China leads humanoid robot market while Tesla's Optimus trails

China captured nearly 90% of global humanoid robot sales in 2025, with domestic firms Unitree and Agibot topping the charts. American companies, including Tesla, sold far fewer units despite ambitious targets. This early dominance mirrors China's strategy in electric vehicles, bolstered by state support and supply chains.

In 2025, the humanoid robot sector saw its first significant commercial activity, with global sales ranging from 13,000 to 18,000 units, according to research from Omdia and IDC. These robots, designed to mimic human form, found primary applications in research, retail, and industrial settings. Analysts at Morgan Stanley predict mass adoption could begin in the late 2030s, propelling the market to $38 billion by 2035 and $5 trillion by 2050.

Chinese manufacturers dominated, accounting for almost 90% of sales and claiming six of the top-selling companies. Unitree, based in China, led with 5,500 units sold—its first public disclosure of figures—while Shanghai's Agibot followed closely with 5,168. This rivalry echoes China's electric vehicle ascent, driven by early government backing and rapid scaling.

The sector's growth stems from Beijing's strategic priorities. Humanoid robots were highlighted in the 2021 14th Five-Year Plan as a key area for breakthroughs, with state funds supporting testing facilities and firms. Tech analyst Lian Jye Su of Omdia attributes the edge to 'a combination of policy support, public investment, mature supply chain, and advancements made in AI software and hardware.' He added that Chinese vendors increasingly incorporate local components, enhancing cost efficiency and innovation speed.

In contrast, the three non-Chinese entries on Omdia's top-sellers list—U.S.-based Figure AI, Agility Robotics, and Tesla—each moved only about 150 units. Tesla aimed for 5,000 Optimus robots in 2025 but fell short. CEO Elon Musk, speaking at the World Economic Forum recently, conceded China's prowess: 'China is very good at AI, very good at manufacturing, and will definitely be the toughest competition for Tesla.' He noted no major rivals outside China but predicted Optimus would surpass alternatives. Developed for over five years, Optimus currently handles simple factory tasks, with public sales eyed for late 2027.

Su suggests the West can counter through strengths in AI and software, avoiding reliance on Chinese hardware.

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Elon Musk announces Optimus robot sales at Davos WEF, with robot demo on screen.
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Tesla to sell Optimus humanoid robots to public by end of 2027, Musk announces at Davos

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Elon Musk announced at the World Economic Forum in Davos that Tesla plans to sell its Optimus humanoid robots to the public by the end of 2027, once reliability and safety are assured. Currently performing basic tasks in California factories, the robots will expand training to Texas next month and tackle industrial, household, and caregiving roles, though experts caution on timelines amid competition and past delays.

A new Omdia report shows Chinese manufacturers dominated the global humanoid robot market in 2025, with Shanghai-based AgiBot leading in shipments. Worldwide shipments surged nearly 480% to 13,318 units, highlighting rapid industry growth.

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A Chinese robotics firm, EngineAI, has developed a humanoid robot capable of delivering forceful Bruce Lee-style kicks, priced at US$150,000 and set for mass production two years ahead of Tesla's timeline. In contrast, Elon Musk's Optimus robot recently jogged a few steps but fell over during a demo while handing a water bottle. Backed by China's engineering talent and supply chains, such startups are accelerating humanoid robotics development.

Tesla released a video on December 2, 2025, showing its Optimus humanoid robot running at speeds up to 13.7 km/h in a Fremont laboratory, fueling investor optimism and a 1.7% stock rise to $454.48 the following Thursday. The clip, republished by Elon Musk, drew millions of views and prompted a response from rival Figure AI with its own robot demonstration. Amid the robotics hype, Tesla launched a budget Model 3 in Europe to counter competition.

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Building on his announcement the previous day at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Elon Musk specified Tesla aims to sell Optimus humanoid robots to consumers by late 2026, subject to safety and reliability validation. With robots advancing in factories and leveraging Tesla's AI, this pivot underscores diversification as EV sales decline.

Following Elon Musk's announcement of Optimus sales by 2027, Tesla's humanoid robot has started an apprenticeship at its Austin factory, learning complex tasks from camera-equipped trainers amid CES 2026 robotics advances. Deployment in factories is targeted by end-2026.

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At Tesla's 2025 annual shareholder meeting, Elon Musk unveiled ambitious plans for the Optimus humanoid robot, stating it would eliminate poverty and provide superior medical care. Shareholders approved Musk's $1 trillion performance-based pay package, which includes targets for delivering one million Optimus units over the next decade. Musk highlighted the robot's potential to transform the economy through sustainable abundance.

 

 

 

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