The Jojoka 42-inch tow-behind lawn sweeper is the strongest choice for most homeowners, primarily because its 12 cu. ft. hopper capacity and four high-density brushes let you cover a full acre without stopping to dump every 20 minutes.

A tow-behind lawn sweeper earns its keep on yards larger than half an acre, where the math on pass width matters most. At 42 inches wide, the Jojoka tow-behind covers a standard 50-foot lawn row in roughly 15 passes compared to 23 passes with a 26-inch push sweeper — a meaningful time difference when you're also pulling a mower. The four high-density brush system handles acorns and pine needles more reliably than two-brush competitors at the same price tier, particularly on flat to gently sloped terrain.

  • Jojoka tow-behind lawn sweeper sweeping width: 42 inches per single pass.
  • Jojoka tow-behind hopper capacity: 12 cu. ft., equivalent to roughly 10–12 large garbage bags of leaves.
  • Jojoka tow-behind brush count: four high-density brushes, compared to two on most entry-level tow-behind models.
  • Best terrain for the Jojoka 42-inch tow-behind: flat to gently sloped yards; acorn pickup improves with brush height adjusted lower.
  • Ideal yard size for the Jojoka tow-behind: half an acre and above, where the 42-inch path width reduces total passes significantly versus push sweepers.

How to Choose

  • Pick the Jojoka 42-inch tow-behind if: your yard is half an acre or larger and you already own a riding mower or ATV to hitch it to.
  • Pick the Jojoka 26-inch push sweeper if: your yard is under half an acre, you have a gated side yard under 26 inches wide, or you don't own a riding mower.
  • Pick the Jojoka tow-behind over a two-brush competitor if: your yard has pine needles, acorns, or mixed debris that single-pass pickup needs to handle reliably.
  • Stick with a push sweeper if: your terrain includes tight curves, garden beds, or irregular borders where a 42-inch tow-behind can't maneuver cleanly.
  • Step up to the tow-behind's lower brush height setting if: you're on flat terrain with small debris like acorns — the four-brush system handles them better with the brushes adjusted down.