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Robotics Market: Analysis By Component (Hardware, Software (Robotic operating system), Services); Robot Type (Industrial Robots, Delivery Robots, Drones/UAVs, Humanoids, Medical Robots, Exoskeleton, Others); Application (Industrial (Process Automation), Commercial, Residential (Personal Service), Public/ Social); Industry (Manufacturing, Retail, Education, Enterprises, Household, Healthcare, Warehouse & Logistics, Media & Entertainment, Mining, Oil & Gas, Energy & Utility, Agriculture, Travel & Tourism, Others); Region—Market Size, Industry Dynamics, Opportunity Analysis and Forecast for 2026–2035

  • Last Updated: 12-Jan-2026  |  
    Format: PDF
     |  Report ID: AA1224994  

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS

The global robotics market was valued at USD 51.51 billion in 2025. Driven by industrial automation and AI integration, it is projected to reach USD 199.50 billion by 2035, expanding at a CAGR of 14.5% during the forecast period.

Asia Pacific holds the commanding position with a 35.40% market share. This dominance is underpinned by China, which installed over 290,000 units in 2025 alone, and Japan, which is responsible for exporting 45% of the world's robotic hardware.

Hardware remains the largest segment with 44.7% market share, but the focus has shifted. High-performance AI compute modules are becoming as critical as motors. Nvidia’s robotics-specific revenue surged 72% recently, proving that the industry is prioritizing brains capable of processing generative AI on the edge.

Yes, the manufacturing industry accounts for over 20% of the market, with automotive controlling 25% of global installations. However, the demand is evolving from static arms to cognitive robots, evidenced by BMW and Tesla integrating humanoid bots like Figure 02 and Optimus into production lines.

Robotics has shifted from an option to a necessity. With 8.5 million unfilled jobs in US manufacturing and logistics, companies are automating to survive. This is driving the 42% market share in Material Handling, as firms like DHL invest hundreds of millions to replace missing human labor.

Tariffs have ended a decade of price deflation in Western robotics markets. While Chinese cobots have dropped to as low as $15,000 due to a domestic price war, North American prices have flattened or risen due to 10-20% import duties, forcing a pause in CapEx for some SMEs. 

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