TLDR
- AgiBot expects revenue to exceed $142M in 2025 while planning shipments of 5,000 humanoid robots.
- The company launched BotShare, a robot rental platform targeting expansion into more than 200 Chinese cities by 2026.
- AgiBot aims to maintain multi-fold growth in 2026 as it accelerates commercialisation and large-scale deployment.
- China’s robotics sector is pushing commercial adoption under government support for embodied intelligence technologies.
- AgiBot recently produced its 5,000th humanoid robot at its Shanghai factory, two years after its founding.
Chinese robotics start-up AgiBot expects to exceed 1 billion yuan (US$142 million) in revenue during 2025. The company also aims to ship 5,000 humanoid robots within the year. These figures reflect AgiBot’s accelerated push toward commercial-scale production and deployment in a competitive market.
AgiBot Sets Revenue Target and Launches BotShare Platform
According to SCMP, AgiBot confirmed its revenue and shipment targets at a corporate event held on Monday in Shanghai. Chairman and CEO Deng Taihua stated the company would maintain “multi-fold” growth into 2026. He added that commercialisation will remain the core focus of operations going forward.
To support its sales model, AgiBot launched BotShare, a robot rental platform designed for mainstream accessibility across urban centers. BotShare aims to operate in more than 200 Chinese cities by 2026. The platform will connect users, developers, rental providers, and manufacturers.
Jiang Qingsong, BotShare chairman and AgiBot partner, said the system is designed to simplify access to humanoid robots. He said, “We want people to rent robots like they borrow power banks.” The initiative supports Beijing’s tech development goals.
Industry Competition Intensifies as Firms Secure Large Contracts
The robotics sector in China is moving toward rapid commercialisation with policy support from the central government. Beijing views “embodied intelligence” as critical to modernising manufacturing and supporting long-term economic goals. This includes AI-integrated humanoid robots with functional applications.
Galbot, a Beijing-based competitor, secured an order for 1,000 robots from Baida Precision Manufacturing. The robots will handle raw material storage, machining, and quality checks across Baida’s production sites. Galbot received US$300 million in funding led by China Mobile.
This investment round marks the largest raised to date for companies focused on embodied intelligence. The company said proceeds will be used to expand production and meet contract obligations. Chinese start-ups continue forming partnerships with manufacturers to deploy robots at scale.
AgiBot Expands Production Footprint and Secures Major Contracts
In recent months, AgiBot has signed major commercial agreements with industrial firms. In August, Fulin Precision ordered nearly 100 robots for its automotive parts factories. Recently, AgiBot and Unitree Robotics won China Mobile contracts worth 124 million yuan.
Earlier, AgiBot completed production of its 5,000th humanoid robot at its Shanghai facility. The company launched operations just two years ago and has rapidly expanded manufacturing output. This milestone underlines AgiBot’s ability to deliver at scale.
The robotics start-up is positioned to increase shipments and revenue through 2026 as orders and demand continue to grow. AgiBot’s commercial strategy includes broad deployment across industries and integration with factory workflows. The firm remains focused on scaling operations through direct contracts and rental distribution.


