Shaving a bald head with a handheld razor is a daily exercise in trusting your fingertips to find spots your eyes can’t see. The Groomie BaldiePro is built to take that guesswork out, and after weighing the Groomie shaver reviews against the specs, here’s whether it actually delivers.
It’s a palm-held electric head shaver with five floating rotary heads that ride the curve of your skull, plus a kit of attachments for your face, neck and body. The pitch is a full, smooth head shave in under three minutes, wet or dry, without nicking the back of your scalp.
For this review we went through Groomie’s own specs, the way its rotary system works, the owner feedback on Amazon and Trustpilot, and how it stacks up against the head-shaver most people already know, the Skull Shaver Pitbull. We weighted the durable facts over the marketing.
The short version: at $79.99 it’s the value play in this category, with genuinely useful waterproofing and a strong battery. There’s one catch worth knowing before you buy, and it isn’t the shave. Let’s get into it.
What the Groomie BaldiePro is

The Groomie BaldiePro is a cordless electric head shaver shaped like a smooth pebble that sits in your palm, so you can reach the back of your head without an awkward grip. Instead of a single foil, it uses five independent rotary heads that float and pivot, each tracking the contour of your scalp so the blades stay in contact over bumps and around the crown.
A 10,000 RPM motor drives those heads, and Groomie says it clears a full head in under three minutes. The whole thing is IPX7 waterproof, so you shave wet in the shower with gel, dry on the couch, or rinse it clean under the tap.
It charges over USB and runs about 90 minutes per charge, which is weeks of shaves for most people. First mention aside, this is a head-and-body tool, not only a scalp razor.
How the shave actually works

Rotary heads want a different motion than a foil. You work in slow overlapping circles, letting the five heads do the cutting rather than dragging in straight lines, and the pebble shape means you can run it one-handed over the back of your skull by feel.
The same body handles your face and neck, so a beard line, sideburns and the back of the neck are all in reach. The kit’s trimmer and guards take on longer stubble before you switch to the shaving head for the finish.
Honestly, the first shave or two feel unfamiliar if you’re coming from a blade, and that’s worth saying plainly. Give it a session to learn the circular motion and the closeness catches up fast.
What’s in the kit

The base kit is more than a razor in a box. For $79.99 you get the BaldiePro shaver, the five-head shaving attachment, an exfoliator brush, a scalp scrubber, an ear-and-nose trimmer, a trimmer with guards, a cleaning brush and a zip travel case. Larger bundles run up to about $124.99 if you want the extras.
That case matters more than it sounds. A head shaver lives in a gym bag or a carry-on as often as a bathroom shelf, and the hard zip case keeps the heads and attachments together instead of loose in a dopp kit.
It’s a genuinely complete grooming set for one price, which is a big part of why it reads as good value next to single-purpose shavers.
The catch: blades and the subscription

Here’s the part the sales page soft-pedals. The rotary heads are a wear item you replace roughly every 60 days, or about every 60 shaves, to keep the cut close and hygienic. A dull head is the number-one complaint on any rotary shaver, Groomie included, and it’s avoidable only by swapping blades on schedule.
Groomie sells those blades on a subscription that ships every 30, 45 or 60 days, which lands somewhere around $90 a year depending on how fast you burn through a head. Factor that in, because the $79.99 sticker isn’t the whole cost of ownership.
The upside: buying blades on subscription unlocks a lifetime warranty, on top of the standard 1-year warranty and a 60-day money-back guarantee. If you were going to replace heads anyway, the subscription is the cheaper path and de-risks the purchase. If you resent recurring charges, price the blades in with clear eyes first.
What owners say

The feedback is solid rather than spotless. The BaldiePro holds a 4.0 out of 5 across more than 1,500 Amazon ratings, and Trustpilot skews positive, with buyers repeatedly calling out the ergonomic pebble shape and how easily it handles the back of the head.
The recurring praise is speed and reach: a quick, close head shave you can do by feel, wet or dry. The recurring gripe is blade life, which loops back to the subscription point above.
Weigh the detailed, verified reviews over the one-line raves and pans, and the picture is consistent: a well-designed, well-priced shaver whose only real friction is keeping fresh heads on it.
How it compares
The rival most shoppers cross-shop is the Skull Shaver Pitbull Gold PRO, the established name in palm-held head shavers. It’s the more proven brand, but it lists around $110 to the Groomie’s $79.99, and it carries a lower IPX5 splash rating versus the BaldiePro’s fully submersible IPX7. Battery life is a wash at roughly 90 minutes each.
So the Groomie wins on price and on water resistance, while Skull Shaver wins on track record. If you want the most established name and don’t mind paying for it, the Pitbull is the safe pick. If you want the cheaper, more waterproof kit with the same core job done well, the BaldiePro is the smarter buy.
Freebird makes a rotary-style head shaver some buyers cross-shop too, but the comparison that actually matters here is the one against the Skull Shaver.
Pros and cons
What we liked
- Five floating rotary heads follow the curve of your skull for a fast, close head shave, roughly three minutes
- IPX7 fully waterproof, so it works wet in the shower and rinses clean, a step above IPX5 rivals
- Complete kit at $79.99: shaver, trimmer, exfoliator, scalp scrubber, ear-and-nose trimmer and travel case
- 90-minute battery, USB charging, and a 60-day money-back guarantee plus lifetime warranty on the blade subscription
What we didn't
- Replacement heads are a recurring cost, around $90 a year, and a dull head is the top complaint
- Rotary heads need a session or two to learn if you're coming from a foil or a blade
- Newer direct-to-consumer brand without Skull Shaver's long track record
- The subscription upsell is central to the pricing, so read the blade plan before you commit
Who it’s not for
If you shave with a foil and love an ultra-close, straight-line finish on very sensitive skin, the rotary system may take patience you’d rather not spend, and a premium foil shaver could suit you better.
Skip it too if recurring charges are a dealbreaker. The BaldiePro is at its best and cheapest on the blade subscription, and fighting that model means fighting the product.
One honest note on the imagery: the people shown using the shaver in Groomie’s materials are the brand’s models, not our staff, so treat those photos as illustration of the technique, not a test we ran.
For nearly anyone who keeps a shaved head and wants a capable, well-priced tool that reaches the back of the skull by feel, though, the Groomie BaldiePro is an easy recommendation. It’s the same “make the daily ritual painless” logic behind the at-home tools in our electric gua sha review and the practical everyday-carry pick in our KeySmart review. You’ll find more of the self-care gear we’ve researched in our beauty hub, including at-home skin devices in our Glamory vs Seranova and Glokore LED mask vs CurrentBody comparisons.
Verdict
The Groomie BaldiePro earns a 9.1. At $79.99 it does the hard part of a head shaver well, five floating heads that hug your skull for a quick, close, one-handed shave, with genuine IPX7 waterproofing and a battery that lasts.
Go in clear-eyed about the blades. Budget for fresh heads a few times a year, give the rotary motion a session to click, and you’ve got the value champion of head shavers. Ignore the replacement schedule and any rotary shaver, this one included, gets worse over time.
Check today's Groomie BaldiePro price
