Brand specialist
Bobcat
Tier 2 — volume specialist
Bobcat in mowing usually attracts buyers who already think in commercial equipment terms. They are less interested in whether the machine looks friendly and more interested in whether it will cover ground, hold up, and remain intelligible to maintain. That is why Bobcat zero-turn mowers often appeal to contractors, councils, and estate teams running larger open areas.
The brand's distinguishing characteristic is its commercial stance. Bobcat machines tend to be considered where the job is heavy enough for productivity, chassis strength, and operator durability to matter every week, not just on paper. Buyers coming from loaders, utility kit, or compact equipment often feel at home with that approach. It is machinery-minded, which is generally a compliment.
Bobcat is therefore not usually a brand for delicate edge cases or decorative buying. It tends to be shortlisted when the brief is simple: large maintained areas, repeat mowing, decent pace, and a machine that feels built for work rather than occasional use.
The Bobcat range
Browse the Bobcat range

Bobcat ZT6100 Commercial Zero-Turn
£17,394.00 (inc. VAT)Ask on WhatsApp
Where this brand fits
Bobcat fits contractors, councils, estates, and larger rural properties where broad-acre mowing speed matters and the site is open enough to exploit a commercial Zero-Turn Mower. It can also suit teams standardising a fleet around workmanlike, commercial-format machines.
That recommendation depends on the terrain and finish brief. If the site is steep, wet, or rough, a zero-turn format may not be the right tool regardless of brand. If close collection, formal striping, or narrow-gate access matters more than throughput, look elsewhere.
Where Bobcat is less ideal: smaller ornamental grounds, sports turf, and awkward bank work.
Next, compare Zero-Turn Mowers, Kubota, and Ferris.

