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Bissell Revolution + Pet Oxy Formula + Febreze Air Spray

  • Based on 15 reviews
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Sunday, Feb 15
Order within 21 hours and 47 minutes
Available payment plans shown during checkout

Style: Revolution + Pro Pet Formula + Febreze Air Freshener


Features

  • Every Purchase Saves Pets. BISSELL proudly supports BISSELL Pet Foundation and its mission to help save homeless pets..Amperage : 6.8 amps
  • Engineered to be our best and most powerful carpet cleaning system for the toughest pet stains and odors even removes skunk odor
  • MAX Clean Mode. Packing in 12 rows of rotating Dual DirtLifter PowerBrushes, it delivers professional grade cleaning to remove deep down embedded stains, dirt and odors.
  • 2X concentrated formula for use in all upright carpet cleaning machines
  • Removes pet stains and odors at the source with the power of oxy and febreze freshness
  • Cleans and protects from future stains with scotch gard protector. Surface Type - Heavy Traffic Areas, Large Area
  • Eliminates air odors without masking, leaving nothing behind but a light, fresh scent
  • Refresh stinks right meow with 2X the odor-eliminating power and freshness in Heavy Duty Pet Odor Eliminator (vs. base Febreze)
  • Hold upright and spray in a sweeping motion throughout your house

Brand: Bissell


Special Feature: MAX Clean Mode with Dual DirtLifter PowerBrushes


Filter Type: Foam or Cloth


Included Components: Febreze Air Spray, Pet Oxy Boost


Is Cordless?: No


Brand: Bissell


Special Feature: MAX Clean Mode with Dual DirtLifter PowerBrushes


Filter Type: Foam or Cloth


Included Components: Febreze Air Spray, Pet Oxy Boost


Is Cordless?: No


Recommended Uses For Product: Pet Foundation


Form Factor: Upright


Color: Green, Purple


Model Name: Revolution


Manufacturer: Bissell


Number of Items: 1


Control Method: Touch


Style: Revolution + Pro Pet Formula + Febreze Air Freshener


Portable: No


Indoor/Outdoor Usage: Indoor


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Sunday, Feb 15

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


  • Very good at carpet cleaning but so confusing to clean out.
Style: Revolution
I bought this Bissell carpet cleaner after returning the carpet cleaner that I originally tried, the Hoover Smartwash Automatic Carpet Cleaner model FH52000. You can see my review of the Hoover Smartwash at the following link: https://www.amazon.com/review/ROS4FTWF2IDKH/ref=cm_cr_srp_d_rdp_perm?ie=UTF8&ASIN=B07DTKXTXV The main selling point of the Hoover Smartwash is that it is ridiculously easy to use. The side benefit to it is that it's also super easy to clean. After using that, you'll be spoiled. Which leads me to my review of this Bissell Proheat model... This Bissell beats the Hoover Smartwash in cleaning. It was able to get my carpets cleaner, quicker. The Hoover Smartwash is not bad, mind you. It's just that this Bissell is better. If you want one of the best possible cleans, you should get this one. If I had to rate the cleaning performance of both, I'd give this Bissell a 9 out of 10, and I'd give the Hoover Smartwash an 8 out of 10. On youtube, you can even see comparisons where this Bissell model did better than commercial quality models like the Bissell Big Green Machine. Right now (as of the beginning of 2020), it seems to be the best model available, period, for actually cleaning carpets. Awesome! One thing to keep in mind, though, is that these performance comparisons are just looking at how the carpet looks after the same number of passes forwards and backwards over the stain. Pretty much all of the carpet cleaners will be able to get rid of a stain if you work at it long enough (more passes). That might mean using a manual pre-wash first. Or it might mean going over the stain many more times. Or you can simply double the amount of liquid carpet cleaner you use. So I think both the Bissell and the Hoover can clean more or less equally well, if you're willing to work at it a bit more with the Hoover. I didn't think I'd like the "spot clean" feature of this Bissell model, though. That's where it shoots a stream of cleaning fluid right at a spot to soak it in. But I have to say, it's a great feature. Granted, I could just get a spray bottle and do it manually. But anything to make my life easier is a good idea. Where this Bissell product really needs to improve is in clean-out. I found it was so confusing and tedious to clean out this carpet cleaner, especially compared to the Hoover Smartwash. The Smartwash required no instructions and was much quicker, had far less steps, less parts, less complication. This Bissell carpet cleaner has two pieces housing the brushes, for example. The Hoover Smartwash only has one. Less parts to clean! And on the Bissell, when I went to remove the top one, it wasn't obvious what I had to do. After doing the wrong thing a couple times, I finally just pulled at it from the back piece, and it came off. But pulling at pieces at random is hardly a good thing to train your customers to do, right? The second part of the brush housing came off only after I read the instruction manual. And the manual wasn't terribly clear about it. You have to press down on two button-like things at the same time. Complicated and non-intuitive, requiring squinting and carefully reading and re-reading the manual. After I removed the second of the two brush housing pieces, it leaked cleaning fluid all over the place. Luckily this was on the tiles in my bathroom, because I had the common sense to bring it there first, just in case. The manual didn't tell me to expect that, though. It certainly should have, but it certainly didn't! Now, cleaning the two brush housing pieces was not a big deal, but a little more complicated than it should be. Again, the Hoover Smartwash was easier in this regard, because you could pour water directly into the hole at the narrow end, and it would push out all the gunk at the wide end. And then you could turn it around and run water through the wide end as well, in reverse. But this Bissell product only lets you pour water in the wide end. The hole at the narrow end is perpendicular to the unit, preventing you from using it to flush it out. That made cleaning it more difficult, more time consuming, and not as thorough. To get it completely clean, it required a special tool that they include with the unit. Just flushing it with water wasn't good enough. Whereas, the Hoover Smartwash required no such tool and was super easy to flush out! With the two brush housing pieces cleaned, I then tried to put them back onto the machine. The first piece was fine. I just put it on and heard it click into place. Simple enough. But the second piece? Oh my god! You can't be serious! It was so confusing. Nothing I did worked to get that piece on. I was pressing down firmly enough the thing was about to snap. I tried sliding it on. I tried pressing it on. I tried smacking it on the top, on the end, etc. Nothing worked. I was ready to say this piece was defective. But then I squinted at and re-read the manual again. They show only one picture, and it really doesn't depict the action that you need to perform. They have one very vague sentence telling you what to do. And finally, I figured it out: You're supposed to rotate the piece, placing the bottom edge into the front lip thingy first, and then rotate it as if it was a hinge. But it's not a hinge! And there's no indication that it was designed to be a hinge! If you keep rotating it, it will snap in correctly. To my utter astonishment, it worked. Wow! There's really no reason a normal human being would expect it to work that way. None. I'm an electrical engineer, and I found it absurd and confounding. Then came cleaning out the waste water collection jar. I pulled it out just fine. It didn't leak. Good so far. I took it over to my toilet to dump it out. I saw a little rubber stopper at the top, off-side and not quite at the top of the jar. So I figured, no, that can't be where they want me to pour it out from. I mean, you're expecting a screw cap of some sort, with some sort of lip to pour from. But there is none. So you're thinking, that can't be where you pour from. It's just going to trickle right down the edge of the jar, since it has no lip. Ewww. No, that can't be right. It's gotta be something else. So I looked around and saw on the bottom of the collection jar there was a huge round screw-cap-like piece. Awesome. That must be it, right? Well, I unscrewed it and realized it was just a collar piece, not a lid. The collar piece came off, but it didn't open up the bottom of it. Apparently you have to reach in and pull out the overflow assembly at this point. I was struggling to figure out how to do that. Nothing I grabbed worked, no matter how hard I pulled at it. It was just stuck in there good. While I was doing this, the waste water inside came out on occasion as it tilted from side to side. Apparently, the bottom piece is actually open to the inside. Yeah, that murky water can come right out the bottom even without unscrewing anything, just by tilting it the wrong way! Oh man. Are you kidding me? Who designed this? A waste collection jar should be leak-proof! This one isn't. It will leak quite a lot if you just tilt it or jostle it. So I went to the manual again. I read it, squinted, re-read it, and I knew what to do. Apparently you do use that rubber stopper on the top to empty the thing out first. Who knew? It isn't a real cap, just a stopper. It has no "lip" preventing waste water from trickling down the container. There's no pour nozzle. And that rubber stopper is designed to just hang from the container. It doesn't stay out of the way once you open it. That just makes it messy to pour out. The waste water is going to splash against that stopper. I honestly don't get it. Why would they design it like this? To remove the overflow mechanism from the bottom of the collection jar in order to clean it, you have to do this really awkward, non-intuitive thing to pull it out. I tried reaching in and pulling at it hard, but that didn't work. You have to sort of pry off one side of it, and then pull. It's strange. Even now I'm like, "How did I do that?" Then after cleaning it, I had to put the overflow mechanism back into the collection jar. The manual says to line up the arrow on the overflow part with the arrow on the jar. And it reassured the readers that it only goes in one way. Well I could not for the life of me see any arrow on the overflow mechanism. So I just stuck it in some way that seemed right. Well, it didn't work. That wasn't the right way, obviously. Okay, I'll just turn it around and try again. It still didn't work. So I'm looking once again for the arrow. I found it! It's actually a very tiny raised imprint on the clear part of the piece. Oh, so it's invisible! Okaaaay. A crucial piece of information, and they decided to make it very hard to see. Wow. Moving on, I then pulled out the clean water jar and cleaned it. When I did that, it leaked a little bit, maybe a teaspoon full. Meh. Not terrible, but obviously not something I liked to have happen. Now, the Hoover Smartwash was a breeze to clean. I mean, that thing required no reading whatsoever. All the parts were so easy to pull out and intuitive to use and clean. It didn't require any fighting with the machine. There were no leaks. There was no special way of cleaning it. No secret knowledge needed. You just pulled something out, unscrewed it easily and in an obvious manner, and rinsed it with water. You're done in a minute or two. No problems whatsoever with the Smartwash. With this Bissell, it will take at least 10 minutes to clean out! And bring that manual with you every time, because I guarantee you you'll forget the secret stuff you need to do. Not my idea of a good experience. And yes, you must clean out these devices after every use, or else they will die in no time at all. One other thing. Apparently you can't pull the brush rollers out and clean them. You can do that super easily in the Hoover Smartwash. They just pop right out in the Hoover. The Bissell's manual tells you to clean them on the unit instead (don't remove them). If you do want to remove the brush rollers, you can do it. You just have this tricky procedure involving using a screwdriver, opening up the belt compartment, removing belts, and so on. Yeah, don't even try that unless you never want your Bissell to work again. Haha. In conclusion, holy moly! Cleaning out this machine was so absurdly confusing. I can't believe they designed it like this. Seriously, bad engineers! Bad! Hang your heads in shame! I'm reading between the lines here, but I think this was designed by people who didn't like their jobs and wanted to send a message to their bosses by making this product as horribly confusing and convoluted as possible. Just can't believe it went on to production like this. If only the Bissell was as easy to clean out as the Hoover Smartwash, or at least made some sense, I'd give it 5 stars. I'm taking away one star for the fact that the design was tedious and completely non-intuitive to clean. I'd take away two stars if it wasn't for the fact that I do think this is great at actually cleaning carpets. In the future I'll come back to my review and update it when the unit dies. I want to get 5 years out of it. But I know most of these only last a year. We'll see. If it doesn't make it to 2 years at least, I'm taking away another star. As for the Hoover Smartwash, I loved the concept. I loved its ease of use and how easy it was clean out, especially compared with this Bissell. It was awesome. Its cleaning ability is somewhat less than the Bissell, but like I said, that just means you have to go over the stain more times. No big deal. It's adequate. I would have gone with the Hoover Smartwash instead of this Bissell if the Smartwash didn't arrive with a defect. That defect caused me to be very skeptical of the build quality of the Smartwash, which caused me to buy the Bissell instead. Design-wise, the Smartwash is better. But is it as durable as the Bissell? I just got the impression that it wasn't. I could be wrong. It's hard to tell. So my recommendation is to buy the Bissell if you don't mind having to deal with the convoluted clean-out procedure. I think you'll learn what to do over time, and it will get easier to do as you go on. It will never be as easy as the Hoover, though. Get the Bissell if you want the best cleaning performance. If you want to take a chance on the Hoover, go for it. The experience with the Hoover model is so much better, even if it doesn't clean as well (which just means going over the carpet more times, no big deal). Just make sure you buy it on Amazon so that you can return it easily if things go wrong. Hope that helps. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 10, 2020 by Steven Weigand

  • Works!
Style: Revolution
Was looking to get my Carpets cleaned. They were pretty bad. I have a rental where the person works at Burger King and tracks grease onto the kitchen floor and take his shoes off at the carpet. Then everyone else walks on the greasy kitchen floor and tracks it on the carpet. I looked into hiring someone who would charge $50-$100 per room for 5 rooms. I just thought, why not buy my own machine and do it myself. This thing did not get me super pro results but I think it that’s because of my pretreat not the machine. For my first time it worked wonderfully though. I just have to learn what soap/cleaner to use. My carpet is beige and it looks really good now. I didn’t use the Bissell cleaner. I just bought a bottle of pretreaT and sprayed my carpets and let it sit for 30 minutes and used plain water in the machine. It works fine for the greasy filthy carpet and at my home it’s even better because the carpets don’t get nearly as dirty. I think the difference between this and the big commercial machines in the tank volume and maybe suction but for home jobs this is perfect. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 21, 2022 by Tommy Gunnz

  • Absolutely great.
Style: Revolution
Rented a rug doctor, was absolutely terrible. was gonna go to lowes to rent thier green whatever thing a week after cleaning my carpet. Decided to just buy a carpet cleaner as I figured buy once, cry once. Does everything you'd need for any cleaning job. Deep/light cleans amazingly. Only problem is the waste water capacity. About half a gallon each go around till you have to empty. But that is literally only a minor convenience in comparison to what you get. Not good with stairs but it does come with attachment hose accessory. Didn't even bother to try as we own a portable smaller bissel cleaner. Wish I took before and after pics, cause it put that rug doctor machine to shame in one pass. Cleaned my whole damn house of carpet lol. I'm not kidding, It's that much of a pleasure to use. Aight I'm gone now ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 30, 2022 by B.C.

  • Great Carpet Shampooer
Style: Revolution
I have a cat who sheds like an old hound dog, so I needed a new carpet shampooer. I haven't tried it on the stairs yet, so I can't speak to how that works, but my sister asked me to bring it when I went to visit her so she could try it on their carpet which is full of rabbit fur. It did a fantastic job sucking up years of rabbit fur build-up--this dragged up stuff the vacuum left. I love the fact it comes with a wand to clean fur out of the tight stops on the machine itself, too. My sister is getting one of her own as a Christmas gift from me, at her request! My only complaint is the slightly deceptive advertising that says the carpet dries in a very short time--that's only if you use it on the setting that barely wets the carpet. Otherwise, it takes the usual overnight to dry thoroughly. But that's a small complaint. I love this machine. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on November 20, 2022 by Amante dei Gatti

  • It took up some NASTY stains
Style: Revolution
This thing is exactly what we needed for pet stains. I read a ton of reviews and decided to get this one after our spot bot died. I must say, this one is so much easier to clean. We moved out all of our living room furniture and noticed our reclining couch and chair left black stands on the carpet. We also have a nice reddish pink stain behind the end table but, sadly, that one didn’t fully come up with cleaning. After doing our living room, with the ceiling fan running, it was dry in eight hours. This vacuum is not bulky at all, and surprisingly light for its size. But it is very powerful. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2022 by A. Miller

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