I bought the Pocket Hose Arrow Sprayer because the ads made it look like an easy way to blast away dirt without dragging out a bulky pressure washer.
After using it, I think it’s a decent hose attachment, but it’s nowhere near the game-changing cleaning tool the marketing had me expecting.

What Is the Pocket Hose Arrow Sprayer?
The Pocket Hose Arrow Sprayer is a garden hose attachment designed to increase the cleaning power of a standard hose. It comes with interchangeable spray tips, including a concentrated jet stream for tougher cleaning jobs and wider spray patterns for rinsing, watering plants, or washing vehicles. Unlike a pressure washer, it doesn’t use a motor or electricity… it simply concentrates your home’s existing water pressure into a narrower stream.
It’s marketed as an easier, lighter alternative to a traditional pressure washer for cleaning patios, driveways, siding, cars, outdoor furniture, and more.
Why I Bought It
The biggest selling point for me was convenience.
I liked the idea of getting stronger cleaning performance without dealing with extension cords, loud motors, or hauling a heavy pressure washer around the yard. If this little attachment could deliver even 80% of the results with a fraction of the effort, I figured it’d be well worth the money.
The demonstrations made stubborn dirt disappear so effortlessly that it honestly seemed too good to pass up.
My Experience Using It
Setup couldn’t have been easier. I connected it to my garden hose, switched between the included spray tips, and started testing it on everything from patio furniture to concrete and my driveway.
Right away, I could tell the jet stream was noticeably stronger than a regular garden hose nozzle. It rinsed away loose dirt, mud, leaves, and light grime without much effort, and I actually enjoyed how lightweight and comfortable it felt in my hand.
The disappointment came when I tried tackling tougher stains.

The commercials gave me the impression that years of grime would practically disappear with a quick pass. My experience was very different. Oil stains, embedded dirt, mildew, and heavily soiled concrete still required a lot of scrubbing, multiple passes, or cleaning solutions. The concentrated stream helped, but it never came close to performing like an actual pressure washer.
I also realized that the overall performance depended almost entirely on my home’s water pressure. On surfaces that only needed a good rinse, the Arrow worked perfectly well. But whenever I expected deep cleaning, I found myself wishing I had simply pulled out a real pressure washer instead.
By the end, I felt like I’d bought a very good hose nozzle… not a pressure washer replacement.
Build Quality & Ease of Use
One thing I genuinely liked was how comfortable the sprayer felt.
The handle was easy to grip, switching between the spray tips was straightforward, and I appreciated not having to wrestle with a heavy machine every time I wanted to clean something outside.
It’s also compact enough to store almost anywhere, which makes it much more convenient than traditional pressure washers.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Extremely easy to install
- Lightweight and comfortable to use
- Multiple spray tips for different jobs
- Stronger than a standard hose nozzle
- No electricity or motor required
- Convenient to store
Cons
- Doesn’t replace a real pressure washer
- Performance depends on your home’s water pressure
- Struggles with deeply embedded stains
- Marketing creates unrealistic expectations
- Expensive for what is essentially a premium hose attachment
Product Claims vs. Reality
Pocket Hose advertises the Arrow as producing a powerful, high-velocity cleaning stream capable of blasting away dirt using only your garden hose.
Technically, that’s true. It absolutely produces a stronger, more focused spray than a standard hose nozzle.
Where I think the marketing becomes a little misleading is in the comparisons to pressure washers. Concentrating water flow isn’t the same thing as generating the hundreds or thousands of PSI that a dedicated pressure washer produces. If you’re expecting those kinds of results, I think you’ll probably be disappointed.
For lighter cleaning jobs, it performs well. For deep cleaning, I think the advertising oversells what it can realistically do.
Is It a Scam?
No. The Pocket Hose Arrow does exactly what it’s physically capable of doing… it focuses your existing water pressure into a narrower, stronger stream. That’s legitimate, and the product itself works as intended.
What I struggled with was the expectation the advertising created. The demonstrations make it look like an inexpensive substitute for a pressure washer, when in reality it’s still limited by the water pressure coming from your garden hose. No attachment can magically create pressure that isn’t already there.
So I don’t think the product is fake. I just think the marketing makes its capabilities look far more impressive than they feel during everyday use.
Customer Feedback
Customer opinions are fairly mixed. Many buyers appreciate how lightweight, easy to use, and convenient the Arrow is for washing cars, rinsing patios, watering plants, and handling everyday outdoor chores. People who went into it expecting an upgraded hose nozzle generally seem satisfied.
On the other hand, many disappointed buyers expected pressure-washer performance and felt the product didn’t deliver enough cleaning power for heavily stained concrete or other demanding jobs. Discussions on Reddit also include complaints about durability and sprayer reliability with some Pocket Hose products, although experiences vary widely.
That honestly reflects my own experience.
Alternatives to Consider
- Sun Joe electric pressure washers
- Greenworks pressure washers
Conclusion — Would I Recommend It?
Only if you understand what you’re buying. If you’re expecting a lightweight hose attachment that makes everyday outdoor cleaning a little easier, I think the Pocket Hose Arrow does a respectable job.
But if you’re buying it because the commercials convinced you it’ll replace your pressure washer, I think you’re setting yourself up for disappointment.
For me, the product wasn’t bad… it simply wasn’t nearly as powerful as I had been led to believe. I finished using it feeling like I’d purchased an upgraded garden hose nozzle rather than the revolutionary cleaning tool the advertising promised.
Also read my similar review on the Qinux Aquoxis Pressure Washer
