Nosh One

The Nosh One is an AI-powered autonomous cooking robot from Bengaluru-based Nosh Robotics. It handles the full cooking cycle — portioning ingredients, sautéing, stirring, and plating — inside a sealed chamber, then runs a self-cleaning cycle when done. NoshOS, the onboard culinary AI, monitors texture, moisture, aroma, and browning in real time via a built-in camera, dynamically adjusting heat, timing, and seasoning as a dish cooks. Users load fresh ingredients and spices into reusable, dishwasher-safe cartridges (five ingredient compartments and eight spice compartments), pick from over 500 built-in global recipes or describe a dish in natural language to generate one, and the robot completes the meal without further intervention. The device weighs about 57 lb and measures roughly 21 × 17 inches, making it a substantial countertop appliance comparable in footprint to a large multicooker. Cooking modes include sautéing, stir-frying, stewing, and slow cooking; it cannot bake, roast, boil, sear, or steam. Announced in early 2026 and available for pre-order on Kickstarter.

$1,499

USD

Kickstarter pre-order price. Retail price not yet announced. Shipments expected early summer 2026.

Home Assistants Mar 1, 2026 Pre-order

Height

Not applicable (countertop appliance)

Weight

57 lb (26 kg)

Battery

Not applicable (plug-in appliance)

Speed

Not applicable

Payload

5 ingredient compartments + 8 spice compartments + water/oil container

Technical Specifications

Height

Not applicable (countertop appliance)

Weight

57 lb (26 kg)

Dimensions

21 × 17 inches (53 × 43 cm)

Battery Life

Not applicable (plug-in appliance)

Charging Time

Not applicable

Max Speed

Not applicable

Payload

5 ingredient compartments + 8 spice compartments + water/oil container

Capabilities

7
Autonomous cooking (portioning, sautéing, stirring, plating)
Real-time AI cooking monitoring and adjustment
500+ built-in global recipes
Natural-language recipe generation
Self-cleaning cycle
Ingredient and spice cartridge dispensing with millimeter-level precision
App-based recipe browsing, editing, and meal scheduling

Ecosystem Compatibility

  • Nosh mobile app (iOS/Android)
  • Dishwasher-safe ingredient and spice cartridges

About the Nosh One

5Sensors2Protocols7Capabilities$1.5kListed Price

The Nosh One is a Home Assistants robot built by Nosh Robotics. The Nosh One is an AI-powered autonomous cooking robot from Bengaluru-based Nosh Robotics. It handles the full cooking cycle — portioning ingredients, sautéing, stirring, and plating — inside a sealed chamber, then runs a self-cleaning cycle when done. NoshOS, the onboard culinary AI, monitors texture, moisture, aroma, and browning in real time via a built-in camera, dynamically adjusting heat, timing, and seasoning as a dish cooks. Users load fresh ingredients and spices into reusable, dishwasher-safe cartridges (five ingredient compartments and eight spice compartments), pick from over 500 built-in global recipes or describe a dish in natural language to generate one, and the robot completes the meal without further intervention. The device weighs about 57 lb and measures roughly 21 × 17 inches, making it a substantial countertop appliance comparable in footprint to a large multicooker. Cooking modes include sautéing, stir-frying, stewing, and slow cooking; it cannot bake, roast, boil, sear, or steam. Announced in early 2026 and available for pre-order on Kickstarter.

At a listed price of $1,499, it positions itself in the mid-range segment of the home assistants market. See all Nosh Robotics robots on the Nosh Robotics page.

Spec Breakdown

Detailed specifications for the Nosh One

Height

Not applicable (countertop appliance)

At Not applicable (countertop appliance), the Nosh One is sized for its intended operating environment and use cases.

Weight

57 lb (26 kg)

Weighing 57 lb (26 kg), the Nosh One balances structural integrity with portability and maneuverability.

Dimensions

21 × 17 inches (53 × 43 cm)

The overall dimensions of 21 × 17 inches (53 × 43 cm) define the robot's physical footprint and determine what spaces it can navigate and what clearances it requires for operation.

Battery Life

Not applicable (plug-in appliance)

With a battery life of Not applicable (plug-in appliance), the Nosh One can operate for sustained periods before requiring a recharge. Battery life is measured under typical operating conditions and may vary based on workload intensity and environmental factors.

Charging Time

Not applicable

A charging time of Not applicable means the ratio of operation to downtime is an important consideration for applications requiring near-continuous availability. Some deployments use multiple robots in rotation to maintain uninterrupted service.

Maximum Speed

Not applicable

A top speed of Not applicable is calibrated for the robot's primary operating environment and safety requirements.

Payload Capacity

5 ingredient compartments + 8 spice compartments + water/oil container

A payload capacity of 5 ingredient compartments + 8 spice compartments + water/oil container determines what the robot can carry or manipulate. This is a critical spec for practical applications where the robot needs to handle physical objects.

The Nosh One uses NoshOS proprietary culinary AI, trained on thousands of cooking techniques and cuisines; natural-language recipe generation as its intelligence backbone. This AI platform powers the robot's decision-making, perception processing, and autonomous behavior. The sophistication of the AI stack directly impacts how well the robot handles unexpected situations and adapts to new environments.

Nosh One Sensor Suite

The Nosh One integrates 5 sensor types, forming the perceptual foundation that enables autonomous operation.

This sensor configuration enables the Nosh One to perceive its environment and operate autonomously in its intended use cases. Multiple sensor modalities provide redundancy and more robust perception than any single sensor type alone.

Explore sensor technologies: components glossary · full components directory

Nosh One Use Cases & Applications

Home assistant robots combine the functionality of a smart speaker, tablet, security camera, and telepresence device into a mobile platform that follows you or patrols your home. They represent the next evolution of smart home interaction.

Capabilities That Enable Real-World Use

The Nosh One offers 7 distinct capabilities, each contributing to the robot's practical utility.

Autonomous cooking (portioning, sautéing, stirring, plating)
Real-time AI cooking monitoring and adjustment
500+ built-in global recipes
Natural-language recipe generation
Self-cleaning cycle
Ingredient and spice cartridge dispensing with millimeter-level precision
App-based recipe browsing, editing, and meal scheduling

These capabilities work together with the robot's 5 onboard sensor types and NoshOS proprietary culinary AI, trained on thousands of cooking techniques and cuisines; natural-language recipe generation AI platform to deliver practical, real-world performance.

Ecosystem Integration

The Nosh One integrates with the following platforms and ecosystems, extending its utility beyond standalone operation.

Nosh mobile app (iOS/Android) Dishwasher-safe ingredient and spice cartridges

This ecosystem compatibility enables the Nosh One to work as part of a broader automation setup rather than operating in isolation.

Nosh One Capabilities

7

Capabilities

5

Sensor Types

AI

NoshOS proprietary culinary …

Autonomous cooking (portioning, sautéing, stirring, plating)
Real-time AI cooking monitoring and adjustment
500+ built-in global recipes
Natural-language recipe generation
Self-cleaning cycle
Ingredient and spice cartridge dispensing with millimeter-level precision
App-based recipe browsing, editing, and meal scheduling

Connectivity & Integration

How the Nosh One communicates with your network, smart home devices, cloud services, and companion apps.

Network & Communication Protocols

✓ Wi-Fi for local network and cloud access — enabling the Nosh One to participate in various networking scenarios.

Nosh One Technology Stack Overview

The Nosh One by Nosh Robotics integrates 8 distinct technology components across sensing, connectivity, intelligence, and interaction layers. The physical platform features a height of Not applicable (countertop appliance), a weight of 57 lb (26 kg), a top speed of Not applicable, providing the foundation on which this technology stack operates.

Perception — 5 Sensor Types

The perception layer is built on AI camera (machine vision for ingredient identification and real-time cooking monitoring), Texture sensor, Moisture sensor, Aroma sensor, Browning sensor. These work in concert to give the robot a detailed understanding of its operating environment. This multi-sensor approach provides redundancy and enables the robot to function reliably even when individual sensors encounter challenging conditions such as low light, reflective surfaces, or cluttered spaces.

Connectivity — 2 Protocols

For communications, the Nosh One relies on Wi-Fi, Nosh mobile app (iOS/Android). This connectivity stack ensures the robot can communicate with cloud services, local smart home devices, mobile apps, and other networked systems in its environment.

Intelligence — NoshOS proprietary culinary AI, trained on thousands of cooking techniques and cuisines; natural-language recipe generation

NoshOS proprietary culinary AI, trained on thousands of cooking techniques and cuisines; natural-language recipe generation serves as the computational brain, processing sensor data, making navigation decisions, and orchestrating the robot's autonomous behaviors. The quality of this AI platform directly influences how well the robot handles novel situations, adapts to changes in its environment, and improves its performance over time through learning.

Who Should Consider the Nosh One?

Target Audience

Home assistant robots target households looking for a mobile smart home hub that can move between rooms, provide video communication, monitor the home, and assist with daily tasks. Early adopters and smart home enthusiasts are the primary market.

Key Considerations

Mobility range, smart home platform integration, camera quality for video calls and monitoring, microphone/speaker quality for voice interaction, and the breadth of assistive capabilities are key. Consider privacy features (physical camera shutters, mute buttons) and whether the robot can navigate your home layout reliably.

Price Context

At $1.5k (Kickstarter pre-order price. Retail price not yet announced. Shipments expected early summer 2026.), the Nosh One sits in the mid-range price tier for home assistants robots. This competitive price point makes the technology accessible to a broad consumer base.

Availability

Pre-order

The Nosh One is available for pre-order. Pre-ordering secures your position in the delivery queue, though actual ship dates may vary.

Nosh One: Strengths & Trade-offs

Engineering compromises and where this home assistants robot excels

What the Nosh One does well

Solid sensor coverage

The Nosh One integrates 5 sensor types, providing good perceptual coverage for its intended applications. This sensor complement covers the essential modalities needed for effective home assistants operation while keeping complexity manageable.

Broad capability set

With 7 distinct capabilities, the Nosh One is designed as a versatile platform rather than a single-task device. This breadth means the robot can handle varied scenarios and workflows, reducing the need for multiple specialized robots and increasing its utility across different situations.

Accessible price point

At $1,499, the Nosh One is competitively priced within the home assistants market. This price point makes the technology accessible to a broader audience and represents a lower barrier to entry for those exploring home assistants robotics.

What to consider carefully

Currently in pre-order

The Nosh One is not yet available as a finished, shipping product. While pre-ordering secures a position in the delivery queue, actual delivery timelines and final specifications should be confirmed with the manufacturer.

Note: This strengths and trade-offs assessment is based on the Nosh One's documented specifications as tracked in the ui44 database. Real-world performance depends on deployment conditions, firmware maturity, and environmental factors. For the most current information, check the Nosh Robotics manufacturer page or visit the official product page. Use the comparison tool to evaluate these trade-offs against competing robots in the same category.

How Home Assistants Robot Technology Works

Understanding the engineering behind this category

Home assistant robots combine mobility, intelligence, and physical manipulation to perform tasks that stationary smart devices simply cannot. While a smart speaker can tell you the weather, a home assistant robot can bring you an umbrella. This emerging category represents the convergence of multiple robotic technologies — navigation, manipulation, AI, and human-robot interaction — into a single household platform.

Navigation & Mobility

Home assistant robots must navigate the complex, cluttered, and constantly changing environment of a lived-in home. They use LiDAR, cameras, and depth sensors to build and continuously update maps of the home interior, handling furniture rearrangements, opened or closed doors, and transient obstacles like shoes and toys. Path planning must account for the robot's size (including any carried objects), doorway widths, carpet transitions, and areas where humans are present. Advanced systems create semantic maps that understand room functions — knowing the kitchen from the bedroom enables context-appropriate behavior like adjusting movement speed or interaction style.

The Role of AI

AI in home assistant robots must bridge the gap between high-level human instructions and low-level physical actions. When asked to bring a glass of water, the robot must understand the request, plan the task sequence (navigate to kitchen, find a glass, operate the tap, carry without spilling), and execute each step while handling unexpected situations. Foundation models and vision-language models are increasingly central to this task comprehension capability. The AI must also maintain context across interactions — remembering where items are usually kept, learning household routines, and anticipating needs based on time of day and activity patterns.

Sensor Fusion & Perception

Home assistant robots require comprehensive perception that combines environmental mapping with object-level understanding. Cameras and depth sensors identify objects and their positions. Force sensors in hands and arms enable safe grasping and manipulation without crushing or dropping items. Proximity sensors prevent collisions during navigation, especially when carrying objects that extend the robot's footprint. Audio processing detects and localizes voice commands from anywhere in the home. Some robots include sensors for detecting spills, open doors, or unusual sounds that might indicate a problem requiring attention.

Power & Battery Management

Home assistant robots face challenging power requirements due to the combination of mobility, computation, and manipulation. Battery technology limits operational time to several hours before recharging is needed. Smart power management prioritizes tasks by urgency and groups actions by location to minimize unnecessary movement. Autonomous docking and charging ensure availability when needed. Some designs use lighter-weight arms and efficient actuators to reduce power consumption during manipulation tasks. The ability to plan efficient routes through the home — minimizing backtracking and unnecessary movement — directly impacts how much useful work the robot can accomplish per charge cycle.

Safety by Design

Operating a robot with arms and hands in a home with people requires extensive safety engineering. Force-limiting actuators prevent the robot from exerting dangerous grip or impact forces. Speed reduction in the presence of detected humans protects against collision injuries. Object-drop prevention systems ensure the robot does not release carried items unexpectedly. Hot-liquid and sharp-object handling requires specialized grip and stability control. Emergency stop mechanisms allow any household member to immediately halt the robot. The system must fail safely — if power is lost while carrying an object, the gripper should default to a secure hold rather than releasing.

What's Next for Home Assistants Robots

Home assistant robots are at an early but rapidly advancing stage. The convergence of foundation models (for understanding tasks), improved dexterous manipulation (for executing them), and decreasing hardware costs (for making them accessible) is accelerating development. Near-term advances will likely focus on specific task competency — robots that excel at a few useful tasks rather than attempting to do everything. As these capabilities mature and costs decrease, the scope of home assistant robots will gradually expand toward the vision of a truly general-purpose household helper.

The Nosh One by Nosh Robotics incorporates many of these technology pillars. For a detailed look at the specific sensors and components used in the Nosh One, see the sensor analysis and connectivity sections above, or browse the complete components glossary for explanations of every technology used across the robotics industry.

Nosh One in the Home Assistants Market

How this robot compares in the home assistants landscape

Priced at $1,499, the Nosh One sits in the mid-range of the home assistants market — a competitive tier where buyers expect a strong balance of features and value.

The Nosh One's 5 sensor types provide solid perceptual coverage for its intended use cases. This mid-range sensor suite balances cost with capability, covering the essential modalities needed for home assistants applications.

Head-to-Head Comparisons

Side-by-side specs, capability overlap analysis, and key differentiators.

For the full picture of Nosh Robotics's portfolio and market strategy, visit the Nosh Robotics manufacturer page.

Owning the Nosh One: Setup, Maintenance & Tips

Practical guide from day one through years of ownership

Initial Setup

Home assistant robot setup involves physical placement, network configuration, environment mapping, and capability training. Place the charging dock in an accessible central location. Connect to your home Wi-Fi and smart home platform. Run the initial mapping session with all doors open and the home in its typical state. After mapping, configure room names, restricted areas, and any smart home integrations. For robots with manipulation capabilities, the setup may include teaching specific tasks by demonstration or configuring task parameters through the app. Expect to invest several sessions over the first week refining the robot's understanding of your home and preferences.

Ongoing Maintenance

Home assistant robots combine the maintenance needs of mobile platforms with those of manipulation systems. Weekly tasks include cleaning sensors, checking wheels and arm joints for debris, and verifying gripper functionality. Monthly maintenance should cover thorough sensor cleaning, software updates, and calibration checks. If the robot handles food or liquids, clean any contact surfaces after each use according to the manufacturer's hygiene guidelines. Monitor battery performance over time and report any significant degradation to the manufacturer.

Software Updates & Long-Term Support

Home assistant robot software updates are particularly impactful because they can add entirely new task capabilities. A robot that launches with five core tasks might gain additional abilities through software updates as the manufacturer develops and validates new skills. Keep automatic updates enabled and review update notes to discover new capabilities you might not have known were added. Major platform updates may also improve task execution quality for existing capabilities — making the robot more reliable and efficient at tasks it could already perform.

Maximizing Longevity

Home assistant robots represent a significant investment, and proper care maximizes that investment's return. Avoid exceeding payload limits when the robot carries objects. Keep the operating environment reasonably tidy to reduce navigation challenges. Maintain clean, unobstructed sensor surfaces for reliable operation. For robots with arms, avoid forcing joints beyond their range of motion. Address any unusual sounds or behaviors promptly — early intervention prevents small issues from becoming expensive repairs. Consider a manufacturer service plan for access to priority support and replacement parts.

For Nosh Robotics-specific support resources and documentation, visit the Nosh Robotics page on ui44 or check the manufacturer's official website at Nosh Robotics's product page.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Nosh One?
The Nosh One is a Home Assistants robot made by Nosh Robotics. The Nosh One is an AI-powered autonomous cooking robot from Bengaluru-based Nosh Robotics. It handles the full cooking cycle — portioning ingredients, sautéing, stirring, and plating — inside a sealed chamber, then runs a self-cleaning cycle when done. NoshOS, the onboard culinary AI, monitors texture, moisture, aroma, and browning in real time via a built-in camera, dynamically adjusting heat, timing, and seasoning as a dish cooks. Users load fresh ingredients and spices into reusable, dishwasher-safe cartridges (five ingredient compartments and eight spice compartments), pick from over 500 built-in global recipes or describe a dish in natural language to generate one, and the robot completes the meal without further intervention. The device weighs about 57 lb and measures roughly 21 × 17 inches, making it a substantial countertop appliance comparable in footprint to a large multicooker. Cooking modes include sautéing, stir-frying, stewing, and slow cooking; it cannot bake, roast, boil, sear, or steam. Announced in early 2026 and available for pre-order on Kickstarter. It features 5 sensor types, 2 connectivity protocols, and 7 distinct capabilities.
How much does the Nosh One cost?
The Nosh One is listed at $1,499 (Kickstarter pre-order price. Retail price not yet announced. Shipments expected early summer 2026.). This places it in the mid-range tier for home assistants robots. Prices may vary by region and retailer.
Is the Nosh One available to buy?
The Nosh One is currently available for pre-order. Visit Nosh Robotics's website to reserve yours. Delivery timelines may vary by region.
What sensors does the Nosh One have?
The Nosh One is equipped with 5 sensor types: AI camera (machine vision for ingredient identification and real-time cooking monitoring), Texture sensor, Moisture sensor, Aroma sensor, Browning sensor. These sensors work together through sensor fusion to provide comprehensive environmental awareness for autonomous operation. See the sensor analysis section for details.
How long does the Nosh One battery last?
The Nosh One has a rated battery life of Not applicable (plug-in appliance) and charges in Not applicable. Actual battery performance may vary based on usage intensity, ambient temperature, and specific tasks being performed. Heavy workloads like continuous navigation and sensor processing will consume battery faster than idle or standby modes.
What AI does the Nosh One use?
The Nosh One is powered by NoshOS proprietary culinary AI, trained on thousands of cooking techniques and cuisines; natural-language recipe generation. This AI platform handles the robot's perception processing, decision-making, and autonomous behavior. The sophistication of the AI directly impacts how well the robot handles unexpected situations, learns from its environment, and improves over time.
How does the Nosh One compare to the Memo?
The Nosh One and Memo are both home assistants robots, but they differ in key specifications, pricing, and manufacturer approach. Use the side-by-side comparison tool to see detailed differences in specs, sensors, and capabilities. You can also browse other similar robots below.
Does the Nosh One work with smart home systems?
Yes, the Nosh One is compatible with: Nosh mobile app (iOS/Android), Dishwasher-safe ingredient and spice cartridges. This ecosystem integration allows the robot to work alongside your existing smart home devices and platforms rather than operating as an isolated system.
How current is the Nosh One data on ui44?
The Nosh One specifications on ui44 were last verified on 2026-04-07. All data is sourced from official Nosh Robotics documentation, spec sheets, and press releases. If you notice any outdated information, please let us know.

Data Integrity

All Nosh One data on ui44 is verified against official Nosh Robotics sources, including spec sheets, product pages, and press releases. Last verified: 2026-04-07. Official source: Nosh Robotics product page. If you find outdated or incorrect information, please let us know — accuracy is our top priority.

Explore More on ui44

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