Following the CES 2026 unveiling of its production-ready Atlas humanoid robot, Boston Dynamics has begun commercial manufacturing at its Boston facility, with tens of thousands of units committed for Hyundai sites this year—beating Tesla's Optimus to market. A Google DeepMind partnership integrates advanced AI, amid Hyundai's major robotics investments.
Production of the all-electric Atlas robot is now underway at Boston Dynamics' Boston facility, with initial deployments at Hyundai's Robot Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) for tasks like part sequencing in the coming months. Tens of thousands of units are slated for Hyundai manufacturing sites this year, all already committed, with additional customers planned for early 2027. By 2028, Atlas will reach Hyundai's Georgia facility, expanding to component assembly, repetitive tasks, heavy loads, and complex operations by 2030—freeing humans for oversight roles.
Building on the CES announcement, the collaboration with Google DeepMind will embed Gemini Robotics AI foundation models to elevate Atlas's cognitive skills for navigation and manipulation.
Enhancing its CES-demonstrated capabilities (56 degrees of freedom, 110 lbs/50 kg lift), Atlas adds 360-degree vision for human detection, automatic safety pauses, IP67 weatherproofing, self-hot-swappable batteries, simple field-repairable components, and padding to reduce hazards. It operates from -20°C to 40°C.
"Atlas is going to revolutionize the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children – useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling," said CEO Robert Playter.
This follows the 2024 retirement of the hydraulic prototype (developed since 2013) in favor of the electric model for commercialization, bolstered by successes with Spot and Stretch. Hyundai, the majority owner, backs efforts with a January 2025 Nvidia partnership, a $28 billion US investment including a new 30,000-unit annual robot factory, and a South Korean government-Nvidia MOU for AI expertise.
Unlike Tesla's Optimus, which has missed targets for factory deployments by end-2025, Atlas offers full autonomy, teleoperation, and real-world readiness.