AGIBOT ranked first worldwide in humanoid robot shipment volume and market share in 2025, according to General-Purpose Embodied Intelligent Robot 2026, a report published by Omdia. The report states that AGIBOT shipped more than 5,100 humanoid robots during the year, representing approximately 39 percent of global shipments.
Omdia estimates that global humanoid robot shipments reached about 13,000 units in 2025, marking a period of accelerated commercial adoption across multiple application areas. Within this market, AGIBOT accounted for the largest share by both volume and percentage, placing it first globally on the two measures cited in the report.
The company’s humanoid robot portfolio includes full-sized humanoids, compact half-sized models, and wheeled embodied robots. According to the report, these systems have been deployed commercially in settings such as reception and hospitality, entertainment and performance, industrial manufacturing, logistics sorting, security patrols, data collection, and research and educational environments.
Omdia evaluated leading humanoid robot developers using a heatmap-based model covering eight dimensions, including mobility, payload capacity, manipulation, perception and navigation, artificial intelligence learning, customization, scalability of production and deployment, and commercial impact. AGIBOT received an “Advanced Capability” rating in six of the eight categories, the highest number of top-tier ratings awarded to any company in the assessment.
The report also notes that advances in generative artificial intelligence are contributing to closer integration between AI systems and robotics, enabling robots to move beyond predefined tasks toward broader autonomous learning and adaptability. Within this context, Omdia identifies AGIBOT as part of a group of companies it categorizes as the industry’s “first tier,” alongside Unitree and Tesla. Omdia projects continued expansion of the humanoid robot market, forecasting that global annual shipments could reach 2.6 million units by 2035.
