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Greenworks 40V 14 Inch Cordless Lawn Mower, 4Ah Battery and Charger Included MO40B410

  • Based on 7,466 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Friday, Nov 29
Order within 12 hours and 34 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Size: 14" Mower (4.0Ah)


Features

  • Your purchase includes One GreenWorks 14-Inch Cordless Lawn Mower | One 4.0 AH Battery and Charger
  • Product dimensions 50.4 L x 15.8 W x 40.47 H | Weight 33 lbs. | Run time Up to 45 minutes (greatly depends on the condition of the grass)
  • Easy assembly required | Deck Material Plastic | Handle height is not adjustable | Cutting blade type Single, metal
  • Single lever 5-position height adjustment offers cutting height range from 1-1/4 inch to 3-3/8-inch for the best cut in all environments
  • 2-in-1 feature offers rear bagging and mulching capability for multiple use | 14'' deck is versatile and light weight | Up to 34% of U.S. homes only need one charge to get the job done

Description

The Greenworks 40V cordless brushless lawn mower is an efficient and versatile tool for maintaining small to medium-sized lawns. With a 14-inch deck, it is designed to provide excellent cutting performance while ensuring ease of use. The mower comes with a 4Ah battery and charger, which delivers up to 45 minutes of run-time on a single charge. It also features a 2-in-1 function for rear bagging and mulching, enabling you to dispose of grass clippings effectively. The 5-position height adjustment allows you to choose the ideal grass cutting height, while the push handle ensures comfortable and effortless operation. Furthermore, the mower comes with a 3-year warranty, giving you peace of mind and ensuring that you get the most out of your investment.


Brand: Greenworks


Power Source: Gas Powered, Battery Powered


Material: ABS plastic & Aluminium


Color: Black, Green


Style: 4.0Ah


Item Weight: 33.33 Pounds


Cutting Width: 14 Inches


Number of Positions: 5


Operation Mode: Manual


Product Dimensions: 50.4"D x 15.8"W x 40.47"H


Product Dimensions: 50.4 x 15.8 x 40.47 inches


Item Weight: 33.3 pounds


Manufacturer: Sunrise Global Marketing, LLC


Domestic Shipping: Item can be shipped within U.S.


International Shipping: This item is not eligible for international shipping. Learn More


Country of Origin: China


Item model number: MO40B410


Batteries: 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. (included)


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: No


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Friday, Nov 29

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Feels cheap but works for what I bought it for.
Size: 14" Mower (4.0Ah)
I purchased this to mow tall weedy grasses that grow in a very large wash that runs through my yard. String trimmers can't handle the tough, stringy grasses that grow in it every summer. I've resorted to using hedge trimmers in the past but that is too back breaking. I wanted a narrow cordless mower to tackle the tough grasses which grow every year in my wash. This works very well for that purpose however the mower feels really cheap and I'm not real confident in how long it will last but I only need to use it a few times a year so if I get 3 years out of it, I'll be happy. One thing I was not happy about was that when I went to try to register it with Greenworks, the registration page didn't work. After filling out all the info, I hit the submit button and nothing would happen. So I tried the "chat" button and that didn't work either. This has left me very doubtful that anything will be done if I end up having a problem with the unit and need to use the 3 year warranty. I finally resorted to printing the form and mailing it via snail mail to them. Very annoying. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 29, 2023 by Siouxjo

  • Easy to use as first-time lawn mower user
Size: 14" Mower (4.0Ah)
This is the first time I am using a lawn mower to take care of my backyard. I used to have a gardener but he decided to not show up about 2 months ago. So I decided to take care of things with my own hand. Got this one from prime day deal a few days back and used it for the first time today. Easy to assemble and pretty easy to use as someone mowing lawns for the first time. I don't have the perfect backyard to mown (uneven surfaces, a lot of weed) and this thing works. The only thing I would hope is that better illustration on the mulch stopper thing. I was wishing to collect mulch but did not take away the mulch stopper thing until half way through -- the manual was not very clear on why it needs to be there or why it needs to take off. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on July 24, 2023 by Yuwan Cheng

  • Putting it up directly against its closest competition...
Size: 16" Corded Mower
I am a perpetual apartment / duplex dweller who occasionally runs up against wacky landlords who actually expect me to deal with lawn care on top of my rent check. Basically, I need something to get the job done as quickly, cheaply, and expense- / maintenance-hassle-free as possible. For me, a corded electric mower fits that bill much better than a conventional combustion-based mower *or* a cordless electric (the latter of which adds significant cost, weight, proper-charging worry, and semi-frequent battery replacement expense). Corded mowers aren't for everyone or for every yard, but if you can make one work for you, they are about as hassle-free a mowing solution as you could hope for. Buy the right mower, buy a cord, and you're basically done spending money on this particular first-world annoyance for years. The Greenworks 25142 is the second small budget corded-electric push mower I have owned. I have also owned the Black and Decker LM175, which is comparable in price and functionality to the 25142 (sometimes cheaper, sometimes more expensive depending on Amazon's mood / automated price-changing algorithm that day). In my research, it seems they are perhaps the two cheapest *reliable and viable* electric mowers (or mowers PERIOD) on the current market. The B&D LM175 was just fine and never had any problems whatsoever over 2 mowing seasons of use, but I sold it and the extension cord I used with it when I moved back to an apartment that did not require me to mow. Recently my landlord suddenly decided I ought to start mowing again, and while I was tempted to just buy another LM175, for a few reasons I ended up with the Greenworks. One big reason is going to sound odd at first: the price of a suitably rated extension cord for the 25142 vs. the LM175. I knew I'd need a 100-ft extension cord to handle my lawn, and I did not have one. The LM175 pulls down 12 amps, the 25142 only 9-10. Around here, with the current absurd price of copper, a hundred-foot extension cord rated for anything over 10A would have set me back *fifty to sixty bucks* more than a cord that could handle the 25142's smaller current demands. And I'm a pretty hardcore cheapskate - I'll take a little less power if it means I can save that much money. Another big reason-- aside from the wiles of Amazon's pricing that day, which made the 25142 a Jackson cheaper-- was (very seriously!) limited garage space. The 25142 is not only noticeably smaller than the B&D, but has some cool, quick fold-up features on the handle that the B&D totally lacks. I can unlock the lever-cams on the handle and have this thing tucked away in a corner that the B&D never would have fit into without time-consuming partial disassembly. The 25142 also comes with a grass-catching bag - although I quickly determined that it was too small in capacity to be practical for actual use, I'd have to empty the thing every 5-7 minutes of mowing - and a few other nice touches the bare-bones B&D lacks, like quick-adjust deck height and a neat little on-the-handle cord holder that does help at least *a little* in keeping the cord from ending up under the blade. Heck, unlike the B&D, you won't even need to get a screwdriver to put this together out of the box - it comes all pre-assembled and ready to go (once you remove the requisite packaging materials, of course). Greenworks put some real thought into this product and it just *feels* more expensive than the B&D. But, dude, how does it *mow*? Pretty well. I think the B&D did a slightly better / cleaner job... the Greenworks seems to miss little blades right in the middle of its path here and there on occasion - not very often, mind, but this isn't great for my me-vs.-lawn OCD! This might just be an issue I could resolve by sharpening up the factory blade (haven't tried yet). But the B&D also had a little more oomph to it (maybe no surprise, as it's a 12-amp 18" mower vs. the 25142's 10 amp motor and 16" deck). This is not to say that the Greenworks isn't sufficient to get the job done, but it does slow down more noticeably over particularly thick / tall patches... not enough to bug me personally or hinder my yardwork in any way, but the B&D was undeniably more unfazed by such things. My two major complaints about the Greenworks, after four uses, are this: 1) Those cool cam-levers that let me unfold the handle in several spots hang out on the edges just a bit past / outside the back wheels. That's a bit of a problem when I'm trying to get right up against the side of the house as close as I can with the mower. The levers themselves are made of plastic and the abrasion from *accidental* scrapes against the brick is already starting to show. 2) The height adjustment is not quite fine enough and/or correctly calibrated in my book. The lowest setting is practically plowing up topsoil, and the second-lowest setting (which allegedly adds an extra inch to the height) is too high to look "properly mowed", at least with our particular nasty, uneven, weedy grass. On 2), I might be able to tweak the blade height further / more finely than the top-deck lever allows, but I have not turned it over and really "dug in" and/or read the manual cover-to-cover to see what I can adjust easily... so keep all this in mind. (I plan to look into this and will edit if/when I make any discoveries.) I think you'd have to have some really thick grass and/or truly avant-garde taste in yardwork to make use of any setting above the second lowest, as it stands. The B&D had no cool, single-lever height adjustment, but it was set up "just right" height-wise out of the box. So far I'm pretty happy overall with the Greenworks and I'd almost certainly buy it again under the CURRENT circumstances. I am also happy to recommend it. But if I had the space, and could stomach the added cord cost, I'd personally prefer my old B&D... just by a hair... or I might just give the next-step-up, spec-comparable Greenworks model a go instead. Finally, it is important to remember that ANY corded lawn mower has a learning curve - and that goes for each lawn you use it with. It took me about 75, 90 minutes to mow my lawn the first time with the Greenworks; I've got it cut down to about 45 minutes (just a few minutes longer than a cordless mower would take me) after a few "route changes" to keep the cord out of my way as much as possible. Everyone (including Greenworks) will tell you to "mow AWAY from the outlet / power source, starting close and moving further away" - this is absolutely excellent advice to start with. I am also happy to report the 25142 is more than ergonomic / light enough to handle around the yard with one hand - leaving the other hand free to cord-wrangle as needed. :) ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on May 22, 2013 by rob

  • Lightweight. Great for small yards. Surprisingly powerful.
Size: 16" Corded Mower
I own a townhouse, so my yard is tiny at 325 sq ft. For years, I used a reel mower and a weedwhacker to take care of it and it would take about 45 mins to an hour, depending on how long the grass and weeds had gotten. I’m not great about doing yard-work because I live where the weather is hot and humid about 7.5 months out of the year. My house is also built on what used to be a swamp, so I get ginormous dandelions with thick stems, weird bushy weeds that have a woody consistency, and other tough weeds I refer to as “swamp weeds.” No weed killer I’ve found seems to stop these plants from growing. The swamp weeds are persistent and the weather stinks, so it means I usually cut the grass about once a month. This lawnmower has reduced my yard-work to about 15 mins when it’s ankle high and about 30 mins when it’s knee high. Set on level 2, the mower can handle tall grass in one pass. It takes out the swamp weeds in one pass. It takes out the prehistoric size dandelions in one pass. It gets close enough to the fence, the house foundation, and the bases of my container planters to reduce the weedwhacking to whacking around the hvac and the corners of the yard. If the mower is set on the shortest cutting level, it will take the yard down to pretty much dirt. But my weedy yard grows back anyway. This mower is electric and corded, but I don’t find that hard to manage. If I toss the cord over my shoulder and use a straight line mowing strategy (moving forward, then backwards) instead of using the big rectangle mowing strategy, the cord is not an issue at all. And the mower cuts effectively going both forward and backward as long as you continue to squeeze the handle. For a lawnmower, this machine weighs nothing. It’s easy to get in and out of the shed. It’s easy to start. The squeeze handle is easy to keep engaged, even for somebody who has small hands like I do. I don’t use the bag. I let it mulch. The only thing I don’t like may be a product of where I live, rather than the fault of the mower. The shoot where the cut grass comes out clogs up pretty easy, especially if the yard is damp. Living in a humid area, the grass is usually damp unless it’s the middle of the summer when it gets blistering hot and the grass will dry out during the day. But, like I said, I don’t think the clogging is the mower’s fault. I think it’s a product of the climate zone I live in. Overall, the mower saves me time and saves my balky back. It’s easy to use and store. It does a great job on my tiny lawn. I like the cord because I don’t have to worry about charging batteries, too. I highly recommend it for small yards. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on March 1, 2023 by Fools and Sages

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