AgiBot has announced that its 5,000th humanoid robot has rolled off the production line, marking one of the largest confirmed manufacturing volumes in the humanoid robotics sector to date. The milestone, achieved at the company’s Shanghai facility, centres on the latest model in its Lingxi line, the X2, and signals that AgiBot considers itself ready for sustained mass-production.
The company reports that the 5,000 units produced to date span three product families: the Expedition (A-Series), Lingxi (X-Series) and Spirit (G-Series). According to AgiBot, these ranges reflect different application domains, from industrial to service-oriented environments. The Lingxi X2, designated as the 5,000th unit, features 28 degrees of freedom, a weight of 33.8 kilograms and a full stack of self-developed components, including a joint module architecture, power-management system, a domain controller and what the company calls a “cerebellum controller” designed for balance and motion coordination.
AgiBot states that reaching this production level demonstrates “batch-level production capability,” a term the company uses to indicate readiness for scaled deployment. While the announcement focuses on manufacturing output, broader details on real-world deployment, unit pricing, field performance and operational integration have not been disclosed. AgiBot has positioned the X2 and its related product lines as platforms for industrial automation, logistics and general-purpose tasks, joining a growing number of manufacturers attempting to move humanoid robots from prototype demonstrations to routine operational use.
The milestone follows a rapid expansion trajectory. Founded in 2023, AgiBot produced several hundred units during its initial two years before aiming for several thousand in 2025. The company’s strategy appears to be based on multi-line development rather than a single flagship model, suggesting an effort to serve varied customer requirements and accelerate iteration cycles across hardware and control systems.
Although producing 5,000 humanoid robots places AgiBot among the highest-volume manufacturers in the space, the announcement leaves open questions about deployment scale, integration into existing workflows and long-term serviceability. As more companies enter high-volume humanoid production, the focus is shifting toward reliability, lifecycle costs and the ability of robots to perform sustained work in commercial environments.
