Vacuum is cleaning
The Vacuum cleaner is cleaning condition passes when one or more targeted vacuums are actively cleaning.
Use this when you want an automation to continue only if the robot is actively cleaning, like pausing it for a quiet activity, avoiding another floor-cleaning routine, or sending a status update only while the run is still underway.
Requires the Purpose-specific triggers and conditions Labs preview feature. Enable it at Settings > System > Labs.
Using this condition from the user interface
If you prefer building automations visually, Home Assistant walks you through this condition step by step. You pick what to check, tweak a few options, and save. No YAML knowledge required.
To use this condition in an automation:
- Go to Settings > Automations & scenes.
- Open an existing automation, or select Create automation > Create new automation.
- In the And if section, select Add condition.
- From the search box, search for and select Vacuum: Vacuum cleaner is cleaning.
- Under Targets, select the vacuum entity, an area, a floor, or a label.
- Under Condition passes if (see Behavior), pick Any or All.
- Under For at least, enter how long the vacuum must keep cleaning before the condition passes.
- Select Save.
Options in the UI
When multiple vacuums are targeted, controls how results combine. Pick Any to pass if at least one targeted vacuum is cleaning, or All to pass only when every targeted vacuum is cleaning.
Using this condition in YAML
If you work directly in YAML, or you want to know exactly what Home Assistant does under the hood, this section has the technical reference. It lists the field names you use in YAML, their types, and which ones are required.
In YAML, refer to this condition as vacuum.is_cleaning. A basic example looks like this:
condition: vacuum.is_cleaning
target:
entity_id: vacuum.living_room
options:
behavior: any
This passes when vacuum.living_room is actively cleaning.
Options in YAML
YAML sometimes provides additional options for more complex use cases that are not available through the UI.
Targets of the condition
This condition requires a target. The target is the object that Home Assistant will check. You can point the condition at a single entityAn entity represents a sensor, actor, or function in Home Assistant. Entities are used to monitor physical properties or to control other entities. An entity is usually part of a device or a service. [Learn more], a device, an area, a floor, or a label, and Home Assistant will evaluate every matching vacuum entity behind that target.
-
Entity: one specific vacuum entity, such as
vacuum.living_room. - Device: every vacuum entity that belongs to a device.
- Area: every vacuum entity in a room or area.
- Floor: every vacuum entity on a floor.
- Label: every vacuum entity that shares a label.
You can also select different target types in one condition. For example, you can add a specific entity and an area as targets in the same condition to check both of them at once.
Behavior with multiple targets
When you target more than one entity (or select an area, floor, or label that contains several), the Condition passes if option controls how the results combine:
- Any (default): the condition passes if at least one of the targeted entities matches. For example, if you check three smoke sensors and only one of them detects smoke, the condition still passes. This is useful for questions like “is there smoke anywhere in the house?”
- All: the condition passes only when every targeted entity matches. For example, if you check the same three smoke sensors, the condition passes only once all three report cleared. This is useful for “is the entire house safe now?” checks, so your automation does not send an all-clear while one room still has a reading.
Good to know
- Entities with state
unavailableorunknownare ignored when Home Assistant evaluates the condition. - With Any (default), the condition passes if at least one targeted vacuum is cleaning.
- With All, the condition passes only if every targeted vacuum that Home Assistant can evaluate is cleaning.
- If every targeted vacuum is
unavailableorunknown, Any fails and All passes.
Try it yourself
Ready to test this? Go to Settings > Automations & scenes, open an automation, and add this condition. Trigger the automation with and without the condition met, and watch whether it continues or stops.
More examples
Real scenarios where this condition gates an automation. Copy any example and adapt it to your setup.
You don’t need to edit YAML to use these examples. Copy a YAML snippet from this page, open the automation editor in Home Assistant, and press Ctrl+V (or Cmd+V on Mac). Home Assistant automatically converts the pasted YAML into the visual editor format, whether it’s a full automation, a single trigger, a condition, or an action.
Automation: pause the vacuum for movie time
When movie mode starts, this automation first checks whether the living room vacuum is actively cleaning. If it is, Home Assistant pauses it so the room is quiet.
- Trigger: Movie mode turns on
- Condition: Vacuum is cleaning
- Target: Living room vacuum
- Action: Pause cleaning
YAML example for pausing a vacuum during movie mode
alias: "Pause vacuum for movie mode"
triggers:
- trigger: state
entity_id: input_boolean.movie_mode
to: "on"
conditions:
- condition: vacuum.is_cleaning
target:
entity_id: vacuum.living_room
options:
behavior: any
actions:
- action: vacuum.pause
target:
entity_id: vacuum.living_room
Still stuck?
The Home Assistant community is quick to help: join Discord for real-time chat, post on the community forum with the condition you’re using and what you expected to happen, or share on our subreddit /r/homeassistant.
AI assistants like ChatGPT or Claude can also explain conditions or suggest the right one when you describe what you want in plain language.