Insider Brief
- At CES 2026, Hyundai Motor Group unveiled its AI Robotics Strategy, outlining a human-centered roadmap for Physical AI built around large-scale deployment of robots across manufacturing, logistics, mobility, and service environments.
- The strategy is anchored by three pillars: deploying co-working robots alongside humans, building an end-to-end AI robotics value chain with Boston Dynamics, and partnering with leading AI firms including Google DeepMind and NVIDIA to accelerate training, simulation, and safe commercialization.
- Hyundai said it plans to mass-produce and deploy Atlas humanoid robots across its global facilities beginning later this decade, supported by new robotics manufacturing capacity, a Physical AI application center, and a robotics-as-a-service model aimed at scaling adoption across industries beyond automotive.
Hyundai Motor Group said it plans to invest $26 billion in the United States over four years starting in 2025, expanding partnerships in humanoid robotics, AI, autonomous driving, and related technologies while building a new robotics facility with annual capacity of 30,000 units.
The company indicated the investment is intended to strengthen U.S.–Korea industrial ties, support economic growth, and position the U.S. site as a production hub for its future mobility and robotics strategy, as it outlined a new AI Robotics Strategy at CES 2026. The plan, positions robotics as a core extension of the company’s manufacturing, logistics, and mobility operations rather than a standalone technology bet, according to the company.
The strategy centers on what Hyundai describes as physical AI — systems that combine hardware, real-world data, and software to make autonomous decisions in operational environments. Hyundai said it intends to apply this approach across its value chain, using factories, logistics hubs, and sales operations as both deployment sites and continuous training grounds for robots.
Hyundai’s roadmap rests on three pillars. The first focuses on co-working robots designed to operate alongside humans, initially in manufacturing settings where repetitive, hazardous, or physically demanding tasks dominate. The second pillar formalizes the company’s integration with Boston Dynamics, combining Hyundai’s manufacturing scale with Boston Dynamics’ robotics engineering to build an end-to-end robotics value chain. The third pillar extends outward through partnerships with AI leaders, including Google DeepMind and NVIDIA, to accelerate training, simulation, and deployment.
A central focus of the strategy is the Atlas humanoid robot from Boston Dynamics. Hyundai said Atlas is being developed as a general-purpose industrial system, capable of material sequencing, assembly support, and machine tending in existing factory layouts. The company plans a phased rollout, beginning with tightly validated tasks such as parts sequencing in 2028, expanding to more complex assembly operations by 2030. Atlas robots are expected to be deployed first at Hyundai facilities, including the Hyundai Motor Group Metaplant America in Georgia, before wider commercial adoption.
To support scale, Hyundai indicated it is building a Group Value Network that links robotics, components, logistics, and software. This includes data-driven “software-defined factories,” a U.S.-based Robot Metaplant Application Center scheduled to open in 2026, and standardized components supplied by affiliates such as Hyundai Mobis. Hyundai said this structure is designed to shorten development cycles, improve reliability, and enable mass production similar to automotive manufacturing.
The company said it also plans to expand robotics through a service-based model, offering ongoing software updates, maintenance, and remote monitoring. Existing deployments of Boston Dynamics’ Spot and Stretch robots in logistics and inspection are being used as reference points for broader rollout into energy, construction, and facility management.
Hyundai said the strategy reflects its view that humanoid robots will become a major segment of industrial automation, with long-term applications extending well beyond automotive manufacturing.
Image credit: Hyundai




