This past year wasn鈥檛 the highest-grossing period for robotics startup investment. However, it was one of the flashiest.
In areas from humanoid coworker bots to AI robot brains, startups developing some of the most scifi-esque applications of the technology scored the year鈥檚 largest rounds. Big deals skewed early stage as well, indicating the cycle is likely just getting started.
Illustrative of the trend is , a 2-year-old startup dedicated to 鈥渂ringing a general purpose humanoid to life.鈥 Founded in 2022, the Silicon Valley startup pulled in $675 million in Series B funding in February to further its vision of building robots to perform unsafe and undesirable jobs.
Another example is the year鈥檚 second-biggest round, which went to robot brain developer . The San Francisco startup, founded just this year, pulled in $400 million at a $2 billion valuation last month.
Altogether, robotics-related startups secured around $7.2 billion in seed- through growth-stage investments in 2024, per SA国际传媒 data. That鈥檚 slightly above year-ago levels, but still well below the 2021 market peak, as charted below.
Versatile robots
One trend we鈥檙e seeing in the funding tallies is that investors are interested in startups developing versatile robots capable of doing more than just a simple task or two.
Besides Figure and Physical Intelligence, another exemplar of this concept is Pittsburgh-based , which is also developing brain models that can be used in a variety of robots and for different tasks. It raised a $300 million Series A in July at $1.5 billion valuation.
A few months earlier, Silicon Valley-based landed a $100 million Series B to create what it calls 鈥減ractical collaborative robots鈥 鈥 or 鈥渃obots鈥 鈥 to work alongside humans in areas such as manufacturing, healthcare and retail. And San Francisco鈥檚 , which focuses on flexible factory robots, wrapped up a $106 million equity financing in June.
On the home front, meanwhile, founder launched this year with a focus on household robotics. The San Francisco startup closed on $150 million in initial funding to build a robot that will help with a variety of household chores.
Help wanted
Robotics startups commonly point to current and projected labor shortages as a motivating factor. Figure founder 鈥檚 for the company, for instance, is built on the premise that 鈥渢here are over 10 million unsafe or undesirable jobs in the U.S. alone,鈥 and that an aging population will only make positions harder to fill.
Using SA国际传媒 , we put together a list of 14 companies that raised large rounds this year with a focus on developing robots to do work currently performed by humans.
One robotics power investor and major employer who appears to share this vision is founder and his fund, . Bezos, whose company is known for its embrace of warehouse automation technologies, has backed at least four major rounds for robotics companies this year through his investment vehicles: Figure, Physical Intelligence, Skild AI and , which is developing a wheel-legged robot.
Surgical robotics, drones and more
Beyond workplace bots and AI robot brains, we also saw continued investment in areas that have long been major robotics startup sectors.
Surgical robotics is one. This year, two of the biggest investments went to , a developer of technology for robotic-assisted microsurgical procedures, and , which is working on robotics-enabled technology offering a less invasive alternative to traditional open heart surgery. Both raised $110 million Series C rounds.
Drones and robot delivery vehicles scooped up considerable funding over the years, and continued to do so in 2024. , which sells drones for enterprise and military use cases, landed a $170 million extension round last month. In the delivery space, another startup with the military as a primary customer, autonomous ground transportation provider , locked up a $75 million Series B.
Not about exits (yet)
Broadly, the pipeline of funded robotics startups this year fits mostly in what I鈥檇 call the 鈥渇un to watch鈥 stage. That is, the most heavily funded names are largely early stage, with huge ambitions, fascinating business plans and modest pressure at this point to produce consistent earnings or a clear path to profitability.
Investors, too, seem willing to play wait-and-see if their portfolio companies can deliver on early promises.
It looks like an exceedingly risky proposition, albeit one with potential for enormous returns. That, at least, is what Figure expects in its master plan which admits that: 鈥淲e face high risk and extremely low chances of success.鈥
鈥淗owever, if we are successful,鈥 Figure maintains, 鈥渨e have the potential to positively impact humanity and to build the largest company on the planet.鈥
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Related reading:
- Robotics Funding Remains Robust As Startups Seek To Expand Robots鈥 Skills
- Robot Brain Startup Physical Intelligence Raises $400M At $2B Valuation
- Robotics Startups On The Rise In 2024
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