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Robotics Startups Raised $23 Billion in 2026, Closing In On All of 2025

Published Jun 2, 2026
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A humanoid robot with an outstretched hand stands in an industrial warehouse setting.
Summary:
  • Robotics startups have raised over $23 billion globally in 2026, nearly matching the full-year 2025 total of $26 billion with weeks still remaining.
  • Nvidia, OpenAI, Meta, and Tesla all made major robotics moves in the same weekend, signaling a sector-wide shift among the biggest AI players.
  • Commercial deals are replacing pilots, with Figure AI, Agility Robotics, and Boston Dynamics all signing or expanding contracts with major corporations.

Robotics startups have raised more than $23 billion globally in 2026, already closing in on every dollar the industry pulled in across all of 2025 - and the year still has weeks to go.

The surge follows years of slow growth, with every major AI player now treating humanoid robots as the next big bet.

Funding Has Jumped Six-Fold Since 2019

PitchBook data shows the global robotics space raised about $4 billion in 2019, climbing to $26 billion by 2025 - and 2026 is now on pace to lap that figure entirely.

The trigger isn't one breakthrough but a sector-wide shift, as every major AI player has decided robots are the next leg of the trade.

The shared bet is that the same AI breakthroughs powering chatbots like ChatGPT can also run robots in the physical world.

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Nvidia, OpenAI, Meta, and Tesla All Made Moves

The weekend alone moved the story, with Nvidia using its GTC Taipei conference to unveil a standard humanoid robot blueprint - a kit with a Unitree robot body, five-fingered hands, Nvidia onboard computing, and software tools - aimed at academic researchers and shipping in late 2026.

Sam Altman used the same weekend to declare robotics OpenAI's next frontier and kicked off hiring for the new effort.

That came just weeks after Meta bought humanoid startup Assured Robot Intelligence and folded the team into its Superintelligence Labs unit.

Tesla, the longest-running player in humanoids, is still saying Optimus will hit the public market by the end of 2027, with CEO Elon Musk repeatedly describing it as central to Tesla's future.

That bullish framing extends across the industry, with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang publicly calling humanoids a "multitrillion-dollar economic opportunity" - a view now showing up in funding rounds across the sector.

Commercial Contracts Are Replacing Pilot Programs

Figure AI, last valued at $39 billion, signed a commercial deal with Catalyst Brands - the parent of JCPenney, Aéropostale, and Brooks Brothers - to deploy humanoids in its distribution and logistics network.

Agility Robotics is further along, with its Digit humanoid already working for Amazon, GXO, Schaeffler, and Mercado Libre on actual warehouse tasks.

Hyundai-owned Boston Dynamics is going bigger, with plans to put tens of thousands of Atlas robots in its factories by 2028 as the sector moves from pilots to paying customers.

Worth Noting

Robotics has been the "five years away" story for over a decade, but funding, talent, and customer contracts are now all moving at the same time.

At the current pace, total venture funding for the sector could top $30 billion by year-end - well past 2025's full-year total.

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