Boston Dynamics has unveiled the new industry-ready Atlas, a humanoid designed as a practical industrial tool for warehouses and factories. Atlas can operate 24/7 in extreme temperatures, and uses AI to adapt to its environment. Production has already started.
After a creepy launch video followed by wowing us with backflips and dance moves, Boston Dynamics has finally gotten down to business. The robotics company has just unveiled the production version of Atlas, a humanoid robot built for serious industrial work. With the first units arriving this year, Atlas has already landed its first job at a Hyundai facility, marking the robot’s first deployment in a real-world industrial setting.
“For more than 30 years, Boston Dynamics has been building some of the world’s most advanced robots,” says Robert Playter, CEO of Boston Dynamics, in a press release. “This is the best robot we have ever built. Atlas is going to revolutionize the way industry works, and it marks the first step toward a long-term goal we have dreamed about since we were children – useful robots that can walk into our homes and help make our lives safer, more productive, and more fulfilling.”
Boston Dynamics has also announced a partnership with DeepMind, Alphabet’s British-American artificial intelligence research lab, to accelerate the humanoid’s capabilities. The collaboration will focus on teaching the robot new tasks more quickly and improving its contextual understanding of factory and warehouse operations. And when one Atlas learns a new task, that knowledge or skill can be deployed instantly across the entire fleet.
This version of the robot is built for warehouse and factory roles – component sequencing, machine tending, and order fulfillment – though Boston Dynamics claims its systems can be customized in less than 24 hours to adapt to other tasks. Production of the new Atlas has started at Boston Dynamics’ Boston headquarters, according to the company, with initial customer deployments scheduled for 2026 at Google DeepMind and Hyundai facilities.
Hyundai is a majority shareholder in Boston Dynamics, and is planning to build a new robotics facility that’s capable of churning out 30,000 robots every year – though that will likely include Spot robodogs and other units. More Atlas customers will be added to the roster from 2027.

