Pricing

Humanoid robot price guide 2026

A neutral map of the four price bands buyers are seeing in 2026 — and what actually differs between them.

7 min read

Band 1: Under €15,000

This band is dominated by small bipedal platforms aimed at classrooms, hobbyist developers and entry-level research labs. Height is typically 120–135 cm, payload is minimal (a few hundred grams per arm at best), battery runtime is measured in tens of minutes, and hands are usually fixed or parallel grippers.

What you are actually buying: an accessible, well-documented walking platform. That is a real capability — bipedal locomotion at this price point did not exist five years ago. What you are not buying: dexterous manipulation, whole-body torque control, or the compute headroom to run a modern vision-language-action model on-board.

For teaching, prototyping and student projects this band is often the correct answer. For any production or research programme that expects to grow, treat it as a stepping stone.

Band 2: €15,000–€40,000

The most popular band for university labs and serious developer teams in 2026. Mid-size chassis (roughly 130–150 cm), usable ROS 2 stacks, respectable on-board compute, and — at the top of the band — early dexterous hand options as add-ons.

This is where the market's centre of gravity sits: enough capability to host real reinforcement-learning work, teleoperation studies and imitation-learning pipelines, without the six-figure procurement process. It is also where competition is fiercest, which means specs move fast — a spec sheet from twelve months ago is already dated.

If you are shortlisting for the first time and unsure, start here. It is easier to justify a step up in year two than to justify a stalled programme in year one.

Band 3: €40,000–€100,000

Full-size research platforms — roughly 165–185 cm, richer sensing (LiDAR, stereo depth, sometimes tactile), higher peak torques, more degrees of freedom, and dexterous hands either included or available as a supported option. Compute is on-board and substantial; some units include dedicated inference accelerators.

This band is where labs doing whole-body control, bimanual manipulation research or humanoid teleoperation for tele-existence work usually land. The unit price is only part of the cost — expect meaningful spend on rigging, safety fencing, training and a service contract.

Do not enter this band without a written answer to “what will this specific robot be doing in twenty-four months?” If the answer is the same demos as month one, you overpaid.

Band 4: €100,000+

Clinical, healthcare, industrial-integrator and enterprise-grade units. Price is often bundled with services: installation, integration, training, an SLA, sometimes an on-site technician. The robot itself may or may not be more capable than a top-of-band-3 unit; what you are buying is the wrapper around it.

Buyers in this band are usually hospitals, tier-one industrial integrators, or corporate R&D groups. If your organisation does not have a procurement process built for capital equipment, this band will surprise you — not because of the sticker price, but because of the timelines.

The hidden costs that change everything

Sticker price is the easy number. The harder numbers are the ones that decide three-year total cost of ownership: sensor and compute BOM, hand complexity, and — above all — on-continent service.

A €40,000 unit with a spares depot in Frankfurt and a five-day median RMA turnaround is a fundamentally different product from a €25,000 unit with an eight-week return path to Shenzhen. Downtime is the hidden line item on every quote. Ask two questions before signing: where do spare parts physically live, and what was the median RMA turnaround for the last twelve units returned.

Then add the honest extras: freight (often €1,500–€4,000 for a full-size unit shipped from China), EU import duty, VAT, integration and training, and any software or model licences the manufacturer sells separately. The delta between sticker and landed price frequently exceeds 25%.

How to use these bands

Bands are a coarse map, not a spec sheet. Two units in the same band can differ dramatically in software maturity, sensor quality and service posture. Use bands to filter the shortlist, not to pick the winner.

Once you are inside a band, the decision is driven by the specific research or deployment question you are trying to answer — which is what the rest of this site is for.

Last reviewed: July 2026

Specifications and prices change frequently — confirm current details with the supplier before purchasing.

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