Chinese embodied AI and humanoid robotics company Robotera has raised more than $200 million in a new funding round aimed at accelerating the commercialization and large-scale deployment of its humanoid robot systems. The round was led by SF Group and included participation from major investors such as HSG, IDG Capital, Hillhouse Investment, and CICC Capital, reflecting growing investor confidence in embodied intelligence technologies.
The funding comes shortly after Robotera completed another major strategic financing round earlier in 2026, highlighting strong market demand for robotics companies that are moving beyond prototypes into real-world industrial applications. According to the company, investor interest significantly exceeded its original fundraising target.
Robotera specializes in humanoid robots designed for logistics, industrial automation, and commercial operations. The company has already deployed robotic systems across more than ten logistics centers through partnerships with organizations such as China Post and SF Group. These robots are being used for parcel sorting and warehouse-related operations, with the company claiming high levels of operational efficiency and continuous 24-hour performance capability.
A major focus of the company is its vertically integrated robotics architecture, with more than 95 percent of core hardware components reportedly developed in-house. Robotera has emphasized advancements in dexterous hand technology and embodied AI systems that combine vision, language, and action models to improve robotic manipulation and real-world adaptability.
The company plans to expand deployments beyond logistics into industries such as automotive manufacturing, electronics, and service sectors. It has also begun thousand-unit robot deliveries in 2026, signaling a shift toward large-scale commercialization as competition intensifies within the global humanoid robotics industry.
Robotera’s rapid growth reflects broader momentum in the robotics and embodied AI market, where investors are increasingly backing companies capable of demonstrating practical industrial applications and scalable deployment models. Industry observers view this funding round as another sign that humanoid robotics is transitioning from experimental development toward commercial adoption across multiple sectors.







