Robots Are Growing Up: What CES 2026, Market Growth, and Drone Delivery Tell Us

CES 2026 showed robotics leveling up fast as AI improves autonomy, with everything from humanoids and home-helper concepts to weird AI companion pets. The market outlook is equally bullish, projecting robotics to grow from $51.5B (2025) to $199.5B (2035) as robots become core infrastructure, especially in industrial settings. Meanwhile, drone delivery is moving from “future” to routine, with Walmart + Wing expanding to 150 more stores and aiming to reach ~40M Americans by end of 2026.

January 16, 2026
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3 MIN READ

TL;DR

CES 2026 showed robotics leveling up fast as AI improves autonomy, with everything from humanoids and home-helper concepts to weird AI companion pets. The market outlook is equally bullish, projecting robotics to grow from $51.5B (2025) to $199.5B (2035) as robots become core infrastructure, especially in industrial settings. Meanwhile, drone delivery is moving from “future” to routine, with Walmart + Wing expanding to 150 more stores and aiming to reach ~40M Americans by end of 2026.

The robots we saw at CES 2026: The lovable, the creepy and the utterly confusing

CES has always been a magnet for attention-grabbing robots, but Engadget framed 2026 as a real inflection point. With AI materially improving robot “brains” and autonomy, the show moved beyond novelty and leaned into systems that can actually do more on their own. Humanoids were front and center: Agibot’s lineup stood out, with the smaller X2 learning complex choreography and the larger A2 holding real conversations while actively operating booths. On the consumer side, robotics stretched past the standard vacuum demos. Dreame showed a multipurpose extendable arm capable of picking up objects and cleaning corners, along with a stair-climbing concept that handled full-size steps. Roborock introduced its own stair-climbing vacuum concept, while LG’s CLOiD ran an extended demo folding laundry, fetching drinks, and assisting in the kitchen, impressive, even if still conceptual. AI companions were everywhere as well, from Sharp’s Poketomo to Takway’s Sweekar pocket pet and Ludens AI’s Cocomo. At the other end of the spectrum, Realbotix leaned into realism, showcasing humanoids with facial tracking and expression-reading vision tech that many found unsettling.

Major Takeaway: CES 2026 made it clear that robotics is accelerating quickly, with more autonomy and a broader range of form factors, but also highlighted the tension between practical, value-driving machines and human-like robots that still feel difficult to trust. Read More

Robotics market projected to reach US$ 199.50 billion by 2035

A new market outlook from Astute Analytica projects the global robotics market will grow from $51.51 billion in 2025 to $199.50 billion by 2035, driven by sustained investment and clear industrial demand. The report argues robotics has moved beyond pilots and demos into core operational infrastructure, powered by embodied AI and use cases that are increasingly non-optional for companies. It highlights rapid industrial expansion, noting that the operational stock of industrial robots reached roughly 4.7 million units with 9% year-over-year growth, and that China accounted for 54% of global robot supply. Hardware represents the largest share of the market at 44.7%, while industrial robots remain the dominant category at 35.5%, led by manufacturing use cases such as welding, painting, and assembly. The outlook also points to growing deployments in logistics and healthcare, and ties future growth to the convergence of generative AI with humanoid platforms capable of more complex work.

Major Takeaway: Robotics is increasingly being treated as critical infrastructure, not experimentation, driven by industrial demand, hardware-heavy economics, and the next wave of embodied AI expanding what robots can realistically handle. Read More

Walmart expands drone delivery with Wing to 150 more stores

Wing is significantly expanding its Walmart drone delivery operations, adding service to 150 more U.S. stores and extending coverage from Los Angeles to Miami. Axios notes that what once sounded futuristic is already routine for some customers, with certain Dallas users ordering Wing drone deliveries multiple times per week. Walmart and Wing project that by the end of 2026, roughly 40 million Americans could have access to the service, with upcoming metro launches planned for Los Angeles, St. Louis, Cincinnati, and Miami. The operating model is designed for scale and repeatability: customers order through Wing’s app, items are packed into a small basket, loaded into a fenced parking-lot “nest,” and flown autonomously while human pilots oversee flights from a centralized hub. Deliveries are currently free as Wing prioritizes adoption, with plans to integrate the service directly into Walmart’s app as the network grows toward more than 270 locations by 2027.

Major Takeaway: Walmart and Wing are pushing drone delivery toward the mainstream by scaling aggressively, standardizing operations, and betting that speed and convenience for everyday essentials will drive consistent, repeat usage. Read More

About Lucid Bots

Founded in 2018, Lucid Bots is an AI robotics company that is committed to uplifting humanity by building the world's most productive and responsible robots that can do dangerous and demanding tasks.

Headquartered in Charlotte, the company engineers, manufactures, and supports its products domestically, which include the Sherpa, a cleaning drone, and the Lavo, a pressure-washing robot.

Lucid Bots' products are elevating safety and efficiency for a growing number of customers around the world. Lucid is a Y Combinator-backed company, with investments from Cubit Capital, Idea Fund Partners, Danu Ventures, and others. Lucid Bots was recently recognized as the fastest growing robotics manufacturer in the United States.

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