Top 10 robotics developments of November 2025

Top 10 robotics developments of November 2025

We kicked off November 2025 with our inaugural Robotics Startup Radar, which aims to help readers understand the startup landscape by highlighting 100 unique companies from around the world. Large funding rounds, new robot releases, and new partnerships also drew our readers’ attention.

Here are the 10 most popular articles on this site in the past month. Subscribe to The Robot Report Newsletter and listen to The Robot Report Podcast to stay up to date on the latest robotics developments.


1X Neo humanoid

 

10. Teleop, not autonomy, is the path for 1X’s NEO humanoid

1X Technologies’ NEO humanoid is impressive. It has a sleek design and strong manipulation and teleoperation skills. However, there’s a major gap between what NEO can do today and the autonomous robot the company is promising to deliver to consumers in 2026. Read more.


The Roomba Max 705 Combo robot.9. iRobot revenue continues to drop with ‘no sources’ of additional capital

iRobot shared grim Q3 2025 financials in November 2025. The Roomba maker brought in $145.8 million in revenue, a 24.6% drop from the $193.4 million it brought in in Q3 2024. Last quarter, iRobot’s revenue was down 23.3% year over year. iRobot has struggled for a number of reasons. Read more.


Physical Intelligence says its VLA model can accelerate robot productivity for tasks such as making espresso, shown here.8. Physical Intelligence raises $600M to advance robot foundation models

While ChatGPT and other generative AI engines can draw from the entire Web, robots require real-world data and foundation models to transcend more deterministic programming and learn new skills. Physical Intelligence raised Series B funding to develop models for robots to understand and interact with the material world. Read more.


Young Liu, Chairman of Hon Hai Technology Group (Foxconn), and Wendy Tan White, CEO of Intrinsic.7. Foxconn, Intrinsic build flexible robots for U.S. factories

Intrinsic and Foxconn are teaming up to create the AI that powers robotic systems for Foxconn’s U.S. factories. Intrinsic is an Alphabet subsidiary that builds robotics development tools, while Foxconn is the world’s largest contract manufacturer for consumer electronics. The partnership was announced at Foxconn’s Hon Hai Tech Day in Taipei. Read more.


A Digit humanoid robot from Agility Robotics designed with Foxglove.6. Foxglove raises Series B to scale its data platform for roboticists

Foxglove, a San Francisco-based startup building a data and observability platform for robotics companies, said it has raised $40 million in funding. The company has now raised more than $58 million since its 2021 founding. Read more.


Armstrong Robotics' arms cleaning dishes.5. Armstrong Robotics wants to create general-purpose kitchen robots, starting with dishwashing

At each full-service restaurant in the world, dishwashers spend hours every day cleaning dishes to keep things running. Armstrong Robotics said it plans to use robotics and artificial intelligence to free these workers for more customer-facing tasks. Read more.


Agile Robots will manufacture the Agile ONE humanoid, shown here, in Germany.4. Agile Robots launches Agile ONE industrial humanoid in November 2025

More humanoid robots are coming to market. Agile Robots SE launched Agile ONE, its first humanoid. The company said the robot is designed to work safely and efficiently alongside people and other systems in industrial settings. Read more.


First generation of the Roomba robot vacuum. iRobot announced poor financial results in November 2025.3. This time, iRobot needs help cleaning up a mess

Few companies have done more for robotics than iRobot since its founding in 1990. iRobot has been the household name in consumer robotics, putting more than 50 million Roomba robot vacuums into homes around the world. The Roomba brought robots out of the lab and into millions of homes, sparking curiosity, comfort, and even affection for machines. Read more.


With advanced motion control, the UR8 Long can conduct automotive quality inspection. Universal Robots, MiR, and parent Teradyne Robotics announced layoffs in November 2025.2. Teradyne Robotics lays off another 14% of workforce

Roughly nine months after reducing its global workforce by 10%, Teradyne Robotics had another round of layoffs in November 2025, cutting about another 14% of its staff worldwide as revenue growth has not matched expectations. Teradyne owns cobot maker Universal Robots and autonomous mobile robot developer Mobile Industrial Robots. Read more.


The inaugural Robotics Startup Radar debuted in November 2025.1. 100 robotics startups to watch

Welcome to the inaugural Startup Radar, an in-depth report that shines a spotlight on the next generation of robotics. The Startup Radar profiles 100 robotics startups, each five years old or younger, that are working to shape the future of robotics. Read more.

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