Robot dossier

Verified Jun 1, 2026

H2 Plus

Release

Jun 1, 2026

Price

Price TBA

Connectivity

4

Status

Development

Height

182cm

Weight

About 70kg with battery

Battery

About 3 hours

Payload

Rated arm payload approx. 7kg; peak arm payload approx. 15kg

Research Development

H2 Plus

H2 Plus is Unitree Robotics' NVIDIA Isaac GR00T reference humanoid for academic and frontier physical-AI research. It packages the full-size Unitree H2 chassis with dual Sharpa Wave tactile five-finger hands, NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 onboard compute, multi-view sensing, Isaac GR00T software workflows, and remote emergency stop into a validated platform for robot bring-up, data capture, simulation, policy evaluation, and real-world skill development. Unitree's product page lists a 182 cm, about 70 kg body with 31 joint-motor degrees of freedom, while the added dexterous hands bring the reference design to 75 total body-and-hand degrees of freedom. Pricing has not been disclosed, and availability is planned for late 2026.

Listed price

Price TBA

Public price not announced. Unitree and NVIDIA say the H2 Plus reference humanoid will be available from Unitree in late 2026.

Release window

Jun 1, 2026

Current status

Development

Unitree Robotics

Last verified

Jun 1, 2026

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Technical overview

Core specifications and system stack

A fast read on the mechanical profile, sensing package, and platform integrations behind H2 Plus.

Technical Specifications

Height

182cm

Weight

About 70kg with battery

Dimensions

1820 x 456 x 218mm standing

Battery Life

About 3 hours

Charging Time

Not officially disclosed

Max Speed

Not officially disclosed

Payload

Rated arm payload approx. 7kg; peak arm payload approx. 15kg

Operational profile

How this robot is configured

Capabilities

12

Connectivity

4

Key capabilities

NVIDIA Isaac GR00T Reference HumanoidFull-Size Humanoid Research Platform31 Body Joint-Motor Degrees of Freedom75 Total Body-and-Hand Degrees of FreedomDual Sharpa Wave Tactile Five-Finger HandsDexterous ManipulationMulti-View SensingWhole-Body Control

Ecosystem fit

NVIDIA Isaac GR00TNVIDIA Isaac TeleopNVIDIA Isaac SimNVIDIA Isaac LabNVIDIA Isaac ROSNVIDIA Jetson Thor

About the H2 Plus

4Sensors4Protocols12Capabilities

The H2 Plus is a Research robot built by Unitree Robotics. H2 Plus is Unitree Robotics' NVIDIA Isaac GR00T reference humanoid for academic and frontier physical-AI research. It packages the full-size Unitree H2 chassis with dual Sharpa Wave tactile five-finger hands, NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 onboard compute, multi-view sensing, Isaac GR00T software workflows, and remote emergency stop into a validated platform for robot bring-up, data capture, simulation, policy evaluation, and real-world skill development. Unitree's product page lists a 182 cm, about 70 kg body with 31 joint-motor degrees of freedom, while the added dexterous hands bring the reference design to 75 total body-and-hand degrees of freedom. Pricing has not been disclosed, and availability is planned for late 2026.

Pricing has not been publicly disclosed — typical for robots still in development. See all Unitree Robotics robots on the Unitree Robotics page.

Spec Breakdown

Detailed specifications for the H2 Plus

Height

182cm

At 182cm, the H2 Plus is sized for its intended operating environment and use cases.

Weight

About 70kg with battery

Weighing About 70kg with battery, the H2 Plus balances structural integrity with portability and maneuverability.

Dimensions

1820 x 456 x 218mm standing

The overall dimensions of 1820 x 456 x 218mm standing define the robot's physical footprint and determine what spaces it can navigate and what clearances it requires for operation.

Battery Life

About 3 hours

With a battery life of About 3 hours, the H2 Plus 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.

Payload Capacity

Rated arm payload approx. 7kg; peak arm payload approx. 15kg

A payload capacity of Rated arm payload approx. 7kg; peak arm payload approx. 15kg 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 H2 Plus uses NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 with Blackwell GPU, 2,070 FP4 TFLOPS, 14-core Arm CPU, and 128GB unified memory 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.

H2 Plus Sensor Suite

The H2 Plus integrates 4 sensor types, forming the perceptual foundation that enables autonomous operation.

This sensor configuration enables the H2 Plus 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

H2 Plus Use Cases & Applications

Research robots serve as platforms for advancing robotics science and engineering. They enable researchers to test theories about locomotion, manipulation, perception, and human-robot interaction in controlled and real-world environments.

Capabilities That Enable Real-World Use

The H2 Plus offers 12 distinct capabilities, each contributing to the robot's practical utility.

NVIDIA Isaac GR00T Reference Humanoid
Full-Size Humanoid Research Platform
31 Body Joint-Motor Degrees of Freedom
75 Total Body-and-Hand Degrees of Freedom
Dual Sharpa Wave Tactile Five-Finger Hands
Dexterous Manipulation
Multi-View Sensing
Whole-Body Control
Data Capture and Robot Demonstration Workflows
Simulation, Training, and Policy Evaluation
On-Robot Inference and Control
Remote Emergency Stop

These capabilities work together with the robot's 4 onboard sensor types and NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 with Blackwell GPU, 2,070 FP4 TFLOPS, 14-core Arm CPU, and 128GB unified memory AI platform to deliver practical, real-world performance.

Ecosystem Integration

The H2 Plus integrates with the following platforms and ecosystems, extending its utility beyond standalone operation.

NVIDIA Isaac GR00T NVIDIA Isaac Teleop NVIDIA Isaac Sim NVIDIA Isaac Lab NVIDIA Isaac ROS NVIDIA Jetson Thor

This ecosystem compatibility enables the H2 Plus to work as part of a broader automation setup rather than operating in isolation.

H2 Plus Capabilities

12

Capabilities

4

Sensor Types

AI

NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000…

NVIDIA Isaac GR00T Reference Humanoid
Full-Size Humanoid Research Platform
31 Body Joint-Motor Degrees of Freedom
75 Total Body-and-Hand Degrees of Freedom
Dual Sharpa Wave Tactile Five-Finger Hands
Dexterous Manipulation
Multi-View Sensing
Whole-Body Control
Data Capture and Robot Demonstration Workflows
Simulation, Training, and Policy Evaluation
On-Robot Inference and Control
Remote Emergency Stop

Connectivity & Integration

How the H2 Plus communicates with your network, smart home devices, cloud services, and companion apps.

Network & Communication Protocols

✓ Wi-Fi for local network and cloud access · ✓ Bluetooth for direct device pairing — enabling the H2 Plus to participate in various networking scenarios.

Voice Assistant Integration

Enables hands-free control, smart home device management, and access to each platform's ecosystem of skills and services.

H2 Plus Technology Stack Overview

The H2 Plus by Unitree Robotics integrates 10 distinct technology components across sensing, connectivity, intelligence, and interaction layers. The physical platform features a height of 182cm, a weight of About 70kg with battery, providing the foundation on which this technology stack operates.

Perception — 4 Sensor Types

The perception layer is built on Head-mounted stereo camera with wide field of view, Wrist cameras, IMU, Array microphones. 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 — 4 Protocols

For communications, the H2 Plus relies on Ethernet, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2, USB. 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 — NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 with Blackwell GPU, 2,070 FP4 TFLOPS, 14-core Arm CPU, and 128GB unified memory

NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 with Blackwell GPU, 2,070 FP4 TFLOPS, 14-core Arm CPU, and 128GB unified memory 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.

Voice — Voice interaction via array microphones and speakers

Voice interaction is handled through Voice interaction via array microphones and speakers, providing natural language understanding and speech synthesis that enable conversational control and integration with broader smart home ecosystems.

Who Should Consider the H2 Plus?

Target Audience

Research robots are acquired by universities, government labs, and corporate R&D departments. They serve as experimental platforms for developing new algorithms, testing locomotion strategies, and advancing the field of robotics. Some are also used for educational purposes.

Key Considerations

Open-source software compatibility (ROS/ROS 2), sensor modularity, programmability, available SDK/API quality, community support, and published research papers using the platform are key factors. Documentation quality and the ability to modify both hardware and software are essential for research use.

Pricing

H2 Plus does not currently have publicly listed pricing. As the robot is still in development, pricing will likely be announced closer to market availability.

Availability

Development

The H2 Plus is currently in active development. Follow Unitree Robotics for updates on when the robot will become available for purchase or pre-order.

H2 Plus: Strengths & Trade-offs

Engineering compromises and where this research robot excels

What the H2 Plus does well

Solid sensor coverage

The H2 Plus integrates 4 sensor types, providing good perceptual coverage for its intended applications. This sensor complement covers the essential modalities needed for effective research operation while keeping complexity manageable.

Versatile connectivity

Supporting 4 connectivity protocols gives the H2 Plus flexible integration options. Whether connecting to local smart home networks, cloud services, or companion devices, the breadth of connectivity ensures compatibility across a wide range of deployment scenarios and reduces the risk of network-related limitations.

Broad capability set

With 12 distinct capabilities, the H2 Plus 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.

Extended battery life

A battery life of About 3 hours provides substantial operational runway. For research applications, this means longer work sessions between charges, fewer interruptions, and the ability to complete larger tasks or cover more area in a single charge cycle.

Substantial payload capacity

With a payload capacity of Rated arm payload approx. 7kg; peak arm payload approx. 15kg, the H2 Plus can handle meaningful physical tasks. This capacity enables practical applications like carrying tools, transporting materials, or supporting equipment mounts that lighter robots simply cannot accommodate.

What to consider carefully

Significant weight

At About 70kg with battery, the H2 Plus is a substantial piece of equipment. This weight contributes to stability and robustness but also means the robot requires careful consideration of floor load limits, transportation logistics, and the potential impact force in the event of unexpected contact with people or objects.

Undisclosed pricing

Unitree Robotics has not published a public price for the H2 Plus. While common for enterprise-class robotics, the absence of transparent pricing can complicate budgeting and comparison shopping. Prospective buyers will need to engage directly with the manufacturer for quotes, which may vary by configuration and volume.

Currently in development

The H2 Plus is not yet available as a finished, shipping product. Specifications may change before commercial release, and timelines for availability are subject to revision. Early adopters should account for this uncertainty in their planning.

Note: This strengths and trade-offs assessment is based on the H2 Plus'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 Unitree 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 Research Robot Technology Works

Understanding the engineering behind this category

Research robots serve a fundamentally different purpose than commercial or consumer models. They are platforms for discovery — enabling scientists and engineers to test theories, develop algorithms, and push the boundaries of what robots can do. The technology in research robots prioritizes openness, flexibility, and access to raw data over consumer-friendly packaging or commercial reliability. Understanding this distinction is important for anyone considering a research robot platform.

Navigation & Mobility

Research robots typically expose their navigation systems at a much lower level than commercial products. Researchers can access raw sensor data, modify SLAM algorithms, implement custom path planners, and test novel navigation approaches. ROS (Robot Operating System) and ROS 2 compatibility is standard, providing a common framework for sharing navigation modules across the research community. This openness enables rapid iteration — a researcher can swap between different SLAM implementations, test new obstacle avoidance strategies, or develop entirely novel navigation paradigms without being locked into a vendor's proprietary stack.

The Role of AI

Research robots serve as physical testbeds for AI algorithms that may eventually appear in commercial products years later. Reinforcement learning, imitation learning, few-shot task learning, and human-robot interaction studies all require robot platforms that can execute AI-generated commands in the physical world. The gap between simulation (where training is cheap and fast) and reality (where physics is unforgiving) makes physical robot platforms essential for validating AI approaches. Research robots must support rapid deployment of new AI models without extensive integration work.

Sensor Fusion & Perception

Research platforms prioritize sensor modularity and data access. Standard mounting interfaces allow researchers to attach custom sensors alongside built-in ones. Raw sensor data streams (not just processed results) are accessible for developing novel perception algorithms. Precise time-stamping and synchronization across sensor streams enable accurate multi-modal fusion research. Many research robots include more sensors than strictly necessary for any single application, providing researchers with rich datasets for developing and testing new algorithms.

Power & Battery Management

Research robots balance operational runtime with practical lab use. Sessions of one to four hours are typical, with quick charging between experiments. Some research setups use tethered power for long-running experiments where battery limitations would interrupt data collection. Power monitoring and logging capabilities help researchers understand the energy costs of different behaviors and algorithms — important for developing efficient approaches that will eventually run on battery-constrained commercial systems.

Safety by Design

Research environments present unique safety challenges because robots are constantly being programmed with untested behaviors. Hardware safety limits (joint speed caps, force limits, emergency stops) must be robust regardless of software commands. Safety-rated monitored stop and speed monitoring ensure the robot cannot exceed safe operating parameters even when running experimental code. Collaborative operation standards apply when researchers work alongside the robot during experiments. Many labs implement layered safety with physical barriers for high-speed testing and open-area operation restricted to validated, lower-risk behaviors.

What's Next for Research Robots

Research robot platforms are becoming more accessible and capable. Cloud robotics enables remote experiment execution and shared datasets. Digital twins and high-fidelity simulators reduce the need for physical hardware time while improving sim-to-real transfer. Standardized benchmarks and open datasets enable fair comparison of results across labs. The democratization of robotics research — through lower-cost platforms, open-source software, and cloud infrastructure — is expanding who can contribute to advancing the field.

The H2 Plus by Unitree Robotics incorporates many of these technology pillars. For a detailed look at the specific sensors and components used in the H2 Plus, see the sensor analysis and connectivity sections above, or browse the complete components glossary for explanations of every technology used across the robotics industry.

H2 Plus in the Research Market

How this robot compares in the research landscape

Unitree Robotics has not publicly disclosed pricing for the H2 Plus, which is typical for enterprise-focused robotics platforms that offer customized solutions and direct-sales relationships.

The H2 Plus's 4 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 research applications.

As a robot still in development, the H2 Plus represents Unitree Robotics's vision for where research robotics is heading. Specifications may evolve before commercial release, and early performance demonstrations should be evaluated with this context in mind.

Head-to-Head Comparisons

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

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

Deployment Readiness and Procurement Signals for H2 Plus

What the public profile tells you, and what still needs direct vendor confirmation

From a buying and rollout perspective, the H2 Plus should be read as a research platform aimed at labs and development teams validating robotics workflows. ui44 currently tracks 12 capability signals, 4 sensor inputs, and a last verification date of 2026-06-01. That mix gives buyers a useful first-pass picture, but it is still only the public layer of due diligence, especially when procurement, uptime, and support commitments are decided directly with Unitree Robotics.

Commercial model

Pricing not public

Public price not announced. Unitree and NVIDIA say the H2 Plus reference humanoid will be available from Unitree in late 2026.. That usually means the final commercial package depends on deployment scope, services, or negotiated terms.

Integration posture

4 connectivity options

The profile lists Ethernet, Wi-Fi 6, Bluetooth 5.2, USB, plus NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 with Blackwell GPU, 2,070 FP4 TFLOPS, 14-core Arm CPU, and 128GB unified memory as the AI stack. That is enough to infer the basic network posture, but buyers should still confirm APIs, fleet management, and workflow integration details. ui44 currently tracks 6 declared compatibility links.

Spec disclosure

5/7 core specs public

ui44 currently has 5 of 7 core physical and operating specs filled in for this model, leaving 2 gaps that matter for deployment planning. Missing runtime, charge, speed, or payload details can materially change staffing and site-readiness assumptions.

The current profile is detailed enough to support early comparison work, shortlist creation, and cross-checking against other research robots. It is still worth validating the final deployment package, because integration services, support coverage, software entitlements, and site-preparation requirements often sit outside the raw hardware spec sheet.

If you want a faster apples-to-apples read, compare the H2 Plus against nearby alternatives in ui44's compare view, then cross-check the underlying AI, sensor, and subsystem terms in the components glossary. For manufacturer-level context, the Unitree Robotics profile helps anchor this robot inside the wider product lineup.

Before you sign off on a pilot, confirm these points

  • Confirm how the charging workflow works in practice, including charger count, swap options, and expected downtime.
  • Verify travel speed and cycle time if the robot must keep up with people, lines, or service windows.
  • Check what safety, electrical, or deployment certifications exist for the region and task you care about.

Owning the H2 Plus: Setup, Maintenance & Tips

Practical guide from day one through years of ownership

Initial Setup

Research robot setup combines hardware assembly with software environment configuration. Unpack and assemble the platform following the manufacturer's documentation. Install the development framework — typically ROS or ROS 2 — and verify sensor connectivity. Calibrate all sensors using the manufacturer's tools and procedures. Set up the simulation environment (Gazebo, Isaac Sim, or equivalent) alongside the physical platform for parallel development. Establish version control for your experiment code and configuration. Document the initial calibration values and system state as your baseline for future reference. Plan network and computing infrastructure to handle the data rates your sensors will generate.

Ongoing Maintenance

Research robots need maintenance that preserves the precision required for valid experimental results. Regularly verify sensor calibration — drift in camera intrinsics or IMU biases can invalidate experiment data. Maintain clean workspace conditions to protect optical sensors. Document any hardware modifications or maintenance performed, as these can affect experimental reproducibility. Update software dependencies carefully, documenting versions used for each experiment. Joint and actuator wear in research robots that perform repetitive tasks should be monitored and factored into experimental design.

Software Updates & Long-Term Support

Research robot software updates require careful management to maintain experiment reproducibility. Document the exact software versions used for each experiment. Test updates in a separate environment before applying to your experiment platform. Contribute bug fixes and improvements back to the community when using open-source frameworks. Be aware that ROS and other framework updates may require code changes in your custom packages — budget time for integration testing after major framework updates.

Maximizing Longevity

Research robots often have longer productive lives than commercial products because they can be upgraded and repurposed. Extend your investment by maintaining clean mechanical and electrical systems, documenting all modifications for future lab members, and keeping spare parts for common wear items. When specific components become obsolete, community forums and lab networks can be valuable sources for replacements. Consider the platform's modularity when planning future research directions — a platform that can accept new sensors and actuators adapts to evolving research questions.

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

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the H2 Plus?
The H2 Plus is a Research robot made by Unitree Robotics. H2 Plus is Unitree Robotics' NVIDIA Isaac GR00T reference humanoid for academic and frontier physical-AI research. It packages the full-size Unitree H2 chassis with dual Sharpa Wave tactile five-finger hands, NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 onboard compute, multi-view sensing, Isaac GR00T software workflows, and remote emergency stop into a validated platform for robot bring-up, data capture, simulation, policy evaluation, and real-world skill development. Unitree's product page lists a 182 cm, about 70 kg body with 31 joint-motor degrees of freedom, while the added dexterous hands bring the reference design to 75 total body-and-hand degrees of freedom. Pricing has not been disclosed, and availability is planned for late 2026. It features 4 sensor types, 4 connectivity protocols, and 12 distinct capabilities.
How much does the H2 Plus cost?
Unitree Robotics has not disclosed public pricing for the H2 Plus. Pricing is typically announced closer to market release. Public price not announced. Unitree and NVIDIA say the H2 Plus reference humanoid will be available from Unitree in late 2026.
Is the H2 Plus available to buy?
The H2 Plus is currently in active development and is not yet available for purchase. Follow Unitree Robotics for release date announcements.
What sensors does the H2 Plus have?
The H2 Plus is equipped with 4 sensor types: Head-mounted stereo camera with wide field of view, Wrist cameras, IMU, Array microphones. 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 H2 Plus battery last?
The H2 Plus has a rated battery life of About 3 hours. 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 H2 Plus use?
The H2 Plus is powered by NVIDIA Jetson AGX Thor T5000 with Blackwell GPU, 2,070 FP4 TFLOPS, 14-core Arm CPU, and 128GB unified memory. 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 H2 Plus compare to the TALOS?
The H2 Plus and TALOS are both research 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 H2 Plus work with smart home systems?
Yes, the H2 Plus is compatible with: NVIDIA Isaac GR00T, NVIDIA Isaac Teleop, NVIDIA Isaac Sim, NVIDIA Isaac Lab, NVIDIA Isaac ROS, NVIDIA Jetson Thor. 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 H2 Plus data on ui44?
The H2 Plus specifications on ui44 were last verified on 2026-06-01. All data is sourced from official Unitree Robotics documentation, spec sheets, and press releases. If you notice any outdated information, please let us know.

Data Integrity

All H2 Plus data on ui44 is verified against official Unitree Robotics sources, including spec sheets, product pages, and press releases. Last verified: 2026-06-01. Official source: Unitree Robotics product page. If you find outdated or incorrect information, please let us know — accuracy is our top priority.

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