All Robots

409 notable · 252 available · 254 makers

Filters & sort 409

409 robots found · Page 28 of 35

Sorted by name A–Z

Saros 20 by Roborock — Cleaning robot
Roborock

Saros 20

Roborock's 2026 flagship robot vacuum and mop, and the first consumer product to ship the AI architecture introduced with the development-stage Saros Rover. The Saros 20 features 36,000 Pa HyperForce suction, AdaptiLift Chassis 3.0 that lifts main wheels and deploys a climbing arm to cross double-layer thresholds up to about 3.46 inches (8.8 cm) and adapt to carpets up to 1.18 inches (3 cm) in pile height, and the StarSight Autonomous System 2.0 with embedded 3D ToF LiDAR that recognizes over 300 object types at 21× higher sampling frequency than traditional LDS navigation. Dual rotating mop pads with FlexiArm edge cleaning reach into toe-kick spaces as low as 0.79 inches (2 cm). The included RockDock auto-empties dust (2.7L bag, up to 65 days), washes mops with 212°F (100°C) hot water, dries with 131°F (55°C) warm air, and supports optional refill and drainage integration. Announced at CES 2026, available in the US since March 23, 2026.

up to 190 min~7.98 cm
$1,600 Available
Saros Rover by Roborock — Cleaning robot
Roborock

Saros Rover

Roborock's Saros Rover is a development-stage robot vacuum unveiled at CES 2026 with a two-wheel-leg architecture designed to climb and clean stairs instead of stopping at them. Roborock says the independently controlled wheel-legs can raise and lower to keep the body level on changing terrain, handle slopes and complex thresholds, and even perform small jumps and agile direction changes. The company positions it as a multi-storey home cleaner, but has not yet announced final retail specifications, pricing, or a launch date.

Cleaning
Price TBA Development
Saros Z70 by Roborock — Cleaning robot
Roborock

Saros Z70

Roborock's first robot vacuum with a foldable five-axis mechanical arm (OmniGrip). The Saros Z70 can pick up items up to 300 g, with current official recognizable/organizable categories including socks, sandals, crumpled tissues, and towels; Roborock says more items will be added via firmware OTA. It can move obstacles out of the way and clean areas that were previously blocked — then return to clean the missed spots. At just 7.98cm (3.14 inches) tall, it's Roborock's slimmest design yet while packing 22,000 Pa suction, LiDAR navigation (StarSight 2.0), dual anti-tangle brushes, and an AdaptiLift chassis. The arm takes up only 10% of the space of prior prototypes. Announced at CES 2025, pre-orders opened March 2025, shipping since May 2025. Official FAQ examples cite about 2h15+ vacuuming/mopping with the arm disabled, or about 2h10+ with the arm enabled while tidying 10 items.

38.14 lb7.98 cm
$1,700 Available
Savvy by Hisense — Home Assistants robot
Hisense

Savvy

Hisense Savvy (赛维) is a mobile home butler robot unveiled at AWE 2026 in Shanghai. Designed as the central hub of Hisense's "household without housework" concept, Savvy combines a humanoid upper body with a wheeled chassis, allowing it to navigate home environments and physically interact with appliances and objects. It serves as the mobile interface within Hisense's "1+N+X" smart-home architecture, bridging fixed appliances (refrigerators, washing machines, air conditioners, TVs) and the people using them. Powered by Hisense's Xinghai AI model alongside DeepSeek technology, Savvy can coordinate appliance actions — for example, adjusting the air conditioner while fetching a drink from the refrigerator — and perform household tasks such as loading laundry. The robot was demonstrated in a real-scenario exhibit at AWE 2026 alongside two companion robots (Moii and Harley).

Home Assistants
Price TBA Prototype
Scuba V3 by Aiper — Cleaning robot
Aiper

Scuba V3

Aiper's flagship cordless robotic pool cleaner for 2026, distinguished by its Cognitive AI vision system — the first in a pool cleaner to combine a front-facing camera with dToF (direct Time-of-Flight) sensors for real-time debris identification and adaptive route planning. The VisionPath navigation system detects over 20 debris types and plans efficient cleaning paths rather than relying on random or fixed-grid patterns. AI Patrol mode targets only the dirtiest zones first, which Aiper claims reduces runtime and energy use by up to 40% compared to full-pool cycles. JetAssist technology uses a dedicated side-jet motor to keep the robot pressed against the waterline during surface cleaning, addressing a common weakness of cordless pool robots. The MicroMesh dual-layer filtration captures particles down to 3 microns (with a 180-micron pre-filter for larger debris), and the 3.5-liter debris basket is removable for easy cleaning. An AI Navium autonomous mode builds weekly cleaning schedules based on pool size, shape, cleaning history, and weather conditions. When a cycle finishes, the robot parks at the waterline and sends an app notification for retrieval. Dual LED lights enable night operation. Aiper is the world's top-selling brand of smart robotic pool cleaners by unit volume (Euromonitor, 2025 data). All camera data is processed on-device with zero cloud uploads, backed by TÜV-certified data privacy.

8.2 kg
$800 Available
Scuba V3 Ultra by Aiper — Cleaning robot
Aiper

Scuba V3 Ultra

Aiper Scuba V3 Ultra is a 2026 flagship cordless robotic pool cleaner and skimmer that extends the Scuba line into full-pool floor, wall, waterline, water-surface, shallow sun-shelf, and chlorine-care coverage. Aiper's product and CES launch pages describe it as a Cognitive AI powered 6-in-1 robotic pool cleaner, pairing dual-camera Cognitive AI Vision with VisionPath 2.0 navigation and Navium Mode for real-time debris recognition, route adaptation, and weekly maintenance plans. It targets shallow areas down to 7.87 inches, uses JellyFloat technology for self-rescue and water-surface retrieval, and combines 8,500 GPH dual-pump suction, dual brushes, and a 3.5L MicroMesh filter basket. The live US store lists it for purchase, while PCWorld's early review corroborates wireless charging, app-controlled modes, AI Patrol cleaning, and real-world performance caveats.

28.8 lb
$2,000 Available
Serve Gen3 by Serve Robotics — Commercial robot
Serve Robotics

Serve Gen3

Serve Robotics' third-generation autonomous sidewalk delivery robot, introduced in October 2024 and built for fleet-scale delivery operations. Official Serve materials say Gen3 entered manufacturing with 2,000 new units planned for 2025 on Uber Eats, adds NVIDIA Jetson Orin compute, Ouster REV7 digital LiDAR, an upgraded sensor suite, an expanded insulated cargo bin sized for four 16-inch pizzas, a suspension-equipped drivetrain, improved water resistance, and 40% faster emergency braking. Serve now reports more than 2,000 robots deployed across the U.S., delivery support for 4,000+ restaurants, and partnerships including Uber Eats and DoorDash; after acquiring Diligent Robotics in 2026, the company reports a broader operating footprint of 44 cities across 14 states spanning sidewalk and healthcare robots.

up to 14 h
Price TBA Active
Servi Q by Bear Robotics — Commercial robot
Bear Robotics

Servi Q

Servi Q is Bear Robotics' compact autonomous service robot for restaurants, cafés, hotels, and other hospitality venues with narrow aisles or high-traffic service areas. Bear unveiled the robot at the National Restaurant Association Show 2026 and says it was developed with SoftBank Robotics as the smallest and most versatile member of the Servi family. The official product page lists a 350 × 466 × 1060 mm body, 18-inch minimum aisle width, 0.7 m/s drive speed, two standard trays, 30 kg total load capacity, at least 12 hours of runtime, and wired charging in under four hours. Its main differentiation is service in tight floor plans: Servi Q can reverse when it cannot turn around, stop on backward bumps, keep drinks stable over thresholds or sudden stops, clean its wheels, run a built-in 18.5-inch advertising display, and coordinate peer-to-peer with other Bear Robotics Servi fleet robots without a centralized network dependency. Public pricing and regional rollout dates have not been announced.

45 kg106 cm
Price TBA Active
Shiguang S1 by Hubei Jijia Vision Robot Technology — Humanoid robot
Hubei Jijia Vision Robot Technology

Shiguang S1

Shiguang S1 is a household-focused humanoid/general-purpose robot launched in Wuhan's Optics Valley on May 20, 2026 by Hubei Jijia Vision Robot Technology with local humanoid-robot industry partners. Official Wuhan and Optics Valley coverage says S1 demonstrated home tasks such as heating food, handling dishes, cooking, folding laundry, clearing a table, and chatting with older adults. The company says the robot is intended to understand household goals through its embodied-intelligence model, plan action paths without fixed factory-style programs, and keep improving in real home environments. A 100-unit cooperation order will put the first robots into Guanggu talent apartments from late May for scenario testing before seed-user trials in Wuhan homes.

Humanoid
Price TBA Development
Sky2 by Flytrex — Commercial robot
Flytrex

Sky2

Sky2 is Flytrex's larger autonomous delivery drone for suburban restaurant delivery, introduced with Little Caesars service in Wylie, Texas. Launch coverage describes it as an octocopter built to carry family-size food orders that earlier delivery drones could not fit: up to 8.8 lb of cargo, including two large 16-inch pizzas plus sides and drinks, with deliveries from takeoff averaging about 4.5 to 5 minutes in the Wylie deployment. The drone uses eight motors for in-flight redundancy, dual batteries, GNSS with RTK navigation, AI-enabled flight logic, and remote pickup support so orders can be collected directly outside restaurants. Flytrex and Little Caesars also integrated the service with Little Caesars' ordering and point-of-sale systems through the Flytrex app. Public dimensions, weight, flight-time, speed, and per-unit cost have not been disclosed.

Commercial
Price TBA Active
Sonny by Tutor Intelligence — Humanoid robot
Tutor Intelligence

Sonny

Sonny is Tutor Intelligence's semi-humanoid bimanual industrial robot for factory and warehouse work. Tutor introduced Sonny through Data Factory 1, a 100-robot fleet used for real-world teleoperation, evaluation, and online improvement of robot foundation models for dexterous bimanual manipulation. Official pages position Sonny for the messy middle of manual labor, manufacturing, machine tending, picking, packing, sorting, and other factory or warehouse tasks, with deployment availability targeted for late 2026. Independent reporting from The Robot Report and Forbes corroborates DF1's 100-Sonny fleet and describes Sonny as a wheeled, two-armed robot being trained on piece-picking and related industrial workflows; detailed public product specs and pricing have not been disclosed.

Humanoid
Price TBA Development
Sophia by Hanson Robotics — Research robot
Hanson Robotics

Sophia

The world's most famous social humanoid robot, activated on February 14, 2016 by Hong Kong-based Hanson Robotics. Sophia can mimic facial expressions (60+), hold basic conversations, and recognize faces. In 2017, Sophia became the first robot to receive Saudi Arabian citizenship and was named the UN's first Innovation Champion. Sophia is a technology demonstrator — not a general-purpose robot — with pre-scripted dialogue augmented by a decision-tree chat system.

~1.5 h48 kg
Price TBA Active

ui44's curated robot catalog currently includes 409 home and humanoid robots individually profiled with verified specifications, capabilities, component breakdowns, and pricing sourced from official manufacturer documentation. Right now 252 robots are commercially available for purchase or deployment, with the rest in development, pre-order, or prototype stages across 9 categories from 254 manufacturers worldwide.

How to use this directory

Find the Right Robot

All filters update instantly without page reloads

Search

Type any keyword — robot name, manufacturer, or feature — for instant filtering across all attributes.

Category Filter

Select a robot type to see only cleaning robots, humanoids, quadrupeds, or any other category.

Manufacturer Filter

Narrow results to a specific company to see their full product lineup.

Sort & Status

Order by name or price, and filter by availability status to find robots you can buy today.

Tip

Click on any robot card to view its full detail page with complete specifications, sensor breakdowns, capability analysis, and comparison links.

Robots by Category

The full catalog grouped by primary category

Robots by Category
Category Robots Available
Humanoid 127 73(57%)
Cleaning 62 49(79%)
Companions 53 27(51%)
Research 48 23(48%)
Commercial 44 34(77%)
Lawn & Garden 29 20(69%)
Quadruped 25 17(68%)
Home Assistants 16 6(38%)
Security & Patrol 5 3(60%)

Price Distribution

173 priced of 409 total · 236 pricing TBD

Price Distribution
Band Count Share
Under $500 23 13%
$500–$1,000 26 15%
$1,000–$5,000 71 41%
$5,000–$20,000 20 12%
$20,000+ 33 19%

Home Robot Market Overview

The current state of the home and humanoid robot market in numbers

The home robotics industry is expanding rapidly, with 409 distinct robots tracked across 9 categories from manufacturers in 19 countries. This database captures the full spectrum — from affordable vacuum cleaners under $500 to advanced humanoid platforms costing hundreds of thousands of dollars. Understanding where the market stands today helps buyers, researchers, and industry watchers make informed decisions about which technologies are mature and which remain aspirational.

Market Status Breakdown

Current availability across all tracked robots

Commercially Available

252 robots are shipping today and can be purchased or leased directly from manufacturers or authorized dealers. These range from consumer cleaning robots to commercial-grade inspection and delivery platforms.

Pre-Order and Upcoming

55 robots are accepting pre-orders with confirmed launch timelines. Pre-order robots typically have finalized specifications but may still undergo minor revisions before shipping begins.

In Development

95 robots are in active development or prototype stage. Specifications are preliminary and subject to change. These represent the next wave of home and humanoid robotics technology.

Discontinued Models

7 robots have been discontinued by their manufacturers. These entries are preserved for historical reference, comparison research, and understanding how the market has evolved.

Price Distribution

173 robots with publicly listed prices

Under $5k

121

Consumer — cleaners, mowers, companions

$5k–$25k

23

Prosumer & light commercial

$25k–$100k

21

Commercial & research

Over $100k

8

Advanced humanoid & enterprise

Category Landscape

Top categories by robot count

Humanoid robots are the fastest-growing segment as companies race to bring general-purpose bipedal platforms to market. Cleaning robots remain the most mature category, with established price competition and proven consumer adoption. Research and commercial categories serve specialized use cases with higher price points and more advanced sensor arrays.

Note

Robot specifications in this database are verified against official manufacturer documentation, press releases, and product pages. Where specifications conflict between sources, we prioritize the most recent official documentation. Each robot's detail page includes source attribution and a last-verified date. Visit the categories directory to explore robots organized by function.

AI & Vision

LLMs and vision transformers give robots natural language understanding and real-time obstacle avoidance — mapping complex spaces without explicit programming.

Hardware Advances

Better battery density means longer runtime. Declining actuator costs make force-controlled joints affordable. LiFePO₄ and solid-state batteries are the next leap.

Smart Home Integration

Matter, Thread, and Home Assistant let robots coordinate with smart locks, lights, and other devices. Interoperability is now a key purchase differentiator.

Choosing the Right Robot

The most common mistake? Focusing on headline specs without considering actual use. A humanoid with impressive degrees of freedom may be far less practical than a purpose-built cleaner with reliable navigation.

1

Start with your need

Cleaning, companionship, security, lawn care, research, or commercial? Filter by category first.

2

Set your budget tier

  • Consumer — minimal setupUnder $2k
  • Prosumer — advanced$2k–$25k
  • Enterprise — custom$25k+
3

Compare & decide

Use the comparison tool to evaluate specs side by side. Check sensors, battery, and ecosystem fit.

Understanding Robot Specifications

Every robot in this database includes detailed specifications that help you evaluate its capabilities and fit for your needs. Here is a guide to interpreting the key data points you will find on each robot's detail page.

127

Active

125

Available

55

Pre-order

55

Development

40

Prototype

7

Discontinued

Note

Prices represent the manufacturer's listed retail price in USD at the time of last verification. Prices can change — always confirm with the manufacturer before purchasing.
Capabilities & Technology

3,837 Capabilities

From basic functions like app control and scheduling to advanced abilities like bipedal locomotion, object manipulation, and emotion detection.

Common: household chores, tidying up, safe human interaction, adaptive learning, gentle manipulation, +3832 more

1,190 Sensor Types

Multiple sensor types tracked across the database, from LiDAR and cameras to ultrasonic and infrared sensors.

Top: RGB Cameras, Depth Sensors, Tactile Skin, Microphone Array, High-Resolution HDR Camera (Front x2)

Comparison tool

Compare Robots Side by Side

Focus on specs that matter for your use case — navigation, battery, payload, AI sophistication.

Open Compare

Tip

Combine sorting with category and manufacturer filters for targeted views. For example, select "Cleaning" + sort by price low-to-high to instantly find the most affordable cleaning robots.

Robots by Category

Every category lane in the catalog, ranked by coverage

Humanoid

127 robots

Full-size bipedal humanoid robots built to work alongside people — from factory floors to household tasks. Compare the cutting edge of humanoid robotics.

73 available · 91 makers ·$1.4k–$1M

Cleaning

62 robots

Robot vacuums, mops, pool cleaners, and window cleaners — the workhorses of home automation that keep every surface spotless.

49 available · 27 makers ·$249–$1.9M

Companions

53 robots

Social robots, robot pets, and elderly-care companions designed for emotional connection and everyday support at home.

27 available · 48 makers ·$125–$578k

Research

48 robots

Academic and research robotics platforms pushing the boundaries of what machines can learn and do in the lab and beyond.

23 available · 39 makers ·$190–$250k

Commercial

44 robots

Delivery robots, warehouse automation, and hospitality service bots — robots built for business and commercial operations.

34 available · 38 makers ·$980–$980

Lawn & Garden

29 robots

Autonomous robot lawn mowers and garden robots that maintain your yard and outdoor spaces without supervision.

20 available · 19 makers ·$436–$9k

Quadruped

25 robots

Four-legged robot dogs and quadrupeds built for rough terrain, inspection, and exploration — going where wheels can't.

17 available · 16 makers ·$1.6k–$50k

Home Assistants

16 robots

Arm-based household helpers — laundry folders, kitchen robots, and mobile manipulators that take on hands-on physical tasks around the home.

6 available · 14 makers ·$1.5k–$36k

Security & Patrol

5 robots

Autonomous surveillance and patrol robots that monitor homes, businesses, and perimeters — keeping watch without an operator on site.

3 available · 5 makers ·$1.6k–$1.6k

Leading Manufacturers

The most prolific makers in the directory

Each manufacturer brings a different approach — from consumer-focused companies prioritizing ease of use and affordability to research-driven firms pushing the boundaries of robotics technology. Some specialize in a single category while others build products across multiple segments. Visit the manufacturers directory for complete profiles, product lineups, and company backgrounds.

What the Numbers Mean

A practical guide to interpreting robot specifications

Specifications require context to be meaningful. A robot weighing 80 kg is not inherently better or worse than one weighing 5 kg — it depends on the use case, deployment environment, and operational requirements.

Key Specification Dimensions

Across 409 robots in the database

Dimensions & Weight

409 robots with weight data. Compact cleaning robots fit under furniture; heavier humanoids trade portability for stability and payload capacity.

Battery & Runtime

409 robots with battery specs. Runtime should exceed your task duration. Check charge-to-runtime ratio for commercial deployments.

1190 Sensor Types

Navigation sensors (LiDAR, cameras, ultrasonic), environmental sensors (temperature, air quality), and interaction sensors (microphones, touch, gesture).

426 Connectivity Options

The key question: does the robot integrate with your existing smart home ecosystem? Protocol support matters less than ecosystem compatibility.

3837 Capabilities

Distinguish core capabilities (the primary function you're buying for) from supplementary features. Prioritize core capability quality over feature count.

IP Rating

IP54 = dust + splash resistant (kitchen safe). IP67 = dustproof + waterproof (rain safe). Essential for outdoor robots.

Sensor Quality Matters More Than Marketing

Two robots claiming "smart navigation" might use fundamentally different approaches — one with a single downward camera, another with a LiDAR scanner + SLAM mapping. The result is dramatically different quality. Use the components directory to understand what each sensor does.

Frequently Asked Questions

About the Database
How many robots are in the ui44 database?

ui44 currently tracks 409 robots from 254 manufacturers across 9 categories. This includes 252 commercially available robots and 157 in various stages of development or pre-order. The database is continuously updated as new robots are announced and existing products receive updates.

What is the price range of robots on ui44?

Robots in our database range from $125 (StackChan) to $1.9M (Bespoke AI Jet Bot Steam Ultra). 173 of 409 robots have publicly listed prices. The remaining robots have enterprise-style pricing available on request from the manufacturer.

How can I find robots within my budget?

Use the sort dropdown on this page to order robots by "Price: Low to High" or "Price: High to Low." You can combine the price sort with category and manufacturer filters to narrow results further. Robots without public pricing will appear at the end when sorted by price.

What does each robot status mean?

"Available" and "Active" mean the robot is currently sold commercially. "Pre-order" means you can reserve one but it has not shipped yet. "Development" means it is still being built. "Prototype" means it exists only as an early model. "Discontinued" means it is no longer manufactured. Use the status filter tabs above to show only robots at a specific stage.

Using ui44
How do I compare two robots side by side?

Visit the comparison tool and select up to four robots to compare. The comparison view displays all specifications, capabilities, sensors, connectivity, and pricing in a structured side-by-side format. You can also find comparison links on individual robot pages and manufacturer pages.

How often are robot specifications updated?

We re-verify specifications against official manufacturer sources on a rolling basis. Each robot page shows a 'last verified' date. Available products are prioritized for frequent verification, and we update records whenever manufacturers announce specification changes, firmware updates, or pricing adjustments.

What categories of robots does ui44 track?

The database covers 9 categories spanning the full range of home and personal robotics. These include cleaning robots (vacuums, mops, window cleaners), lawn and garden robots (autonomous mowers), companion and social robots, home assistant robots, security and patrol robots, humanoid robots, quadruped robots, pool cleaning robots, and commercial service robots. Each category has a dedicated page with filtered listings and category-specific buying guidance accessible from the categories directory.

Data & Pricing
Can I suggest a robot that is missing from the database?

Absolutely. If you know of a home or humanoid robot that is not yet listed in our database, we welcome suggestions. Our discovery process monitors manufacturer announcements, trade shows, crowdfunding platforms, and robotics publications, but new products sometimes slip through. We evaluate each suggestion against our inclusion criteria: the robot must be a physical hardware product intended for home, personal, or commercial indoor/outdoor use, with publicly available specifications.

How does ui44 differ from other robot comparison sites?

ui44 focuses exclusively on depth and accuracy of technical specifications rather than affiliate revenue or marketing partnerships. Every robot profile includes verified dimensions, weight, sensor arrays, connectivity protocols, capability breakdowns, component analysis, and pricing from official sources. We maintain 409 robot profiles with structured data that enables meaningful side-by-side comparisons — not just marketing copy rewritten from press releases.

Are all listed prices in the same currency?

Prices are displayed in the manufacturer's primary market currency — most commonly USD, EUR, JPY, or CNY. Where robots are sold in multiple markets at different prices, we list the primary market price and note regional variations on the detail page. Prices reflect the base model configuration without optional accessories or extended warranties unless noted otherwise.

What sensors and components are most common across robots in the database?

The most prevalent sensors across our tracked robots include LiDAR scanners for spatial mapping, RGB cameras for visual recognition, IMU accelerometers for orientation tracking, ultrasonic proximity sensors for obstacle detection, and structured light depth cameras for three-dimensional environment understanding. Connectivity typically includes Wi-Fi for cloud connectivity, Bluetooth for local device pairing, and increasingly Matter and Thread for smart home integration. Visit the components directory for detailed breakdowns of every sensor type, actuator, and communication module used across the database, including which specific robots use each component.

Explore the database

Find the right robot for your needs

Full specs, side-by-side comparisons, and buyer guides for 409 home and humanoid robots.