The 2026 Landscape
The AI robotics industry has entered a new phase. After years of incremental progress, the convergence of foundation models, large-scale demonstration data, and affordable hardware is producing robots that can generalize across tasks. Venture funding into AI robotics exceeded $8 billion in 2025, with humanoid companies alone raising over $3 billion. This guide profiles the most important companies across four categories: embodied AI/foundation model startups, humanoid robot companies, industrial robotics innovators, and enabling technology providers.
At SVRC, we track these companies because their products and research directly shape what hardware and data our customers need. Many of the robots and platforms listed below are available for testing at our Mountain View and Allston labs.
Embodied AI and Foundation Model Companies
These companies are building the "brains" -- general-purpose AI models that can control diverse robot bodies across many tasks.
| Company | HQ | Funding | Approach | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Physical Intelligence (Pi) | San Francisco | $400M+ | VLAs (vision-language-action models) trained on massive multi-robot datasets | If Pi succeeds, a single model controls any robot body -- collapsing the cost of robot programming |
| Covariant | Emeryville, CA | $222M | RFM-1 foundation model for robotic manipulation; production-deployed picking | Most production-validated AI manipulation company; proving foundation models work in logistics |
| Skild AI | Pittsburgh | $300M+ | General-purpose robot brain; cross-embodiment model | CMU pedigree; betting on a single model for arms, quadrupeds, and humanoids |
| Octo / RT-X (Google DeepMind) | Mountain View | Internal (Alphabet) | Open-source cross-embodiment models trained on Open X-Embodiment dataset | Sets the open-source baseline; their dataset standard (RLDS) is becoming the lingua franca |
| Dobb-E / NYU RAIL | New York | Research grants | Home robot learning from iPhone demonstrations; low-cost hardware | Demonstrates that useful manipulation can come from consumer-grade data collection |
Humanoid Robot Companies
| Company | HQ | Funding | Robot | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Figure | Sunnyvale, CA | $750M+ | Figure 02 -- 5'6", ~60 kg, dexterous hands, BMW factory deployment | First humanoid with real factory deployment; partnership with OpenAI for language-grounded control |
| Unitree Robotics | Hangzhou, China | $150M+ | G1 humanoid ($16K starting), H1 ($90K), Go2 quadruped | Price disruption -- G1 at $16K makes humanoid research accessible to universities. SVRC stocks the G1 for lease |
| Tesla Optimus | Palo Alto, CA | Internal (Tesla) | Optimus Gen 2 -- 5'8", 57 kg, 11-DOF hands | Manufacturing scale potential via Tesla's factories; FSD neural net team working on manipulation |
| 1X Technologies | Moss, Norway | $225M+ | NEO Beta -- bipedal, soft actuators, designed for homes | Unique soft-actuator approach for safety; backed by OpenAI Startup Fund |
| Apptronik | Austin, TX | $350M+ | Apollo -- 5'8", 73 kg, 25 kg payload, partnership with Mercedes-Benz | NASA heritage (Valkyrie lineage); focused on logistics and automotive manufacturing |
| Agility Robotics | Corvallis, OR | $200M+ | Digit -- bipedal, 16 kg payload, Amazon warehouse pilot | First humanoid with a dedicated factory (RoboFab); closest to volume production |
Industrial Robotics Innovators
| Company | HQ | Focus | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Machina Labs | Chatsworth, CA | AI-driven sheet metal forming with industrial robots | Applying AI to transform traditional manufacturing; Boeing and Lockheed contracts |
| Formic | Chicago, IL | Robots-as-a-Service (RaaS) for SMB manufacturers | $0 upfront, pay-per-hour model makes automation accessible to small factories |
| Realtime Robotics | Boston, MA | Hardware-accelerated collision-free motion planning | Replaces MoveIt-style planning with FPGA-based <1ms path generation; enables multi-robot cells |
| Flexiv | Santa Clara / Shanghai | Adaptive force-controlled robots (Rizon series) | Best-in-class force control for contact-rich assembly tasks |
Enabling Technology Companies
| Company | Focus | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| NVIDIA (Isaac) | GPU-accelerated simulation (Isaac Sim), inference (Jetson), robot foundation models (GR00T) | The default simulation and training infrastructure for AI robotics companies |
| Genesis (simulation) | Open-source physics simulator; GPU-accelerated; MuJoCo-compatible | Fastest growing open-source sim; enables massive parallel RL training |
| Foxglove | Robot data visualization and fleet management platform | Replacing RViz for production robots; the "Datadog for robotics" |
| Paxini (SVRC partner) | High-resolution tactile sensors for dexterous manipulation | Tactile sensing is the missing modality; available at SVRC |
| Sanctuary AI | Carbon robot hand with 20-DOF; AI work system | Most advanced dexterous hand on a general-purpose humanoid |
Funding Landscape
Robotics venture funding is concentrated in three areas:
- Humanoids: Figure ($750M+), Apptronik ($350M+), 1X ($225M+), Agility ($200M+). These companies are pre-revenue or early revenue, with valuations driven by the massive TAM for general-purpose labor.
- Foundation models for manipulation: Physical Intelligence ($400M+), Skild ($300M+), Covariant ($222M). The bet is that robot AI follows the LLM scaling playbook -- more data and compute yields more capable models.
- Hardware enablers: Unitree ($150M+), Flexiv ($100M+). These companies sell real hardware to real customers today and are growing revenue alongside the AI boom.
For startups entering the space, we recommend focusing on vertical applications (specific tasks in specific industries) rather than competing on general-purpose AI or hardware. The How to Start a Robotics Company guide covers this strategy in detail.
What Success Means for the Field
- If Pi/Covariant foundation models succeed: Robot programming becomes prompt engineering. The bottleneck shifts entirely to hardware quality and data collection -- exactly what SVRC Data Services provides.
- If Figure/Apptronik deploy at scale: Humanoids enter logistics and manufacturing, creating massive demand for training data, teleoperation systems, and maintenance infrastructure.
- If Unitree's G1 proliferates: University labs get affordable humanoid platforms, accelerating research. SVRC already supports G1 in our leasing program and on the Data Platform.
- If open-source (Octo, Genesis, LeRobot) wins: Barriers to entry drop, more startups enter, and the need for quality data and reliable hardware increases.