Model WA4092 ยท Universal Sock Adapter ยท ~$22
How we scored the WA4092 at 7.9/10: The WA4092 is an older budget kit, so there's little dedicated hands-on expert coverage of this specific model โ we leaned on verified buyer reviews (Home Depot, Amazon), Worx's published specs, and our own spec-by-spec analysis rather than inventing third-party scores it doesn't have. The 7.9 reflects genuine value and a real off-ladder safety benefit, pulled down by a universal "sock" adapter that's hit-or-miss across blower brands and modest power on anything but bone-dry debris.
Lowest cost in the category โ At around $22, it's the cheapest way to try ground-level gutter cleaning. It pays for itself against a single pro visit.
Screw-together tubes โ The three tube sections thread together to whatever length you need and hold that length, rather than friction-fitting and creeping apart.
Just 2.6 lbs โ Light enough to hold overhead at full 11 ft extension for short stretches without much strain.
Tool-free, under 5 minutes โ Twists together with no tools and breaks back down flat for storage.
Real off-ladder safety win โ The benefit owners mention most: routine dry-leaf cleanup from the ground instead of balancing on a ladder.
One sock for any brand, in theory โ The universal adapter is meant to cinch over gas, electric, or cordless blowers with an outlet up to 5".
Universal sock adapter is hit-or-miss โ The most common complaint by far. It seats cleanly on some blowers and won't stay on others (DeWalt called out by name), and can slip under power.
Underpowered for anything but dry โ Owners report it can't move damp or packed debris; gutters need to be fully dry, which can mean waiting days after rain.
Fixed hook nozzle โ No rotation. You reposition your body and the whole pole instead of angling the nozzle.
"Slick" tubes, two-hand work โ Reviewers note the smooth tubes are awkward to control overhead, and you're holding blower and tubes at once.
Single-story only โ 11 ft is borderline on taller eaves and no good for two-story gutters.
Not for leaf-guarded gutters โ Owners with gutter guards note there's little point, since the air can't reach debris under the guard.
The tubes themselves are the strong half of the WA4092. Three sections screw together to your chosen length with a hook tube on the end, and Worx specifically calls out that they "screw together for desired length and stability" โ so they hold position rather than creeping apart mid-job the way friction-fit budget kits do.
The universal adapter is the weak half, and it's where most of the negative reviews land. It's a flexible "sock" that cinches over your blower's outlet. On the right blower it seals fine; on the wrong one it simply won't stay seated โ one Amazon buyer reported it was "completely unusable" on a DeWalt blower and returned it. Worx rates it for outlets up to 5", but real-world fit varies enough that you should treat compatibility as something to verify, not assume.
Worx markets "premium airflow," and within its lane that's fair: paired with a blower in the 400+ CFM range, the WA4092 moves dry leaves and pine needles out of a gutter channel effectively. The tube design is wide enough to carry useful air volume to the hook nozzle.
Its hard limit is moisture. Owner reviews are blunt about it โ the kit "only works with extremely dry gutters," and several note it lacks the punch to shift anything damp or matted. After rain you may be waiting days for the gutter to dry out before it'll work. This is true of blower attachments generally, but the WA4092's modest power makes the dry-only rule less forgiving than higher-output kits.
The 11 ft figure is 8 ft of tube plus arm height and working angle, which covers most standard single-story gutters in the 8โ10 ft range. It's not a two-story tool, and on taller single-story eaves you'll be at the edge of its reach. For second-story work you want a flex-pole system instead.
Weight is a genuine plus at 2.6 lbs, but there's no shoulder strap and the smooth tubes draw a recurring "slick" / "uncomfortable overhead" note from owners. You support the blower and tubes with your arms throughout, so it's best suited to quick cleanups rather than long, uninterrupted rooflines.
Worx sells several similar-looking GutterPro kits, and the model number is what matters. The WA4092 is the older universal kit (also matched to Worx blower-vacs WG505, WG509, WG518, and WG583). The newer Worx WA4096 LeafJet GutterPro ships with both a LeafJet-specific adapter and a universal adapter and uses a more refined screw-lock design, while the WA4094 is built for the WG512 and Turbine Fusion. If you own a Worx LeafJet blower, the WA4096 is the better match; if you just want the cheapest universal option and your blower's outlet plays nicely with the sock adapter, the WA4092 does the job.
The Worx WA4092 is a no-frills budget kit that does one thing well: it gets you off the ladder for routine, dry-leaf gutter cleanup at the lowest price in the category. The screw-together tubes are genuinely solid, and at ~$22 with a 2.6 lb weight it's an easy entry point. The reservations are real, though โ the universal sock adapter is a roll of the dice depending on your blower, the fixed nozzle and slick tubes make overhead work fiddly, and it has no muscle for damp or packed debris. Buy it for the price and the safety, confirm the adapter fits your blower before you commit, and keep your expectations to bone-dry gutters on a single-story home.