The Unitree R1 is the cheapest capable humanoid robot ever released by a major manufacturer, starting at $4,900 for the R1 Air. Standing 123 cm tall and weighing just 25–29 kg, it was unveiled in July 2025, named one of TIME's Best Inventions of 2025, and began shipping to pre-order customers in April 2026. The R1 runs, does cartwheels, recovers from falls autonomously, and integrates a large multimodal model for voice and image interaction — all at roughly the price of a high-end laptop.
Price Range
Unitree sells the R1 in three main configurations: R1 Air, R1 (Standard), and R1 EDU. The EDU line further branches into Standard, Smart, and Pro tiers depending on computing power and hand options.
| Model | Price (Low) | Price (Average) | Price (High) |
|---|---|---|---|
| R1 Air | $4,900 | $5,500 | $6,999 |
| R1 Standard | $5,900 | $7,500 | $8,990 |
| R1 EDU Standard | $10,000 | $11,000 | $12,000 |
| R1 EDU Smart | $15,000 | $17,000 | $19,000 |
| R1 EDU Pro (with dexterous hands) | $20,000 | $27,000 | $35,000 |
Based on publicly listed prices from Unitree's official site, BotInfo.ai, RoboStore, and 4GLTEMall as of April 2026.
Full Specifications
Chassis and Build
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Height | 1,230 mm (48.4 in / 4 ft 0 in) |
| Width × Thickness (standing) | 357 × 190 mm |
| Weight (with battery) | ~25 kg (R1 Air) / ~29 kg (R1 Standard / EDU) |
| Frame material | Aluminum alloy + engineering plastic |
| Degrees of freedom | 20 (R1 Air) / 24–26 (R1 Standard) / up to 38 (EDU Pro with 5-finger hands) |
| Head DOF | 2 (Standard and EDU only — not on Air) |
| Joint motor type | Low-inertia high-speed internal rotor PMSM |
Joint Range of Motion
| Joint | Range |
|---|---|
| Waist (yaw) | ±150° |
| Waist (roll) | ±30° |
| Hip (yaw) | ±157° |
| Hip (pitch) | -168° to +146° |
| Hip (roll) | -60° to +100° |
| Knee | -10° to +139° |
Performance
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Running speed | Up to ~9 km/h (demonstrated) |
| Notable feats | Cartwheels, handstands, front flips, downhill sprints, autonomous fall recovery |
| Movement philosophy | "Movement first, tasks as well" — emphasizes diverse mobility as the foundation for task completion |
Battery and Electrical
| Spec | Value |
|---|---|
| Battery type | Smart lithium-ion, quick-release |
| Runtime | ~1 hour (mixed use) |
| Charging | Included charger, quick-swap system for extended sessions |
Sensors and Perception
| Feature | R1 Air | R1 Standard | R1 EDU |
|---|---|---|---|
| Camera | Monocular | Binocular (depth perception) | Binocular (depth perception) |
| Microphone | 4-microphone array | 4-microphone array | 4-microphone array |
| Speaker | Stereo speakers | Stereo speakers | Stereo speakers |
| IMU | Dual 6-axis IMU | Dual 6-axis IMU | Dual 6-axis IMU |
Connectivity
| Feature | Value |
|---|---|
| Wi-Fi | Wi-Fi 6, dual band |
| Bluetooth | 5.2 |
| OTA updates | Yes |
Computing and Software
| Feature | R1 Air / Standard | R1 EDU |
|---|---|---|
| Main CPU | 8-core high-performance + GPU | 8-core high-performance + GPU |
| High-compute module | — | NVIDIA Jetson Orin (40–100 TOPS, depending on tier) |
| Multimodal AI model | Yes (UnifoLM for voice + image) | Yes (UnifoLM for voice + image) |
| Secondary development / SDK | No | Yes (Linux, ROS2, Python SDK) |
| Simulation support | — | Yes (mainstream platforms supported) |
Key Difference: R1 Air vs R1 Standard vs R1 EDU
The R1 Air has 20 DOF, a monocular camera, weighs 25 kg, and has a 6-month warranty. The R1 Standard bumps to 24–26 DOF, adds binocular depth perception, waist and head joints, weighs 29 kg, and has an 8-month warranty. Neither the Air nor Standard supports custom programming — they are remote-controlled only. The R1 EDU adds NVIDIA Jetson computing, full SDK access, ROS2 support, and simulation tools. If you need to write code for the robot, you need the EDU.
Model-by-Model Breakdown: Which R1 Should You Buy?
R1 Air ($4,900) — Best for Hobbyists and First-Time Buyers
The most affordable humanoid robot from any major manufacturer. You get basic locomotion, pre-programmed tricks, and multimodal AI interaction out of the box. No programming capability. Think of it as a consumer product — impressive to own, fun to operate, but not a development platform.
R1 Standard ($5,900) — Best for Education and Demonstrations
Adds waist rotation, head movement, and binocular depth perception. Better environmental awareness and more natural movement than the Air. Still no SDK access, so this is for schools, museums, and events where the robot performs pre-loaded behaviors.
R1 EDU ($10,000–$35,000) — Best for Research and Development
The only R1 that supports custom software. Tiers range from the EDU Standard (40 TOPS Jetson) through to the EDU Pro D (38 DOF with 5-finger BrainCo hands featuring 17 tactile sensors). For university labs that need a programmable humanoid at a fraction of G1 pricing, this is the right choice. At 25 kg, you can also deploy 3–4 R1s for the price of a single G1, making it attractive for swarm robotics research.
Buyer's Guide: What to Know Before Buying a Unitree R1
The R1 just started shipping in April 2026. Here's what every buyer should understand.
Base models cannot be programmed. This is the most important thing to understand. The R1 Air and R1 Standard are closed systems. You control them with a handheld remote and the Unitree app. If your plan involves writing any custom software — locomotion algorithms, perception pipelines, ROS2 nodes — you must buy the R1 EDU. There is no way to upgrade an Air or Standard to EDU after purchase.
Battery life is short. One hour of mixed use is workable for demos and lab sessions, but plan accordingly. Keep spare batteries on hand. The quick-release system makes swapping fast.
It is brand new hardware. The R1 has been shipping for less than a month as of April 2026. Expect early-adopter quirks, firmware updates, and ecosystem maturation over the coming months. Unitree has a strong track record of improving products post-launch (the Go2 received dozens of OTA improvements), but the R1 is not yet as battle-tested as the G1.
Warranty varies by model. R1 Air gets 6 months. R1 Standard gets 8 months. EDU models get 12 months. Not waterproof, not dustproof — same as all Unitree consumer robots.
Compare carefully against the G1. The R1 is 70% cheaper than the G1 but also has shorter battery life (1 hour vs 2 hours), fewer degrees of freedom (26 vs 43), and a smaller frame. For serious research, the G1 remains the more capable platform. The R1's strength is accessibility and multi-unit deployments on a budget.
Shipping and lead times. Pre-orders are being fulfilled in queue order. New orders placed today will ship based on queue position. Factor in 30–90 days for delivery depending on the configuration and dealer.
Unitree R1 vs Similar Robots
- Unitree R1 vs Unitree G1: The G1 costs roughly 3× more ($13,500+), is taller (132 cm vs 123 cm), heavier (35 kg vs 25 kg), has up to 43 DOF (vs 26), and 2× the battery life. The G1 is the proven research platform; the R1 is the affordable entry point. Choose the R1 for budget, education, and multi-robot setups. Choose the G1 for maximum capability.
- Unitree R1 vs Tesla Optimus: Optimus is not available for public purchase. Tesla targets $20,000–$30,000 at scale, with sales not expected until 2027. The R1 is shipping now at $4,900.
- Unitree R1 vs 1X NEO: The NEO costs approximately $20,000 and targets home use. The R1 EDU targets research with full SDK at $10,000+. Different markets, similar price range at the EDU level.
- Unitree R1 vs Noetix Bumi: The Bumi is cheaper at $1,400 but has fewer capabilities and is from an early-stage company with limited deployment data. The R1 comes from a proven manufacturer with 30,000+ quadrupeds and 5,500+ humanoids shipped.









