This story is from January 08, 2026
CES 2026: From butler humanoids to stair-climbing vacuums, these robots stole the show
For years, CES robots felt like carefully choreographed theatre—impressive on stage, but you'd never actually trust them with your laundry. CES 2026 changed that script entirely. This year's show floor wasn't about flashy demos or distant promises. It was about robots that companies are actually shipping, deploying, or rolling out in 2026. From home kitchens to factories, the machines on display came with production timelines, real customers, and a clear sense of purpose. The future stopped being theoretical and started folding towels (very, very slowly).
LG's CLOiD prototype stole the spotlight as a genuine home helper. Standing on wheels with articulated arms and a screen-equipped head, it folded laundry, prepped meals, and fetched drinks while coordinating with LG's ThinQ smart home ecosystem. The catch? It takes about two minutes to fold one towel, and it does it like a toddler's attempt. Still, CLOiD represents the clearest vision yet of robots handling everyday household tasks—awkwardness and all.
Boston Dynamics unveiled its production-ready electric Atlas, and it's a beast. Standing over six feet tall with 56 degrees of freedom and a 110-pound lifting capacity, Atlas is built for factory work, not friendship. It walks with fluid, confident strides and can hot-swap its own battery when needed. The real news? A partnership with Google DeepMind to integrate Gemini AI, giving Atlas the ability to reason through complex instructions. Hyundai plans to deploy it at its Georgia manufacturing plant by 2028.
Robot vacuums have always had one nemesis: stairs. Roborock's Saros Rover solves this with angled legs that let it climb step-by-step, cleaning each surface on the way up. It's slow—about 40 seconds for five steps—but does sound impressive. Expect a price tag around $2,500 or higher when it launches.
Unitree Robotics turned heads with live demonstrations of its G1 humanoid performing high-speed martial arts and boxing movements. Compact and foldable, the G1 is designed for affordability and scalability, while its larger sibling, the H2, targets industrial applications. Unitree's pushing a Robot-as-a-Service model, signaling these aren't just prototypes—they're heading for global commercial deployment with quick-swappable batteries and depth perception systems.
Sweekar takes the Tamagotchi concept and supercharges it with generative AI. Starting as an egg, it physically grows through three life stages as you care for it, developing a unique personality along the way. Neglect it, and it dies—forcing you to start over. It's nostalgia meets AI, launching on Kickstarter later this year for $150.
Tombot's Jennie isn't trying to replace real pets. This robo-Labrador is designed specifically for people with Alzheimer's, dementia, anxiety, or autism who need comfort without the responsibility of a live animal. With 1,500 natural behaviors programmed by Jim Henson's Creature Shop, Jennie responds to touch and tracks faces, promising to offer some genuine therapeutic value rather than tech-for-tech's-sake gimmickry.
SwitchBot is entering the home robot race with the Onero H1, a wheeled humanoid with articulated arms designed to tackle everyday chores. Unlike full humanoids, it skips the legs and uses a cylindrical wheeled base for stability. With 22 degrees of freedom and multiple cameras in its head, arms, and midsection, the Onero runs on an on-device OmniSense vision-language-action model that combines visual perception, depth awareness, and tactile feedback. SwitchBot demonstrated it filling coffee machines, washing windows, loading washing machines, and folding clothes. Pre-orders open soon, though pricing hasn't been announced.
After going viral for stunts so dramatic people assumed they were CGI, EngineAI brought the T800 to CES to prove it's real. Standing 1.73 meters tall with joint actuators delivering up to 450 Nm of peak torque, the T800 performed stability-focused sequences that showcased serious balance and control. With a starting price of $25,000 and shipments scheduled for mid-2026, EngineAI is betting on industrial and commercial deployment beyond flashy demos.
These robots at CES 2026 weren't trying to be Rosie from The Jetsons. They were messier, slower, and far more honest about their limitations. But they showed up ready to work— folding laundry badly, climbing stairs carefully, and ready to lift tonnes, if needed. That's not sci-fi. That's just the awkward, promising beginning of robots becoming reality instead of concepts.
LG CLOiD is a helper robot butler that’ll fold laundries, and fetch drinks for you
LG's CLOiD prototype stole the spotlight as a genuine home helper. Standing on wheels with articulated arms and a screen-equipped head, it folded laundry, prepped meals, and fetched drinks while coordinating with LG's ThinQ smart home ecosystem. The catch? It takes about two minutes to fold one towel, and it does it like a toddler's attempt. Still, CLOiD represents the clearest vision yet of robots handling everyday household tasks—awkwardness and all.
Boston Dynamics’ Atlas can lift 110 pounds and swap its own battery
Boston Dynamics unveiled its production-ready electric Atlas, and it's a beast. Standing over six feet tall with 56 degrees of freedom and a 110-pound lifting capacity, Atlas is built for factory work, not friendship. It walks with fluid, confident strides and can hot-swap its own battery when needed. The real news? A partnership with Google DeepMind to integrate Gemini AI, giving Atlas the ability to reason through complex instructions. Hyundai plans to deploy it at its Georgia manufacturing plant by 2028.
Roborock’s newest vacuum cleaner has finally conquered the stairs
Robot vacuums have always had one nemesis: stairs. Roborock's Saros Rover solves this with angled legs that let it climb step-by-step, cleaning each surface on the way up. It's slow—about 40 seconds for five steps—but does sound impressive. Expect a price tag around $2,500 or higher when it launches.
This compact robot throws punches like a martial artist
Unitree Robotics turned heads with live demonstrations of its G1 humanoid performing high-speed martial arts and boxing movements. Compact and foldable, the G1 is designed for affordability and scalability, while its larger sibling, the H2, targets industrial applications. Unitree's pushing a Robot-as-a-Service model, signaling these aren't just prototypes—they're heading for global commercial deployment with quick-swappable batteries and depth perception systems.
Sweekar takes Tamagotchi and blends it with generative AI to give you a pet robot that grows up with you
Sweekar takes the Tamagotchi concept and supercharges it with generative AI. Starting as an egg, it physically grows through three life stages as you care for it, developing a unique personality along the way. Neglect it, and it dies—forcing you to start over. It's nostalgia meets AI, launching on Kickstarter later this year for $150.
Tombot Jennie is a therapy dog that never needs walking
Tombot's Jennie isn't trying to replace real pets. This robo-Labrador is designed specifically for people with Alzheimer's, dementia, anxiety, or autism who need comfort without the responsibility of a live animal. With 1,500 natural behaviors programmed by Jim Henson's Creature Shop, Jennie responds to touch and tracks faces, promising to offer some genuine therapeutic value rather than tech-for-tech's-sake gimmickry.
Another humanoid for your home
SwitchBot is entering the home robot race with the Onero H1, a wheeled humanoid with articulated arms designed to tackle everyday chores. Unlike full humanoids, it skips the legs and uses a cylindrical wheeled base for stability. With 22 degrees of freedom and multiple cameras in its head, arms, and midsection, the Onero runs on an on-device OmniSense vision-language-action model that combines visual perception, depth awareness, and tactile feedback. SwitchBot demonstrated it filling coffee machines, washing windows, loading washing machines, and folding clothes. Pre-orders open soon, though pricing hasn't been announced.
EngineAI T800 is the action hero robot
After going viral for stunts so dramatic people assumed they were CGI, EngineAI brought the T800 to CES to prove it's real. Standing 1.73 meters tall with joint actuators delivering up to 450 Nm of peak torque, the T800 performed stability-focused sequences that showcased serious balance and control. With a starting price of $25,000 and shipments scheduled for mid-2026, EngineAI is betting on industrial and commercial deployment beyond flashy demos.
These robots at CES 2026 weren't trying to be Rosie from The Jetsons. They were messier, slower, and far more honest about their limitations. But they showed up ready to work— folding laundry badly, climbing stairs carefully, and ready to lift tonnes, if needed. That's not sci-fi. That's just the awkward, promising beginning of robots becoming reality instead of concepts.
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