Hyundai is taking on Tesla and others in race to mass-produce humanoid robots – Hyundai (005380.KS) is joining the global push into robotics, announcing at CES 2026 that it plans to set up a manufacturing system capable of producing thousands of robots per year by 2028.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/hyundai-is-taking-on-tesla-and-others-in-race-to-mass-produce-humanoid-robots-210056155.html

6 Comments

  1. From the article

    Atlas is among the most advanced humanoid robots in the world. You’ve likely seen videos online of the bot doing everything from maneuvering obstacle courses to picking up heavy boxes.

    Hyundai, which acquired a majority stake in Boston Dynamics in a [2021 deal](https://bostondynamics.com/news/hyundai-motor-group-completes-acquisition-of-boston-dynamics-from-softbank/) that valued the company at $1.1 billion, said it will deploy Atlas in its facilities in 2028. The bot will focus on parts sequencing — ensuring vehicle parts are placed in the correct areas of a plant when they’re needed.

    The company said that by 2030 it will begin using Atlas for more complex tasks, including component assembly, and eventually for jobs that involve repetitive motions or require heavy lifting and other tasks.

  2. I don’t get the humanoid robot logic. Why when you can build more effective machines. This is the same silly logic that musk has for vision only self driving.

  3. How is thousands vs millions a race?

    They will both sell – and sell well. The competition is manual labour, not other robots. Not until we have an oversupply – that will take decades.

  4. PecanCoffeePlease on

    Genuine question though…where are all the chips for these humanoids supposed to come from? Feels like everything already needs chips, and Bob from down the street doesn’t need a few NVIDIA chips to show up for work.

  5. Chance_Orchid_3137 on

    my question is: why use humanoid robots? our factory floor robots already use machine learning to improve their performance, and their tooling is optimized for whatever task they’re doing. why spend all this money and research on humanoid robots specifically for manufacturing? having been a human that worked the factory floor, surely there are more efficient/cheaper designs…? 

  6. Lonely_Noyaaa on

    Thousands of humanoid robots a year by 2028 is insane scale for something that just a decade ago was barely more than YouTube demos