China Releases National Standards for Humanoid Robotics and Embodied AI

Insider Brief

  • China has issued its first national standard system for humanoid robots and embodied AI, establishing a regulatory framework for the sector’s full industrial chain and lifecycle, according to Xinhua.
  • The framework, unveiled Feb. 28 in Beijing, is organized into six components — basic commonality, brain-like and intelligent computing, limbs and components, complete machines and systems, application, and safety and ethics — and was drafted by more than 120 institutions under the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology’s technical committee.
  • The move follows rapid industry growth in 2025, when more than 140 domestic manufacturers released over 330 humanoid models, and is intended to guide technical standards, data management, safety protocols and compliance as China scales humanoid robot production.

China has released its first national standard system for humanoid robots and embodied artificial intelligence, marking a formal move to regulate a fast-scaling sector, according to state media outlet Xinhua.

The framework was unveiled at the annual meeting of Humanoid Robots and Embodied Intelligence Standardization in Beijing on Feb. 28, and is designed to cover the full industrial chain and lifecycle of humanoid robotics.

What Does the Framework Cover?

The framework is structured around six components:

  • Basic commonality
  • Brain-like and intelligent computing
  • Limbs and components
  • Complete machines and systems
  • Application
  • Safety and ethics

More than 120 research institutes, companies and industry users participated in drafting the system under the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology’s technical committee for humanoid robots and embodied intelligence, Xinhua reported.

Standards related to brain-like computing define specifications for embodied AI systems’ core processing functions and intelligent computing infrastructure, including data management across the model training and deployment cycle. Application standards address development, operation and maintenance across use cases, while safety and ethics requirements are intended to apply throughout a robot’s lifecycle to support compliance as the technology evolves.

The release follows a year of rapid expansion in China’s humanoid robotics industry. Xinhua cited official data showing that more than 140 domestic manufacturers launched over 330 humanoid robot models in 2025, described by authorities as the first year of mass production. National and local governments have identified humanoid robotics as a strategic priority in mid- to long-term development plans.

The new standards are expected to guide technical requirements and safety protocols as the industry scales.

Greg Bock

Greg Bock is an award-winning investigative journalist with more than 25 years of experience in print, digital, and broadcast news. His reporting has spanned crime, politics, business and technology, earning multiple Keystone Awards and a Pennsylvania Association of Broadcasters honors. Through the Associated Press and Nexstar Media Group, his coverage has reached audiences across the United States.

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