Humanoid
Robotics platforms for embodied AI
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About Humanoid
Humanoid is a robotics company that develops robotics platforms for industrial, service, and embodied AI use cases. Public information from the company emphasizes platform development rather than a single named robot product line. Humanoid’s website is humanoid.ai.
Strategic Snapshot
How this brand positions its humanoid systems.
Turn embodied intelligence into deployable industrial and service robots.
Platform-First Robotics
Humanoid develops adaptable robotics platforms that teams can build on—rather than one-off prototypes that stall in pilot purgatory.
Industrial-to-Service Versatility
Humanoid targets both industrial and service environments, giving buyers and builders a single foundation for multiple deployment classes.
Embodied AI Ready
Humanoid aligns its platforms with embodied AI workflows, enabling researchers and integrators to iterate perception, control, and autonomy on real machines.
Humanoid Product Portfolio

HMND 01 Alpha
HMND 01 Alpha is a humanoid-style robot on a wheeled base referenced in a 2025–2026 third-party comparison of humanoid robots. Public, verifiable specs and commercial details are not disclosed in that source.
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Open robot profileLatest from Humanoid
Atlas humanoid robots enter Hyundai factories for industrial use
Boston Dynamics has unveiled the new industry-ready Atlas, a humanoid designed as a practical industrial tool for warehouses and factories. Atlas can operate 24/7 in extreme temperatures, and uses AI to adapt to its environment. Production has already started. After a creepy launch video followed by wowing us with backflips and dance moves, Boston Dynamics has finally gotten down to business. The robotics company has just unveiled the production version of Atlas, a humanoid robot built for serious industrial work. With the first units arriving this year, Atlas has already landed its first job at a Hyundai facility, marking the robot's first deployment in a real-world industrial setting.
Unitree designs R1 humanoid robot to be agile and affordable - The Robot Report
Last month, it obtained Series C funding that brought its its valuation to about 12 billion yuan ($1.7 billion U.S.). The race to build commercially successful humanoids is still competitive, with new entrants weekly. Founded in 2016, Unitree has developed legged robots for consumer and industrial use. Last month, it obtained Series C funding that brought its its valuation to about 12 billion yuan ($1.7 billion U.S.). The race to build commercially successful humanoids is still competitive, with new entrants weekly. Last week, EngineAI raised about $139 million as it moves toward mass production of its robots. The R1 is lighter and more agile than the G1. For humanoid robots to find wide adoption, the developers and manufacturers will need to make them affordable and useful. Unitree last week unveiled its R1, with the standard model priced at $5,900 — a fraction of what most other humanoids currently cost. The R1 humanoid stands 1.2 m (3.9 ft.) tall and weighs about 25 kg (55.1 lb.), making it slightly smaller than the G1, which weighed 35 kg (77.1 lb.), and enabling it to move with “lifelike” agility. Unitree posted a video (above) of the R1 performing actions such as side flips, handstands, and boxing moves. A dexterous hand is optional for the educational variant of the R1. The new robot runs on a lithium battery and has an eight-core CPU. The educational version also has the option of adding NVIDIA Jetson Orin for 40 to 100 TOPS (trillions of operations per second). Unitree said it will post more customization options to its website. Unlike the humanoids from, say, Boston Dynamics or Agility Robotics, Unitree’s R1 is remote-controlled.
New realistic humanoid robot Moya unveiled by DroidUp
At this stage of the robotics race, it's probably fair to assume that a few of us have a bit of humanoid malaise. After all, we've seen more funny videos of robots dropping plates out of dishwashers and taking 10 minutes to open and close a refrigerator door. And let's not even mention them trying to cook or play soccer. However, Shanghai robotics startup DroidUp (also known as Zhuoyide) has stepped things up a gear or five, which is certainly worth covering considering it expects the new realistic humanoid to be rolled out this year. The model known as Moya was unveiled during a launch at Shanghai's Zhangjiang Robotics Valley where many of China's emerging humanoid developers are clustered. Here, the company launched what it calls "a beautifully designed and expressive bionic robot" that is touted as "the world's first highly bionic robot that deeply integrates human aesthetics and advanced humanoid movement."
Affordable humanoid robot R1 launched by Unitree
With all those joints and a relatively low weight, this humanoid is plenty flexible. You can see what appears to be a video of its athletic capabilities below (it looks actual footage, but I just can't be sure... We've contacted Unitree to ask, and will update this piece if and when they get back to us). Unitree Introducing | Unitree R1 Intelligent Companion Price from $5900 Join us to develop/customize, ultra-lightweight at approximately 25kg, integrated with a Large Multimodal Model for voice and images, let's accelerate the advent of the agent era!🥰 pic.twitter.com/Q5pmkfFZZa— Unitree (@UnitreeRobotics) July 25, 2025 Unitree's R1 robot offers affordable humanoid robotics for research and education, priced at just $5,900 with flexible features. With all those joints and a relatively low weight, this humanoid is plenty flexible. You can see what appears to be a video of its athletic capabilities below (it looks actual footage, but I just can't be sure... We've contacted Unitree to ask, and will update this piece if and when they get back to us). Unitree Introducing | Unitree R1 Intelligent Companion Price from $5900 Join us to develop/customize, ultra-lightweight at approximately 25kg, integrated with a Large Multimodal Model for voice and images, let's accelerate the advent of the agent era!🥰 pic.twitter.com/Q5pmkfFZZa— Unitree (@UnitreeRobotics) July 25, 2025 While the movements above are indeed impressive, it's worth noting the R1 is missing a couple of key things – notably, hands. Unlike Unitree's more advanced humanoids, the R1 doesn't have dexterous mitts that can grip and manipulate objects. For reference, Unitree's general-purpose H1 robot that can climb stairs and do backflips costs $90,000, while the lower-end G1 comes in at $16,000. Tesla's hotly anticipated Optimus is expected to land somewhere between $20,000 - $30,000. So what's remarkable here is that in this early adoption phase, the price of a humanoid robot has dropped significantly with the R1, well before a path to mainstream adoption has been established.
China’s Unitree R1 Is a Humanoid Robot Costing Less Than $6,000 - Bloomberg
Unitree Robotics is marketing one ... startup, among the frontrunners in Chinese robotics, on Friday announced its R1 bot with a starting price of 39,900 yuan (or $5,900).... Unitree Robotics is marketing one of the world’s first humanoid robots for under $6,000, drastically reducing the entry price for what’s expected to grow into a whole wave of versatile AI machines for the workplace and home. The startup, among the frontrunners in Chinese robotics, on Friday announced its R1 bot with a starting price of 39,900 yuan (or $5,900).
Robot Videos: Sanctuary AI Robot, 1X EVE Humanoid, and More - IEEE Spectrum
Humanoid robots from Sanctuary AI and 1X are featured in this edition of Video Friday, a collection of robotics videos showcasing the latest developments from various robotics companies and researchers. As with every single cooking video, there’s a lot of background prep that’s required for this robot to cook an entire meal, but I would utterly demolish those fries. Please send us your events for inclusion. Enjoy today’s videos! I think suggesting that robots can’t fall is much less useful than instead suggesting that robots can fall and get quickly and easily get back up again. Agility Robotics is doing its best to answer the (very common) question of “Okay, but what can humanoid robots actually do?” ...
Frequently Asked Questions
Common questions about Humanoid, answered.
- Where is Humanoid headquartered?
- Humanoid’s headquarters location is not publicly listed in the provided source information.
- What products does Humanoid make?
- Humanoid develops robotics platforms for industrial, service, and embodied AI use cases, but specific product names are not listed in the provided source information.
- Who owns Humanoid?
- Humanoid’s parent company or ownership details are not provided in the available source information.
- What industries does Humanoid serve?
- Humanoid states it builds platforms for industrial and service use cases, but it does not list specific industries in the provided source information.
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