The Boston Dynamics Atlas is the most technically advanced humanoid robot in production, featuring 56 degrees of freedom, fully rotational joints that move beyond the human range of motion, a 2.3-meter reach, and the ability to lift 50 kg (110 lbs). The latest fully electric version was unveiled at CES 2026 — where it won CNET's "Best Robot" award — and entered production immediately at Boston Dynamics' headquarters. Standing approximately 150 cm tall and weighing 89 kg, Atlas is built for enterprise-grade industrial automation. It is estimated at approximately $420,000 per unit. All 2026 production units are committed to Hyundai's Robotics Metaplant Application Center and Google DeepMind. Additional customers will be onboarded starting in early 2027.
Price and Availability
Atlas is not available for general purchase as of April 2026. It is deployed exclusively through enterprise partnerships.
| Milestone | Status | Timeline |
|---|---|---|
| Original hydraulic Atlas unveiled | Completed | July 2013 |
| Hydraulic Atlas retired | Completed | April 2024 |
| Electric Atlas announced | Completed | April 2024 |
| Production-ready Atlas unveiled at CES 2026 | Completed | January 5, 2026 |
| Production begun at Boston HQ | Active | January 2026 |
| Hyundai RMAC deployment (Savannah, Georgia) | Active | 2026 |
| Google DeepMind partnership (AI/LBM training) | Active | 2026 |
| Additional customers onboarded | Planned | Early 2027 |
| Hyundai robotics factory (30,000 units/year capacity) | Planned | 2028 |
| Estimated unit price | ~$420,000 | Current |
| Hyundai total US robotics investment | $26 billion | Multi-year |
Full Specifications
Hydraulic Atlas (2013–2024) vs Electric Atlas (2024–Present)
| Spec | Hydraulic Atlas (retired) | Electric Atlas (production 2026) |
|---|---|---|
| Actuation | Hydraulic | Fully electric (custom high-power actuators) |
| Height | ~150 cm (4 ft 11 in) | ~150 cm (4 ft 11 in) |
| Weight | ~89 kg (196 lbs) | ~89 kg (196 lbs) |
| DOF | 28 | 56 |
| Joint rotation | Limited | Full 360° at key joints — beyond human range of motion |
| Reach | ~2 m | Up to 2.3 m (7.5 ft) |
| Payload (instantaneous lift) | Not published for public | 50 kg (110 lbs) |
| Payload (sustained) | Not published for public | 30 kg (66 lbs) |
| Noise | Loud (hydraulic pumps) | Quiet (electric actuators) |
| Maintenance | Hydraulic fluid changes, seal replacements | Significantly reduced |
| Manufacturing | Research prototype, hand-built | Designed for automotive supply chains, 3D-printed titanium/aluminum |
| Efficiency | Lower | 85–90% electrical-to-mechanical |
Chassis and Build
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Height | ~150 cm (4 ft 11 in) |
| Weight | ~89 kg (196 lbs) |
| Total DOF | 56 (industry record for production humanoid) |
| Joint rotation | Full 360° at key joints |
| Reach | Up to 2.3 m (7.5 ft) |
| Materials | 3D-printed titanium and aluminum components — optimized strength-to-weight ratio |
| Hands | Three-fingered design (revised at CES 2026 from earlier unconventional gripper) |
| Design | Humanoid, upright, with illuminated ring-light face |
| Foot placement precision | Sub-10 cm |
Performance
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Payload (instantaneous lift) | 50 kg (110 lbs) |
| Payload (sustained) | 30 kg (66 lbs) |
| Demonstrated capabilities | Backflips, parkour, dynamic jumping, box lifting, packing, sorting, dancing, push recovery, terrain navigation |
| Movements beyond human range | Yes — fully rotational joints enable postures and reaches impossible for humans |
| Fall recovery | Yes — autonomous |
| Battery swap | Self-swappable — robot autonomously changes its own belly-mounted batteries |
Battery and Power
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Battery | High-density lithium-ion, belly-mounted |
| Autonomous battery swap | Yes — Atlas changes its own batteries for continuous operation without downtime |
| Runtime | Not officially published — continuous operation enabled via self-swap |
Sensors and Perception
| Feature | Value |
|---|---|
| LiDAR | Yes |
| Stereo cameras | Yes |
| RGB cameras | Yes |
| Depth sensors | Yes |
| Force sensors | In limbs |
| IMU | Yes |
| Gyroscopes | Yes |
| Joint sensors | Position, velocity, and torque on all joints |
| Human detection | Yes — enables operation without physical safety barriers |
Computing and AI
| Feature | Value |
|---|---|
| Compute platform | NVIDIA Jetson Thor (800 TFLOPS AI performance) |
| AI approach | Large Behavior Models (LBM) for general-purpose autonomy |
| Google DeepMind partnership | Foundation model training for advanced manipulation and learning from demonstration |
| Control modes | Autonomous, teleoperated, tablet interface |
| Fleet management | Boston Dynamics Orbit platform — WMS integration, barcode/RFID scanning |
| Safety | Human detection enables barrier-free collaborative operation |
Environmental Tolerance
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Water resistance | Yes — tolerates water exposure |
| Operating temperature | -20°C to 40°C |
| Designed for | Industrial environments, factory floors, warehouses, disaster response |
Who Is Atlas For?
Hyundai Automotive Manufacturing
The primary customer. Hyundai's Robotics Metaplant Application Center (RMAC) in Savannah, Georgia will deploy Atlas fleets for assembly line tasks, material handling, quality control, and parts sequencing. Hyundai plans to have Atlas performing component assembly by 2030. The automotive supply chain compatibility of Atlas's components is a key design driver.
Google DeepMind AI Research
Google DeepMind is training Atlas with Large Behavior Models — foundation AI models for general-purpose humanoid intelligence. This is cutting-edge research that could unlock capabilities far beyond current industrial tasks, positioning Atlas as a platform for embodied AI breakthroughs.
Future Enterprise Customers (2027+)
Additional customers will be onboarded starting early 2027. Targeted sectors include heavy-duty warehouse operations (50 kg payload exceeds lighter humanoids like Digit), disaster response, infrastructure inspection, and applications requiring movements beyond human range.
Buyer's Guide: What Enterprise Buyers Need to Know
You Cannot Buy Atlas in 2026
All 2026 production is committed to Hyundai and Google DeepMind. New customers will be accepted starting early 2027. If you need a humanoid robot now, Atlas is not an option.
The Price Is Premium Enterprise
At an estimated $420,000, Atlas is the most expensive production humanoid on the market. The ROI math only works for high-value industrial operations where the 50 kg payload, 56 DOF, and beyond-human-range movements justify the investment over cheaper alternatives.
30 Years of R&D Behind It
Boston Dynamics has been building humanoid robots since the original Atlas in 2013, and legged robots since the 1990s. This is not a startup's first product — it is the culmination of three decades of research and over a dozen previous robot platforms. The engineering maturity is unmatched in the humanoid space.
Hyundai's Manufacturing Scale
Hyundai plans a dedicated robotics production facility capable of producing 30,000 Atlas units per year by 2028. This automotive-grade manufacturing infrastructure is designed to drive costs down over time, though near-term pricing will remain enterprise-grade.
Boston Dynamics Atlas vs Similar Robots
- Atlas vs Tesla Optimus: Atlas has dramatically more DOF (56 vs ~28), higher payload (50 kg vs 20 kg), greater reach (2.3 m), and 30+ years of robotics R&D behind it. Optimus targets a price 15–20× lower ($20,000–$30,000) and has Tesla's manufacturing scale. Atlas is the capability leader; Optimus is the price disruptor. Neither is available for general purchase in 2026.
- Atlas vs Apptronik Apollo: Apollo has 71 DOF (more than Atlas's 56) and is further along in multi-customer commercial deployment (Mercedes-Benz, GXO, Jabil). Atlas has higher payload (50 kg vs 25 kg), self-swapping batteries, and superior athletic capability. Atlas is the premium industrial option; Apollo is the broader enterprise platform.
- Atlas vs Agility Digit: Digit is commercially deployed and generating revenue at ~$250,000. Atlas offers dramatically more capability (56 DOF, 50 kg payload) at a higher price (~$420,000) but is not yet available beyond Hyundai/Google. Digit specializes in logistics tote handling; Atlas targets heavy-duty industrial work.
- Atlas vs Unitree H1: The H1 ($90,000) is one-fifth the estimated Atlas price. The H1 holds the walking speed record (3.3 m/s) but has far fewer DOF (19–27 vs 56) and lower payload. The H1 is a research platform; Atlas is an enterprise production system.
- Atlas vs Unitree H2: The H2 ($29,900) is roughly 1/14 of Atlas's price. The H2 has 31 DOF and 360 N·m leg torque but cannot match Atlas's 50 kg payload, 56 DOF, or beyond-human-range joint rotation. Different price tiers for fundamentally different applications.
- Atlas vs Figure 03: Figure 03 targets home and light industrial use at ~$20,000. Atlas targets heavy industrial work at ~$420,000. Figure 03 has more advanced AI for domestic tasks (Helix VLA); Atlas has superior physical capability. No overlap in buyer.









