Insider Brief
- Hyundai Motor Group will raise its U.S. investment plan to $26 billion over the next four years, adding $5 billion to its March pledge and prioritizing a new robotics factory.
- The new facility will produce up to 30,000 robots annually, strengthening Hyundai’s U.S. robotics hub alongside Boston Dynamics and expanding the company’s ecosystem in advanced automation.
- Hyundai will also deepen commitments in automobiles, steel, AI, and autonomous driving, including through Motional, its joint venture with Aptiv, while boosting U.S. supply chain resilience for EV components and steel.
Hyundai Motor Group is boosting its U.S. investment plan to $26 billion over the next four years, adding $5 billion to its March pledge as it leans into robotics, steel and carmaking under Washington’s reshaped industrial policies, the company has announced.
The South Korean auto giant made the announcement Tuesday following Executive Chair Chung Euisun’s attendance at the Korea-U.S. Business Roundtable in Washington, held after the Korea-U.S. summit. The company said the new money will primarily fund a robotics factory, while also deepening commitments in automobiles, steel, autonomous driving, artificial intelligence and other next-generation businesses.
Hyundai said it will build a U.S. robotics hub capable of producing 30,000 units annually, serving as a center for design, manufacturing, testing, and deployment, aiming at strengthening its role in the global robotics industry. The company acquired Massachusetts-based Boston Dynamics in 2021, known for its humanoid robot Atlas and its four-legged robot Spot, widely used for inspection tasks. The company has described robotics as essential to broadening its ecosystem of connected machines and intelligent systems.
Hyundai also noted it is moving faster into artificial intelligence and autonomous driving. Motional, Hyundai’s joint venture with Aptiv, is developing self-driving vehicles in the U.S., while Boston Dynamics continues work on next-generation robotics platforms. Hyundai said collaborations with American firms in software-defined vehicles and AI will be key to commercial rollouts over the coming years.




