The Boston Dynamics Spot is the world's most widely deployed industrial quadruped robot, with over 1,500 units in customer hands across construction, energy, mining, manufacturing, and public safety. Starting at $74,500 for the Explorer Kit, Spot stands roughly 84 cm tall, weighs 32.5 kg (with two batteries), moves at up to 1.6 m/s, carries 14 kg of payload, and operates for approximately 90 minutes per battery. It features IP54 weather resistance, 360-degree stereo depth perception, autonomous inspection capabilities, and an optional 6-DOF robotic arm. Spot is commercially available now through Boston Dynamics' online store with 6–8 week delivery.
Price Range
Spot is sold directly by Boston Dynamics. Pricing is modular — the base robot is the starting point, and payloads, software, and accessories scale the total cost significantly.
| Configuration | Price |
|---|---|
| Spot Explorer Kit (base robot + 2 batteries + charger + controller + case) | $74,500 |
| Additional battery | $4,620 |
| Spot CAM+ PTZ (30× zoom camera + 5-mic array) | $29,750 |
| Enhanced Autonomy Package (360 cameras, lights, comms, Velodyne VLP-16 LiDAR) | $34,570 |
| GPU AI Core (edge inference board) | $24,500 |
| Spot Arm (6-DOF manipulator + gripper) | Contact sales |
| Expansion ports (payload mounting) | $1,275 |
| Typical inspection deployment (robot + sensors + docking) | $130,000–$150,000 |
| Full enterprise bundle (robot + arm + LiDAR + thermal + docking + cloud) | $150,000–$195,000 |
| 3-year total ownership cost (maintenance, batteries, firmware) | ~$25,000 above purchase price |
| Annual maintenance (preventive + parts + firmware) | ~$6,000 |
| Battery replacement (2 packs, after ~500 cycles) | ~$9,240 |
Based on publicly listed prices from Boston Dynamics' online store, IEEE Spectrum reporting, Standard Bots, and RMUS integrator pricing as of April 2026. Spot is restricted to commercial, industrial, or accredited academic customers — no personal or hobby purchases.
Full Specifications
Chassis and Build
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Length | 1,100 mm (43.3 in) |
| Width | 500 mm (19.7 in) |
| Height (standing) | 840 mm (33 in) |
| Height (sitting) | 191 mm (7.5 in) |
| Weight (with 2 batteries) | 32.5 kg (71.6 lbs) |
| IP rating | IP54 (dust-protected, splash-resistant) |
| Operating temperature | -20°C to 45°C |
| Frame | Ruggedized industrial-grade construction |
| DOF | 12 (2 hip actuators + 1 knee actuator per leg × 4 legs) |
| Designed to | ISO 12100 (risk assessment) and IEC 60204-1 (electrical safety) |
Performance
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Top speed | 1.6 m/s (5.76 km/h / 3.6 mph) |
| Payload capacity | 14 kg (30.8 lbs) |
| Stair climbing | Yes |
| Terrain handling | Stairs, rubble, slopes, gravel, grass, uneven industrial surfaces |
| Perception | 5 stereo depth camera pairs (2 front, 1 rear, 1 each side) — 360° coverage |
| Obstacle avoidance | Automatic, with configurable 0.075–0.5 m safety buffer |
| Autonomous missions | Yes — pre-programmed inspection routes via Autowalk |
| Self-righting | Yes — can roll over to expose battery for replacement |
Battery and Power
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Battery type | Removable, rechargeable lithium-ion |
| Batteries included | 2 hot-swappable packs in Explorer Kit |
| Runtime per battery | ~90 minutes (terrain and payload dependent) |
| Battery life (cycles) | ~500 charge cycles before degradation |
| Charging | Spot Power Supply, or autonomous Spot Dock |
| Continuous operation | Hot-swap batteries in the field, or autonomous docking station for 24/7 patrols |
Spot Arm (Optional)
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| DOF | 6 + gripper |
| Weight | 8 kg (arm + gripper) |
| Reach (full extension + gripper) | 985 mm |
| Max height (arm extended, tall stand) | 1,820 mm |
| Capabilities | Door opening, valve turning, switch manipulation, object pickup, sample collection |
Sensors and Perception
| Feature | Value |
|---|---|
| Stereo depth cameras | 5 pairs (10 cameras total) — 360° coverage |
| LiDAR (optional) | Velodyne VLP-16 (Enhanced Autonomy Package) |
| Thermal imaging (optional) | Available through payload partners |
| PTZ camera (optional) | Spot CAM+ with 30× optical zoom |
| GPU AI Core (optional) | Edge inference for real-time defect detection |
| Microphones | 5-mic array (with Spot CAM+) |
Software and Fleet Management
| Feature | Value |
|---|---|
| Control | Tablet controller (included), Orbit web application, mobile app |
| Autonomous missions | Autowalk — record and replay inspection routes |
| Fleet management | Orbit (formerly Scout) — centralized web dashboard |
| API / SDK | Full Spot SDK — Python, gRPC, ROS integration |
| Data integration | WMS, SCADA, digital twin platforms |
| OTA updates | Yes — firmware and capability updates |
| Cloud | Boston Dynamics cloud platform for data aggregation and analytics |
What Is Spot Actually Used For?
With 1,500+ units deployed globally, Spot has proven use cases across multiple industries.
Industrial Inspection and Predictive Maintenance
The primary use case. Spot autonomously patrols facilities on pre-programmed routes, collecting thermal images, visual data, acoustic readings, and gas measurements. Deployed at power plants, oil refineries, chemical facilities, and manufacturing floors. Digital twin creation from collected data enables predictive maintenance programs.
Construction Site Monitoring
Progress tracking, as-built vs. design comparison, BIM integration, and safety monitoring. Spot maps construction sites and compares real-world conditions against plans.
Hazardous Environment Response
Nuclear facilities, energized electrical substations, chemical spills, and post-disaster assessment. Spot enters environments too dangerous for humans, collects data, and returns without risk to personnel.
Public Safety and Law Enforcement
Remote investigation of suspicious packages, bomb threat assessment, active shooter reconnaissance, and HAZMAT incidents. Controversial use case — Boston Dynamics prohibits weaponization.
Research and Education
Academic institutions use Spot as a platform for locomotion research, AI development, SLAM algorithms, and human-robot interaction studies. Discounted academic pricing available.
Buyer's Guide: What to Know Before Buying a Spot
The Base Price Is Just the Beginning
At $74,500, the Explorer Kit is your starting point. Most real-world deployments require additional payloads (LiDAR, thermal, PTZ camera), the Enhanced Autonomy Package, and potentially the Spot Arm — easily pushing total cost to $130,000–$195,000. Budget accordingly.
Battery Life Is the Main Limitation
At ~90 minutes per battery, Spot requires battery swaps or an autonomous docking station for extended operations. The docking station enables 24/7 autonomous patrols but adds cost. Budget for extra batteries ($4,620 each) and factor in battery replacement every ~500 cycles ($9,240 per pair).
IP54 Is Good but Not IP67
Spot handles rain and dust (IP54) but is not submersible or fully sealed like the Unitree B2 (IP67). For wet industrial environments, heavy rain deployments, or environments with standing water, confirm Spot's rating meets your requirements.
No Personal Sales
Boston Dynamics restricts Spot purchases to commercial, industrial, and accredited academic customers. No hobby or personal orders are accepted. You must demonstrate a legitimate commercial use case.
Ethical Restrictions
Boston Dynamics explicitly prohibits weaponization, using Spot to intimidate or harm people, and applications that violate privacy or civil rights laws. These are contractual terms, not just guidelines.
Total Cost of Ownership
Plan for ~$6,000/year in maintenance (preventive service, firmware updates, parts). Over 3 years, total ownership cost above the purchase price is approximately $25,000. This is an industrial tool with industrial maintenance expectations.
Boston Dynamics Spot vs Similar Robots
- Spot vs Unitree Go2: Completely different products. The Go2 ($1,600–$13,250, 15 kg) is a consumer/education robot dog. Spot ($74,500+, 32.5 kg) is an industrial inspection platform. The Go2 is for hobbyists and researchers; Spot is for power plants and construction sites. Spot has IP54 protection, 14 kg payload, enterprise software, and 1,500+ proven deployments. No overlap.
- Spot vs Unitree B2: The most direct competitor. The B2 ($100,000, 60 kg) runs faster (6 m/s vs 1.6 m/s), carries more payload (40 kg vs 14 kg), has better battery life (4–6 hours vs 90 minutes), and offers IP67 (vs IP54). Spot has a far more mature software ecosystem (Orbit fleet management, Autowalk, extensive API), a larger global install base (1,500+ units), better enterprise support, and a proven track record over many more years. Spot wins on software and ecosystem maturity; B2 wins on raw performance specs.
- Spot vs ANYbotics ANYmal: ANYmal is a Swiss industrial quadruped targeting similar inspection and patrol use cases. ANYmal is more expensive ($150,000+ estimated) with a strong European presence and advanced autonomous navigation. Spot has broader global deployment and a larger partner ecosystem.
- Spot vs Ghost Robotics Vision 60: The Vision 60 targets military and defense applications — a market Spot explicitly avoids. Different buyer, different use case, different ethical framework.









