Germany’s NEURA Robotics is has reportedly completed one of the largest funding rounds seen so far in European robotics. Bloomberg reported in early March that the company was raising about €1 billion in a round that would value the humanoid robotics developer at around €4 billion. A month later, Bloomberg referred to that round again as a completed fact in a broader article on Europe’s position in humanoid robotics.
That places NEURA among a small group of European deep-tech companies attracting capital on a very different scale from the sector’s usual funding pattern. KPMG’s Q1 2026 Venture Pulse report also lists NEURA among the quarter’s largest German deals, although it cites a higher figure of $1.8 billion. That difference has not been clearly explained in public, so the most consistent reported figure remains the roughly €1 billion cited by Bloomberg and market-data reports. (KPMG)
MarketScreener, using S&P Capital IQ transaction data, described the round as completed on 5 March 2026 and named Tether, Amazon and Prime Capital as co-lead investors. It also listed Qualcomm Ventures, Bosch, Roland Berger and Schaeffler among the participants. Bloomberg’s later April coverage separately mentioned Amazon and Qualcomm among the investors, reinforcing the picture that large industrial and technology backers are involved. (bloomberg.com)
NEURA, founded in 2019, presents itself as a developer of cognitive and humanoid robotics systems and has more than 600 employees. Its product and platform strategy spans industrial robotics, collaborative systems and humanoid development, including the Neuraverse ecosystem. That broader positioning helps explain why the company is being watched as one of Europe’s main attempts to build a robotics player with both hardware and software scale.
