Manufacturer profile

LG Electronics

1 robot tracked on ui44 headquartered in South Korea with pricing still largely handled through direct quotes.

  • No active models flagged yet
  • Home Assistants leads the lineup
  • Updated Apr 4, 2026

Coverage snapshot

Tracked robots
1
Categories
1
Available now
0
Price view
Quote based

Research focus

Scan the LG Electronics lineup, open in-brand comparisons, and check pricing, specs, and competitive context for each tracked robot.

Coverage spans multi-model brands and thinner manufacturer records alike.

Share this manufacturer

Open a plain share composer on X or Bluesky for this manufacturer profile.

Manufacturer brief

What stands out about LG Electronics

LG Electronics currently spans 1 robot in the ui44 database. The portfolio leans toward home assistants with 1 model leading the lineup. The lineup is still early-stage, with no robots currently marked available or active. Pricing is largely handled through direct sales or undisclosed quotes.

Autonomous indoor wheeled navigationDual-arm household manipulationAppliance coordination via LG ThinQCooking and meal-prep assistance

portfolio

1 Home Assistants

LG Electronics is most concentrated in home assistants robotics, with 1 category represented overall.

availability

0/1

None of the tracked robots are marked available or active yet, so treat this lineup as earlier-stage.

pricing

Quote-based

Public pricing is limited, so the commercial picture depends on direct sales conversations or enterprise quotes.

Portfolio

What this manufacturer actually covers

A first read on LG Electronics: the company snapshot, the strongest in-brand comparisons, and the tracked model gallery.

About LG Electronics

LG Electronics is a robotics company headquartered in South Korea. The company currently has 1 robot tracked in the ui44 Home Robot Database, spanning the Home Assistants category.

Key Capabilities

Autonomous indoor wheeled navigation Dual-arm household manipulation Appliance coordination via LG ThinQ Cooking and meal-prep assistance Laundry handling and folding demos Voice interaction and expressive display communication User routine learning

At a Glance

Robots Tracked

1 model

Category

Home Assistants

Headquarters

South Korea

Available Now

0 robots

Browse all robotics companies on the manufacturers directory, or explore robots from South Korea.

LG Electronics Robot

Model coverage

The tracked LG Electronics robot is grouped here so the catalog can be scanned quickly before diving deeper into pricing, specs, and context.

Browse the full robot directory
CLOiD by LG Electronics — Home Assistants robot
LG Electronics

CLOiD

LG Electronics' CLOiD is a wheeled home robot unveiled at CES 2026 as part of the company's 'Zero Labor Home' vision. It combines a mobile base with a tilting torso, two 7-DoF arms, and five independently actuated fingers on each hand so it can interact with household objects and LG appliances in kitchens, laundry rooms, and living spaces. LG says CLOiD is designed to retrieve items, help with meal prep, start laundry cycles, and fold or stack garments after drying, while its head unit serves as a mobile AI home hub with cameras, sensors, a speaker, display, and voice-based generative AI. As of April 2026, LG has shown CLOiD publicly and outlined the platform's ThinQ integration and Physical AI stack, but has not announced pricing or a retail launch timeline.

Home Assistants
Price TBA Development
Product and tech

Lineup structure and platform signals

How the LG Electronics lineup is organized, and which technical patterns repeat across the portfolio — from sensing choices to shared platforms.

Technology & Capabilities

LG Electronics's robots combine a range of technologies and capabilities. Here is a consolidated look at the sensors, connectivity, AI platforms, and capabilities found across their product line.

Key Capabilities

  • Autonomous indoor wheeled navigation 1/1 (100%)
  • Dual-arm household manipulation 1/1 (100%)
  • Appliance coordination via LG ThinQ 1/1 (100%)
  • Cooking and meal-prep assistance 1/1 (100%)
  • Laundry handling and folding demos 1/1 (100%)
  • Voice interaction and expressive display communication 1/1 (100%)
  • User routine learning 1/1 (100%)

Sensor Technology

  • Cameras 1/1 (100%)
  • Various onboard sensors 1/1 (100%)

Connectivity

  • LG ThinQ 1/1 (100%)
  • ThinQ ON 1/1 (100%)

AI & Intelligence

LG Physical AI combining Vision Language Model (VLM), Vision Language Action (VLA), and voice-based generative AI

Explore these technologies across all robots:

Commercial reality

Pricing, availability, and hard specs

Published prices, current availability, and the comparable hard specs across the tracked LG Electronics robots.

Pricing & Availability

0/1

Available now

LG Electronics does not currently list public pricing for any of its model. This is common for enterprise-focused and research robotics companies that operate on custom quotes or contact-sales pricing.

Evaluation

Buyer guidance and plain-language spec decoding

Practical evaluation advice for LG Electronics robots, with the key specs decoded into plain language.

Buying Guide: Is a LG Electronics Robot Right for You?

Choosing the right robot depends on your use case, budget, and technical needs. Here's what to consider when evaluating LG Electronics's product line.

Who Should Consider LG Electronics Robots

Enterprise & Research Buyers

LG Electronics serves enterprise and research customers. 1 of their models require contacting sales for pricing, indicating enterprise-tier products with custom deployment support.

Key Factors to Evaluate

Availability

0 of 1 models are currently available. Check individual robot pages for the latest status.

Category Fit

Make sure the robot's category matches your primary use case. Browse all categories.

Sensor Ecosystem

Review the technology section to understand what sensing and connectivity each model offers.

Price Transparency

0 of 1 models list public pricing. For unlisted models, request quotes early.

Ecosystem Compatibility

Some LG Electronics robots integrate with third-party platforms. Check compatibility on each robot's page.

Compare Before You Buy

Evaluate LG Electronics robots head-to-head or against competitors with our comparison tool.

Compare robots →

LG Electronics Specifications Explained

Raw numbers only tell part of the story. Here is a plain-language explanation of what each specification means for the LG Electronics robot — and what it means for you as a buyer or researcher.

CLOiD Specs not published Full profile →
Market context

Use cases and category landscape

Where the LG Electronics lineup fits in the broader robotics market: who these robots are for, and how the surrounding categories are moving.

Real-World Use Cases for LG Electronics Robots

Understanding how a robot fits into your specific situation is more important than any single specification. Here are the real-world scenarios where LG Electronics robots can make a meaningful impact.

Elder Care and Companionship

For families caring for elderly relatives, companion robots can provide social engagement, activity reminders, medication scheduling, and emergency detection.

  • These robots are designed to be intuitive and non-threatening, often featuring warm, approachable designs.
  • Important factors include voice interaction quality, fall detection capabilities, video calling features for family check-ins, and the robot's ability to learn and adapt to individual routines and preferences over time.

Household Physical Tasks

Home assistant robots represent the next frontier in domestic automation — robots that can physically interact with your environment.

  • From fetching items to folding laundry, these robots need sophisticated manipulation, reliable navigation, and an understanding of household objects and layouts.
  • This category is still emerging, but early products demonstrate the potential for robots that handle physical chores beyond floor cleaning.

Not sure which type of robot fits your needs? Browse our categories guide or use the comparison tool to evaluate options side-by-side.

LG Electronics in the Robotics Industry

LG Electronics operates in the home assistants robotics segment.

Home Assistants Market Landscape

Market Overview

Home assistant robots go beyond voice assistants by adding physical manipulation capabilities. These robots can fetch items, fold laundry, cook, and perform household tasks that require arms and hands. The category is still emerging, with most products in development or early commercial stages, but represents a massive potential market as aging populations need more physical help at home.

LG Electronics competes in this space with CLOiD.

Key Industry Trends

Dexterous manipulation enabling handling of everyday objects
Mobile platforms that can navigate homes autonomously
Integration with smart home infrastructure for coordinated actions
AI-powered task learning from demonstration and instruction
Modular end-effector designs for different household tasks

Common Use Cases for Home Assistants Robots

Laundry folding and sorting Kitchen assistance and meal preparation Object retrieval and delivery within the home Tidying and organization tasks Accessibility assistance for people with physical limitations

Buyer Considerations

Task capability range — what specific household tasks can the robot actually perform
Safety features for operation around people, pets, and fragile items
Size and mobility — can it navigate your home's layout and doorways
Noise levels during operation, especially for nighttime tasks
Integration with existing smart home devices and platforms

Future Outlook

Home assistant robots are poised for significant growth as manipulation technology matures. The combination of large language models for understanding tasks and improved robotic hands for executing them is closing the gap between what users want and what robots can deliver. Expect early commercial products to focus on specific tasks rather than general-purpose help.

Systems

Capabilities, sensors, and connectivity

For serious buyers and researchers, the important question is how the stack hangs together: capabilities, sensing, and integration depth all need to read as a coherent system.

Connectivity & Smart Home Integration

How a robot connects to your network and integrates with your existing smart home determines how useful it will be in practice. LG Electronics's robot supports 2 connectivity technologies, and third-party integrations.

Third-Party Compatibility

LG ThinQLG ThinQ ONConnected LG home appliances

Learn more about robot connectivity options in our connectivity components guide or browse the full components directory.

Positioning

Competitive posture and regional context

LG Electronics's strategic position, the regional ecosystem around it, and how the portfolio sits versus peers.

How LG Electronics Compares in the Market

How LG Electronics positions itself in the competitive landscape — beyond individual products.

Price positioning: LG Electronics does not publicly disclose pricing, which is typical for enterprise-focused robotics companies that customize solutions for each deployment. Contact-sales pricing usually indicates a higher-touch customer relationship and tailored support.

Category focus: LG Electronics is a specialist focused entirely on the home assistants category. Category specialists often develop deeper expertise and more refined products in their focus area compared to multi-category companies that spread their R&D across different robot types.

Technology breadth: Across its product line, LG Electronics integrates 2 unique sensor types and 7 distinct capabilities. This technology stack determines the range of tasks and environments their robots can handle, and indicates the depth of the company's engineering investment.

Geographic context: Based in South Korea, LG Electronics benefits from its country's robotics ecosystem and talent pool. Regional context can affect pricing, availability, support quality, and regulatory compliance in different markets.

Market maturity: LG Electronics's robot is currently in development stage. This is common for robotics companies working on next-generation technology that isn't yet ready for general availability.

Compare Side by Side

Use the comparison tool or browse the manufacturers directory.

Robotics in South Korea: Where LG Electronics Comes From

South Korea has invested heavily in robotics as part of its technology-driven economic strategy.

Companies like Samsung and Hyundai (which acquired Boston Dynamics) are major players. The Korean government's Robot Industry Development Strategy aims to make the country a top-three robotics nation. Strong electronics manufacturing and AI research capabilities underpin the country's robotics ambitions.

LG Electronics contributes to South Korea's robotics landscape with 1 model in the home assistants category.

Key Strengths of the South Korea Robotics Ecosystem

Major electronics conglomerates (Samsung, LG, Hyundai) investing heavily in robotics

Government strategic investment in robotics as a national priority

Advanced semiconductor and electronics supply chain supporting sensor and compute needs

Strong AI research community with rapid adoption of latest techniques

Developed 5G infrastructure supporting connected robot deployments

Operations

Ownership planning and final takeaways

Practical ownership and deployment guidance for LG Electronics robots, plus supporting editorial and a concise closing summary.

Owning a LG Electronics Robot: What to Expect

Purchasing a robot is the start of an ongoing relationship with technology that requires setup, maintenance, and periodic attention.

Setting Up Your Robot

First-time robot setup varies significantly by category and complexity. Consumer robots like vacuums and lawn mowers typically involve downloading a companion app, connecting to Wi-Fi, and running an initial mapping or boundary setup routine. More complex robots like humanoids or quadrupeds may require professional installation, calibration, and training. Allow extra time for the first session — the robot needs to learn your space, and you need to learn its controls. Most modern robots improve their performance over the first few uses as their maps and AI models refine based on your specific environment.

Ongoing Maintenance Requirements

Every robot requires some level of maintenance to operate at peak performance. For cleaning robots, this includes emptying dustbins, washing filters, replacing brush rolls, and cleaning sensors — typically a few minutes per week. Lawn mowing robots need periodic blade replacements and seasonal cleaning. Legged robots may require joint lubrication and firmware updates. Check the manufacturer's recommended maintenance schedule and factor replacement part costs into your total cost of ownership. Establishing a regular maintenance routine significantly extends the robot's useful life and maintains cleaning or task performance over time.

Software Updates and Long-Term Support

Modern robots receive regular software updates that can add features, improve navigation, fix bugs, and enhance security. When evaluating any robot, consider the manufacturer's track record for software support — how frequently do they release updates, and for how long do they support older models? Some companies provide updates for years after purchase, while others may discontinue support sooner. Cloud-dependent features are particularly important to evaluate: if the manufacturer shuts down cloud services, will your robot still function? Prefer robots with strong local processing capability for long-term reliability.

Safety Considerations

Robot safety encompasses both physical safety (preventing collisions, falls, and injuries) and digital safety (data privacy, network security, camera access). Physically, look for robots with emergency stop mechanisms, collision detection, cliff sensors, and speed-limiting features when operating near people or pets. Digitally, understand what data the robot collects, where it is stored, who can access it, and whether the manufacturer has a clear privacy policy. For robots with cameras and microphones, hardware privacy indicators (LED lights when recording) and physical mute switches provide important transparency and control.

Warranty and After-Sales Support

Robotics purchases represent significant investments, making warranty terms and after-sales support critical evaluation criteria. Standard warranties in the industry range from one to three years, with some manufacturers offering extended warranty options. Beyond warranty length, consider what the warranty covers — some exclude consumable parts like brushes and filters. Also evaluate the manufacturer's service infrastructure: do they have authorized repair centers in your region? Is support available by phone, email, or chat? Response times and repair turnaround times can vary significantly between companies. User community forums and third-party repair guides can supplement official support.

Total Cost of Ownership

The sticker price of a robot is just the beginning. Total cost of ownership includes the initial purchase price, replacement parts and consumables, electricity for charging, any subscription fees for cloud or premium features, and potential repair costs. For commercial robots, add integration, training, and downtime costs. For consumer robots, factor in accessories like extra mop pads, replacement brushes, or boundary accessories. A thorough TCO analysis over the expected product lifetime — typically three to five years for consumer robots and longer for commercial platforms — provides a much more accurate picture of value than purchase price alone.

For model-specific ownership details, visit individual robot pages or contact LG Electronics directly.

Deployment Planning for LG Electronics Robots

Successful robot deployment depends on preparation that goes well beyond selecting the right model.

Readiness Assessment

Some models are in development or prototype stages, which means specifications may change before commercial availability. Build schedule buffers into any deployment plan that depends on these models.
No public pricing is currently listed for LG Electronics products in this database. Contact the manufacturer directly to request quotes, and ask for itemized pricing that separates hardware, software licensing, support, and integration costs.
With 7 distinct capabilities documented across the product line, LG Electronics robots offer a broad feature surface. Prioritize capabilities that directly map to your operational requirements and treat additional features as secondary evaluation criteria.
1
Site assessment and environment mapping

Before deploying any robot, conduct a thorough physical assessment of the intended operating environment. Measure doorway widths, identify floor surface transitions, map obstacle patterns, and document lighting conditions. For mobile robots, verify that navigation surfaces are compatible with the robot's locomotion system — wheeled robots need relatively smooth floors, while legged robots can handle more varied terrain but require different clearance profiles. Document Wi-Fi coverage maps and identify dead zones where connectivity-dependent features may fail. Establish a baseline understanding of foot traffic patterns so you can predict human-robot interaction frequency and plan safety zones accordingly.

2
Network infrastructure and cybersecurity planning

Modern robots are networked devices that require thoughtful integration with existing IT infrastructure. Plan a dedicated network segment or VLAN for robot operations to isolate robot traffic from critical business systems. Implement certificate-based authentication where supported, and verify that firmware update mechanisms use signed packages. Establish a security review cadence for robot software components, especially for robots that process camera feeds, microphone input, or personal data. Create an incident response plan specific to robot compromise scenarios — what happens if a robot's navigation system is tampered with, or if sensor data is intercepted? These questions are easier to answer before deployment than during an active incident.

3
Operator training and workflow integration

Even highly autonomous robots require human operators who understand normal behavior, can recognize anomalies, and know when and how to intervene. Develop a training program that covers daily operations (startup, shutdown, charging), routine maintenance (cleaning sensors, checking mechanical wear), and emergency procedures (manual override, safe power-down, physical recovery from stuck positions). Integrate robot operations into existing workflow documentation so that robot tasks and human tasks have clear handoff points. Track operator confidence levels over time and provide refresher training when procedures change or new capabilities are deployed through software updates.

4
Performance benchmarking and acceptance criteria

Define measurable success criteria before the robot arrives. For cleaning robots, this might be coverage percentage and cleaning quality scores. For commercial service robots, track task completion rates, customer interaction quality, and mean time between interventions. For research platforms, establish reproducibility metrics and data quality thresholds. Having objective benchmarks prevents the common failure mode where a robot is judged impressive in demos but disappointing in sustained operation. Create a 30-60-90 day evaluation framework with specific milestones at each stage, and define clear decision points for scaling up, adjusting configuration, or discontinuing the deployment.

5
Regulatory compliance and liability assessment

Deploying a robot in a commercial or public-facing setting triggers regulatory considerations that vary by jurisdiction. Verify compliance with local safety standards for autonomous machines, including emergency stop accessibility, speed limitations in human-occupied spaces, and noise level restrictions. Assess liability coverage — does your existing insurance policy cover robot-caused property damage or personal injury, or do you need a specific rider? For healthcare or eldercare companion deployments, review data privacy regulations that govern the collection and storage of health-related observations. Document your compliance posture before deployment so that auditors and regulators see proactive governance rather than reactive scrambling.

6
Long-term maintenance and total cost modeling

The purchase price of a robot is typically a fraction of the total cost of ownership over its operational lifetime. Model the full cost picture including consumables (filters, brushes, wheels, batteries), scheduled maintenance (sensor calibration, actuator inspection, firmware updates), unscheduled repairs (motor replacement, sensor failure, structural damage), and operational costs (electricity, network bandwidth, operator time). Request maintenance schedules and spare-part pricing from the manufacturer before purchase. For commercial deployments, calculate the break-even point against the labor or service cost the robot replaces, factoring in realistic uptime assumptions rather than manufacturer-stated maximums. Revisit the cost model quarterly as real operating data replaces initial estimates.

Deployment planning is iterative — capture lessons learned and refine your approach as you progress with LG Electronics products.

LG Electronics: Summary and Key Takeaways

LG Electronics is a South Korea-based robotics company with 1 robot tracked on ui44, focused on home assistants robotics
Their robots integrate 2 sensor types, 7 capabilities, and 2 connectivity options across the product line
The company's model is currently in development or pre-production stages, with pricing available on request
Notable capabilities span autonomous indoor wheeled navigation, dual-arm household manipulation, appliance coordination via lg thinq, cooking and meal-prep assistance, and 3 additional features

Next Steps

Frequently Asked Questions

What robots does LG Electronics make?
LG Electronics has 1 robot in the ui44 database: CLOiD. These span the Home Assistants category.
Where is LG Electronics headquartered?
LG Electronics is headquartered in South Korea. Browse all manufacturers from South Korea or explore the complete manufacturers directory.
How much do LG Electronics robots cost?
LG Electronics does not publicly list pricing for its robot. This is typical for enterprise and research-focused robotics companies. Contact LG Electronics directly for quotes and availability.
Are LG Electronics robots available to buy?
Currently, none of LG Electronics's robots are listed as available for direct purchase. Their models are in development status. Follow the individual robot pages for updates on availability.
What can LG Electronics robots do?
Across their product line, LG Electronics robots offer 7 distinct capabilities including: Autonomous indoor wheeled navigation, Dual-arm household manipulation, Appliance coordination via LG ThinQ, Cooking and meal-prep assistance, Laundry handling and folding demos, Voice interaction and expressive display communication, User routine learning. See each robot's detail page for the full capability breakdown.
What sensors do LG Electronics robots use?
LG Electronics robots use 2 types of sensors including Cameras, Various onboard sensors. Visit the components directory to see how these compare across the industry.
How current is the LG Electronics data on ui44?
All robot data on ui44 is periodically verified against manufacturer sources. The most recent verification for a LG Electronics robot was on 2026-04-04. Each robot page includes a "last verified" date so you can gauge data freshness.

Data Integrity

All LG Electronics robot data on ui44 is verified against official manufacturer sources, spec sheets, and press releases. Most recent verification: 2026-04-04. If you notice outdated or incorrect data, please let us know — accuracy is our top priority.

Explore the database

Go beyond the spec sheet

Full specifications, side-by-side comparisons, and buyer guides for every robot.