Mova is making garden tools smarter

Mova is kicking off 2026 with a new approach to outdoor gear. The company has launched its 60V Intelligent Cordless Garden Tools lineup — a connected, software-driven system that aims to do for yard work what smart appliances did for the home.

Instead of simply swapping petrol engines for batteries, Mova is trying to rethink garden tools as an integrated platform.

At the centre of the system is a shared 60V EnerMax battery and a software layer that ties every tool together.

Each product has built-in sensors, adaptive power control, and IoT connectivity, allowing the tools to respond to real-world conditions and receive over-the-air improvements after purchase. It’s a notable shift for equipment that’s historically been all brute force and very little intelligence.

The flagship of the lineup is the GL620 self-propelled lawn mower, which uses Mova’s PaceMate system to automatically match your walking speed through dual in-wheel motors. A high-torque outer-rotor motor and a 3-in-1 deck handle mulching, bagging and side discharge with noticeably smoother airflow compared to typical cordless mowers.

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The GB628 leaf blower pushes things further with up to 1000 CFM and 200mph, putting it squarely in petrol territory. A built-in ionisation system reduces static debris, even light snow, lifts more cleanly, and a companion app offers live diagnostics and usage insights.

For more precise work, the GT616TC grass trimmer uses a centrally mounted motor for better balance, a telescopic shaft, and a low-vibration design, while the GH625 hedge trimmer adds angle-sensing to keep cuts consistent along long hedges or overhead trims.

The GC618 chainsaw, meanwhile, introduces an adaptive lubrication system that adjusts oil output depending on the wood you’re cutting, helping maintain speed and stability.

Every tool supports the same 60V battery, which fast-charges in 30 minutes and is designed for high-torque workloads without the noise, fumes, or maintenance of petrol gear.

Mova plans to roll out the full range internationally in spring 2026, with pricing to follow. If the company delivers on the promise of platform-level intelligence, this could be one of the more meaningful shifts in outdoor equipment we’ve seen in years — not just quieter tools, but genuinely smarter ones.

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