Brand guide · Updated July 2026
McGregor Lawn Mowers
McGregor is the Argos own-brand garden range: budget corded and cordless mowers, trimmers and hedge cutters sold exclusively through Argos. It is honest entry-level kit, among the cheapest routes to a working mower in the UK, with support that runs through the retailer rather than a dealer network. Here is what that means in practice.
What McGregor actually is
There is no McGregor factory or independent mower company: the name is owned and used by Argos (Sainsbury's) for its garden power range, the same way B&Q uses Mac Allister. Machines are sourced from overseas factories to hit shelf prices that start well under £100 for a corded mower. That model has genuine advantages: walk-in availability at hundreds of Argos stores, easy returns and cheap spares for common parts. It also has one obvious limit: the brand is only as deep as the retailer's current catalogue.
The range
The line-up shifts season to season but typically covers small corded rotary mowers (30-37 cm decks, roughly £60-£100), entry-level cordless mowers (around £130-£250) on McGregor's shared battery system, plus trimmers, hedge cutters and blowers on the same packs. Everything is aimed at small and medium lawns cut little and often. There is no petrol, no self-propelled drive and nothing for rough ground. That is not the market this range serves.
Best McGregor mowers
McGregor 34cm Corded Rotary Mower
McGregor
The definition of entry-level: a light corded rotary for a small, regularly cut lawn at the lowest price in the shop. Owner reviews on the Argos site are broadly positive at the price, with the usual budget caveats about the grass box and build. As a first mower for a small garden, or a spare for an allotment, it is hard to argue with the money.
Pros
- + Among the cheapest mowers in any UK shop
- + Light and easy to store
- + Argos availability, buy it the same day
Cons
- − Budget build throughout
- − Small grass box means frequent emptying
- − No dealer network, support runs through Argos
McGregor 37cm Cordless Mower
McGregor
Fine for a small lawn cut little and often. The McGregor battery fits other McGregor garden tools, which helps. The platform lives and dies with Argos stocking it, unlike Bosch 18V or WORX PowerShare, which will still sell you a battery in a decade. Budget accordingly: this is a five-year purchase, not a fifteen-year one.
Pros
- + Cheap route into cordless mowing
- + Batteries shared across the McGregor tool range
- + Simple controls, nothing to learn
Cons
- − Closed battery platform with no third-party options
- − Runtime drops fast on long or damp grass
The honest buying advice
McGregor makes sense when the budget is the budget: a first mower for a small garden, a rental property, an allotment machine, or a stop-gap. Owner feedback on the Argos site is broadly content at these prices, and the recurring complaints are predictable: small grass boxes, plasticky height adjusters and cordless runtime that fades on long grass.
Two situations justify spending more. If you will keep the mower beyond a handful of seasons, a Flymo or Bosch is better built and far easier to keep in blades and batteries. And if you are buying cordless, the battery platform is the real purchase: see our best battery lawn mower guide for why the open platforms win over a mower's lifetime.