10 KPa (Turbo)
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Runtime
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~48 min (Eco) / ~35 min (Turbo)
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Battery
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Dual lithium-ion, 6S2P, 3600 mAh combined, 88.8 Wh
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Motor
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180W copper motor, 40,000 RPM
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Charging time
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6–7 hours
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Dust cup capacity
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900 mL
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Filtration
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Dual-stage: stainless steel pre-filter + HEPA filter (washable)
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Noise
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≤85 dB
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Dimensions (assembled)
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108 cm × 24 cm × 22 cm
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Attachments
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Swivel floor brush w/ green LED, crevice nozzle, 2-in-1 dusting brush
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Certifications
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CE, UL, FCC, UN38.3
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How Does the Zynet DP2 Actually Perform? Real-World Testing
I'm going to be upfront: I work in cross-border e-commerce, I've handled hundreds of vacuum SKUs, and I test every unit I review in my own home. The DP2 spent three weeks as my primary vacuum across hardwood floors, a medium-pile area rug, tile, and general above-floor cleaning. Here's what happened.
Hardwood Floors: Where It Shines
This is the DP2's happy place. On Eco mode, the swivel floor brush glides effortlessly across hardwood and laminate, picking up dust, crumbs, pet hair, and cereal debris in a single pass. I deliberately scattered a tablespoon of flour near a baseboard, and the DP2 grabbed about 90% of it on the first pass in Turbo mode. Not flawless, but very respectable for a $129 vacuum.
The green LED dust-revealing light on the floor brush is genuinely useful — not just a gimmick. In dim hallways and under furniture, it illuminates fine dust and hair you'd otherwise miss. I found myself cleaning spots I'd normally skip.
The multi-angle swivel head deserves a mention too. Zynet specs it at 180° horizontal and 90° vertical rotation, and in practice it lays nearly flat — I reached under my couch (about 10 cm clearance) without contortion. The wheels on the brush guard protect hardwood from scratches, a small detail that shows someone at Zynet actually thought about real-world use.
Carpet: Honest Limitations
Here's where I have to level with you. The DP2's suction peaks around 10 KPa on Turbo. For context, a Dyson V15 hits roughly 25+ KPa, and even budget competitors like the Dreame R10 Pro reach 15–17 KPa. The DP2 is not a carpet monster.
On my low-pile entryway rug, it did fine — surface debris, visible dirt, light pet hair all picked up without drama. But on a medium-pile area rug, I could feel it struggling. It wasn't pulling embedded dirt or sand. After a pass with the DP2 followed by a pass with my corded upright, the upright still pulled out visible debris.
The honest take: If your home is 80%+ hard floors with a few low-pile rugs, the DP2 handles it. If you have wall-to-wall medium or high-pile carpet, this vacuum will frustrate you.
Above-Floor and Tight Spaces
The crevice nozzle (25 cm) fits nicely between couch cushions and along window tracks. The 2-in-1 dusting brush is adequate for shelves and lampshades, though the bristles are a bit stiff for delicate surfaces. I used the telescoping wand extended to 68 cm to reach ceiling fan blades — the vacuum is light enough for overhead work, but holding anything above your head for more than a minute still gets tiring. That's physics, not a design flaw.
Design & Build Quality: Better Than the Price Suggests
The DP2 has a gunmetal gray finish with red accent buttons that looks genuinely premium. It doesn't scream "budget vacuum" the way some competitors do. The aluminum telescoping wand feels solid, not flimsy, and the click-lock attachments seat firmly without wobble.
Smart LED Display
This is where the DP2 punches above its weight. The LED display panel on the body shows your current cleaning mode (Eco/Active/Turbo), remaining battery level, and fault indicators — not just a crude battery bar. At $129, having a real mode display is a nice touch. You always know exactly what the vacuum is doing.
The display also has fault indicators: BATTERY warning when charge is low, BRUSH alert if the roller gets jammed (usually tangled hair), and MOTOR warning for connection issues. It's a level of diagnostic feedback you rarely see at this price.
Freestanding Design
No wall mount, no charging dock, no drilling into drywall. The DP2 stands upright on its own. For renters or anyone who doesn't want to commit to a permanent storage spot, this is a practical win. I kept mine in a corner of the kitchen and it never tipped over, even with the cat investigating it.
Dust Cup and Filtration
The one-touch dust cup release works as advertised — press the spring latch, the bottom pops open, dump into the trash. Minimal hand contact with dust, minimal mess. The 900 mL capacity is generous for this class. I went through a full apartment clean (about 800 sq ft) without needing to empty mid-session, which is more than I can say for many budget competitors with 400–500 mL cups.
The dual filtration system pairs a washable stainless steel pre-filter with a HEPA filter. Zynet's marketing claims 99.99% particle capture at 0.1 μm. In practice, I noticed no perceptible dust blowback during use, and the air coming out of the exhaust felt clean. Both filters are washable and reusable, and Zynet includes an extra HEPA filter in the box — a small gesture that saves you money down the line.
Battery & Charging: The Dual-Battery Trick (And Its Trade-Off)
This is the DP2's signature feature and the reason it's on my radar at all.
Why Dual Batteries Matter at This Price
Most budget cordless vacuums ship with a single small battery that delivers 15–25 minutes of runtime. The DP2 packs two lithium-ion cells in a 6S2P parallel configuration (3,600 mAh combined, 88.8 Wh total). In practice, I measured:
- Eco mode: 46–48 minutes consistently across multiple charges
- Turbo mode: 33–36 minutes, depending on floor type and attachment
Those numbers are real. I timed them with a stopwatch across five full discharge cycles. For context, 48 minutes on Eco is enough to vacuum a 1,200 sq ft apartment thoroughly without rushing. That's not something I can say about most vacuums at this price.
Key stat: "48 minutes of actual runtime at a price point where 20 minutes is the norm."
The Charging Downside: 6–7 Hours Is Slow
Here's the catch, and I won't sugarcoat it. The included adapter (26V, 0.69A) charges the dual-battery pack in about 6 to 7 hours. That's slow. In a world where premium vacuums refill in 3–4 hours, waiting overnight to recharge the DP2 feels like a step back.
For most people who vacuum once a day or every other day, this won't matter — you charge it overnight and it's ready by morning. But if you need a quick top-up before guests arrive, you're out of luck. The large battery capacity that gives you great runtime is the same thing that makes charging slow with a low-wattage adapter. It's a physics trade-off, not a defect, but it's worth knowing.
What I Like
- Runtime is the real deal. 48 minutes on Eco mode at $129 is exceptional. You can clean an entire apartment without watching the battery bar.
- Genuinely lightweight. 2.2 kg (4.85 lbs) is easy to maneuver one-handed. My partner, who hates heavy vacuums, used this without complaint.
- Green LED dust light works. Not a gimmick. It changed how I cleaned dark corners and under-furniture zones.
- 900 mL dust cup. Bigger than most budget competitors. One full clean without emptying.
- Smart LED display. Mode, battery, and fault indicators — unusual at this price.
- Freestanding storage. No installation, no dock, no hassle.
- Build quality exceeds price. The aluminum wand and gunmetal finish don't feel cheap.
- Extra HEPA filter in the box. Saves you money for at least a year.
What I Don't Like
- Suction is modest. ~10 KPa on Turbo is fine for hard floors but underwhelming on carpet.
- 6–7 hour charge time. Overnight charging is the only realistic option.
- Carpet performance is limited. Don't expect deep extraction on medium or high-pile.
- Only 3 attachments. No mini motorized brush for upholstery. That's a gap.
- Noise at ≤85 dB. Not quiet. You'll hear it clearly in the next room.
Who Should Buy the Zynet DP2?
Buy it if:
- You live in an apartment or small-to-mid home with mostly hard floors
- You want a lightweight daily-driver vacuum that won't die after 15 minutes
- You're a renter who can't (or won't) mount a wall dock
- You need a capable second vacuum for quick daily cleanups
- You want the most runtime per dollar under $150
Skip it if:
- Your home is mostly medium or high-pile carpet
- You need maximum suction for deep cleaning
- Fast charging is essential to your routine
- You need a powered mini-brush for pet hair on upholstery
Final Verdict & Score
The Zynet DP2 does not pretend to be a Dyson killer. It's a focused, well-executed budget cordless vacuum that makes one very smart bet: runtime over raw suction. For the overwhelming majority of apartment dwellers and hard-floor households, that bet pays off. You get nearly 50 minutes of cleaning time, a genuinely lightweight body, thoughtful design touches like the green LED dust light, smart display, and freestanding storage — and build quality that doesn't feel disposable.
The downsides are real — modest suction, slow charging, and limited carpet performance — but they're predictable trade-offs at this price, not design failures.
Final one-liner: "The best budget cordless vacuum for people who'd rather clean longer than harder."
CleanPick Score Breakdown
| Category | Score (out of 10) |
|---|---|
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Suction Power
|
6.0
|
|
Runtime
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9.0
|
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Build Quality
|
7.5
|
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Filtration
|
7.5
|
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Ease of Use
|
8.5
|
|
Value for Money
|
8.5
|
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Overall
|
7.8
|
Where to Buy
The Zynet DP2 is priced at $129.00 on the official Zynet store with free shipping. You can check availability and current promotions directly at zynetofficial.com.
Disclosure: CleanPick independently tests every product we review. This review is based on our hands-on experience. If you purchase through our links, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you — this never affects our ratings or recommendations.
FAQ
Is the Zynet DP2 good for pet hair?
On hard floors, yes — it picks up pet hair effectively in a single pass, and the green LED light helps you spot stray hairs you'd otherwise miss. On carpet, it's mediocre for embedded pet hair. The DP2 also lacks a mini motorized brush, so removing pet hair from upholstery requires the dusting brush, which isn't ideal. If pets are your primary concern, consider a vacuum with a dedicated powered pet attachment.
How does the Zynet DP2 compare to a Dyson V8?
The V8 has significantly more suction and better carpet performance but costs 2–3x more and offers roughly 25–40 minutes of runtime depending on mode. The DP2 wins on price, runtime, and dust cup size (900 mL vs ~540 mL). They're different tools for different budgets and priorities.
Can I use the Zynet DP2 on tile and vinyl flooring?
Absolutely. Hard smooth surfaces are where this vacuum performs best. The swivel brush head glides easily with 180° horizontal rotation, and the wheel guards prevent scratching. I tested it on kitchen tile, bathroom vinyl, and laminate with excellent results across all three.
Is the Zynet DP2 safe to buy? Are the certifications real?
The DP2 carries CE (EMC, RoHS, LVD), UL, FCC, and UN38.3 battery certifications. These are verifiable safety standards for electrical products and lithium-ion batteries in the US, EU, and international markets. As someone who works in cross-border e-commerce, I can confirm Zynet has done the compliance work here. They also have GS certification listed on their site.
How often do I need to replace the filters?
The stainless steel pre-filter is essentially permanent — just rinse it monthly under running water. The HEPA filter should be washed every 2–4 weeks and replaced every 6–12 months depending on use. Zynet includes one spare in the box, which buys you at least a year before you need to order replacements.

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