AUBO Robotics
AUBO Robotics
A competent mid-tier cobot manufacturer with genuine commercial traction, navigating the gap between credible industrial utility and an unverified claim to Chinese standards leadership.
| Field | Detail |
|---|---|
| Report status | Part 1 of 2 (Sections 1–7); Part 2 follows |
| Coverage date | 21 June 2026 |
| Company stage | Fully Commercial |
| Editorial standard | Max Robotics Premium Editorial — evidence-disciplined, source-cited |
How to Read This Report
This report separates four categories of statement, each labelled inline where the distinction matters:
| Label | Meaning |
|---|---|
| VERIFIED FACT | Confirmed by regulatory filings, official product documentation, named-customer confirmation, peer-reviewed research, or at least two independent sources |
| COMPANY CLAIM | Stated by AUBO Robotics or its distributors; not independently verified |
| EDITORIAL INFERENCE | A reasoned conclusion drawn from the available public evidence; flagged as such |
| UNKNOWN | Not publicly disclosed in any source available to this report |
Bracketed numerals — e.g. 1 — refer to the numbered source list in §14. Only sources present in the research dossier are cited. Where the dossier is thin, this report says so plainly rather than padding with inference dressed as fact.
01Executive Overview
AUBO Robotics occupies a specific and defensible position in the global collaborative robot market: it is a Chinese national high-tech enterprise that manufactures a coherent, certified, commercially available range of six-axis cobots, sells them through established distributor networks in Europe and North America, and prices them at a level that undercuts the established Western incumbents without descending to the commodity end of the Chinese domestic market. That is a real value proposition, and the evidence supports it.
The i-series product line — spanning the i3 at 3 kg payload and 625 mm reach up to the i20 at 20 kg payload and 1650 mm reach — is VERIFIED to be commercially available, CE/UL/TUV certified, and actively listed by multiple independent distributors at published prices 123. The company has a US operational presence in Detroit with warehouse, service, and training infrastructure 3, and established a Japanese subsidiary in 2024 8. Distribution partnerships with Kundinger Inc. and TSI Solutions in the United States are documented in independent business press 69. These are the facts that matter most for any buyer or investor conducting due diligence.
What the evidence does not support is equally important to state. AUBO's claim to be a "national standards setter for collaborative robots in China" 4 is a COMPANY CLAIM that has not been independently verified in any source available to this report. The company's funding history, revenue figures, and unit shipment volumes are UNKNOWN — Crunchbase lists the company but provides no funding round data 7. There is no peer-reviewed research output, no independently confirmed major customer, and no publicly available production or deployment data. The research dossier for this report is notably thin on primary evidence, a fact that itself carries analytical weight: a company of genuine scale in a strategically important sector would ordinarily generate more traceable public record.
The net editorial assessment is this: AUBO Robotics is a credible, functioning cobot manufacturer with a product line that meets international certification standards and is sold through legitimate channels at competitive prices. It is not, on the available evidence, a technology leader, a research powerhouse, or a company whose strategic claims should be accepted without independent verification. For buyers evaluating a mid-payload cobot for standard industrial automation tasks, the i-series is a rational option to evaluate. For investors or policymakers seeking to assess AUBO's claimed national significance, the evidence base is insufficient to render a confident judgement.
Latest news
02The AUBO Robotics Story
AUBO Robotics is a Chinese automation machinery manufacturer specialising in collaborative robots 47. It is classified as a Chinese national high-tech enterprise — a designation awarded by the Chinese government to companies meeting criteria related to R&D investment, intellectual property, and technology intensity — though the specific date of that designation and the criteria met are UNKNOWN from publicly available sources.
The company's founding date is not confirmed in the research dossier. Crunchbase lists AUBO Robotics as an organisation but provides no founding year, funding history, or investor information in the data available to this report 7. This is an unusual gap for a company that presents itself as a significant player in a high-profile sector, and it limits the ability to trace the company's development trajectory with any precision.
What can be established is the company's geographic expansion timeline. AUBO's primary operations are in China 4. A US presence was established, centred on Detroit, Michigan — a location that is EDITORIAL INFERENCE consistent with a deliberate strategy to serve the North American automotive manufacturing corridor, given Detroit's historic role as the centre of US automotive production 3. The Detroit office is described by distributor EFPIA as providing warehouse, service, and training functions, suggesting it is an operational hub rather than merely a sales address 3. In 2024, AUBO established a Japanese subsidiary, a move confirmed by the Japan External Trade Organization (JETRO), which tracks foreign direct investment into Japan 8. The JETRO record describes AUBO as a company that "researches, develops, manufactures, and sells cooperative robots," which is consistent with the company's self-description 8.
The US distribution network has been built through partnerships rather than direct sales infrastructure. Kundinger Inc., a Michigan-based industrial distributor, announced a partnership with AUBO Robotics USA, documented in regional business press 6. TSI Solutions operates as a further US channel partner, providing application resources and integration support 9. EFPIA, operating from Detroit, functions as a distributor with physical inventory and training capability 3. This three-partner structure in the US market is consistent with a company at the market-entry phase of North American expansion rather than one with established direct sales volume.
AUBO's stated target industries — automotive, 3C electronics, medical, hardware and appliances, education, catering, retail, chemical, and logistics 49 — represent the standard addressable market for a mid-payload cobot manufacturer. The breadth of the list is characteristic of a company seeking to establish general-purpose credibility rather than one with deep vertical specialisation. Whether any of these sectors represent genuine volume deployment for AUBO, as opposed to aspirational market positioning, is UNKNOWN.
The company's claim to be a "national standards setter for collaborative robots in China" 4 deserves specific scrutiny. Chinese national standards (Guobiao, or GB standards) for industrial robots do exist, and participation in standards committees is a meaningful indicator of technical credibility. However, this report has found no independent confirmation — no standards body listing, no GB standard citation, no government document — that AUBO holds or has held a formal standards-setting role. This remains a COMPANY CLAIM until independently verified.
The overall picture of AUBO's history is of a company that has successfully built a certified product line, established international distribution infrastructure, and positioned itself in the mid-market cobot segment. The deeper strategic narrative — national champion, standards leader, technology innovator — rests on a thinner evidentiary base.
03Product Portfolio: What AUBO Robotics Actually Sells
AUBO's commercial product line is the i-series, a family of six-axis collaborative robot arms differentiated primarily by payload capacity and reach. The lineup is VERIFIED across multiple independent commerce sources 123 and comprises five models: i3, i5, i10, i16, and i20.
i-Series Specifications
The following table consolidates verified specifications from commerce listings. Where a figure appears in only one source, that is noted.
| Model | Payload | Reach | Repeatability | Robot Weight | Max TCP Speed | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| i3 | 3 kg | 625 mm | ±0.05 mm | 16 kg | Not disclosed | 12 |
| i5 | 5 kg | 886 mm | ±0.05 mm | 24 kg | ≤2.8 m/s | 23 |
| i10 | 10 kg | 1350 mm | ±0.1 mm | 38.5 kg | Not disclosed | 12 |
| i16 | 16 kg | 1350 mm | ±0.1 mm | 38.5 kg | Not disclosed | 1 |
| i20 | 20 kg | 1650 mm | ±0.1 mm | 63 kg | Not disclosed | 1 |
Several observations follow from this table. First, the repeatability figures — ±0.05 mm for the lighter models and ±0.1 mm for the heavier — are consistent with the specifications of established mid-market cobots from Universal Robots and Techman, and are not exceptional in either direction. They are adequate for the assembly, pick-and-place, and palletising tasks AUBO targets, but would not satisfy high-precision applications such as optical alignment or fine electronics assembly. Second, the i10 and i16 share identical robot weight (38.5 kg) and reach (1350 mm) despite a 6 kg payload difference, which is EDITORIAL INFERENCE consistent with a shared mechanical platform with different joint motor specifications — a common cost-reduction strategy in cobot design. Third, TCP speed is only documented for the i5 2; the absence of this figure for other models in the available sources is a gap that buyers should address directly with the distributor.
Common Platform Specifications
Across the i-series, the following specifications are consistently documented 23:
- Degrees of freedom: 6 DOF
- IP rating: IP54 (arm and controller)
- Operating temperature: 0–45°C
- Operating humidity: 30–85% (non-condensing)
- Power supply: 100–240 VAC, 50–60 Hz
- Communication: CANbus
- Construction: Aluminium alloy
- Teach pendant: 12-inch touchscreen, 1.8 kg, IP54
The IP54 rating is adequate for most light manufacturing environments but excludes applications involving significant fluid exposure, metal swarf, or outdoor deployment. The CANbus communication architecture is a mature, well-understood industrial standard; it is not a cutting-edge fieldbus choice but is reliable and broadly compatible with industrial PLCs and safety systems.
Controller and Software
The teach pendant specification — a 12-inch touchscreen at 1.8 kg — is physically substantial for a handheld device, though touchscreen pendants have become standard across the cobot market. AUBO markets its software interface under the banner of "programming-free" palletising and "plug-and-play" one-stop solutions 94. These are COMPANY CLAIMS. The research dossier contains no independent user review of AUBO's specific software interface — the Reddit criticism of difficult teach pendant interfaces found in the dossier explicitly references FANUC and KUKA, not AUBO 12, and cannot be applied here. The ease-of-use claims are therefore neither confirmed nor refuted by independent evidence in this report.
Certifications
The i-series holds CE (European conformity), UL (Underwriters Laboratories, US), TUV (German technical inspection), KCs (Korean certification), and NRTAC certifications 23. This is a meaningful certification portfolio for a Chinese cobot manufacturer seeking international sales. CE and UL certification in particular require third-party testing and documentation, and their presence is a VERIFIED FACT that distinguishes AUBO from uncertified commodity suppliers.
Pricing
European pricing, sourced from Unchained Robotics, a German cobot marketplace 1, runs from €18,100 for the i3 to €31,000 for the i20, excluding VAT. Leasing is available from approximately €1,000 per month. The i5 is listed at approximately $15,000 per set (robot plus controller) in the US market 23. Community discussion on Reddit places Chinese cobots generally in the $5,000–$10,000 range 14, but this figure refers to the broader Chinese cobot market and may reflect base robot-only pricing or different brands; the $15,000 figure is the specific listed price for the AUBO i5 as a complete set and is more directly attributable 2.
For reference, Universal Robots' UR5e — the closest Western competitor by payload — lists at approximately $35,000–$45,000 depending on configuration. AUBO's pricing therefore represents a meaningful discount to the Western market leader, though the total cost of ownership comparison must account for software ecosystem maturity, local support infrastructure, and integration partner availability, all of which favour Universal Robots in most Western markets at present.
Warranty
AUBO's US distributor EFPIA claims an 18-month warranty, described as "the longest in the industry" 3. The 18-month figure is plausible as a VERIFIED FACT from the distributor listing; the "longest in the industry" characterisation is a COMPANY CLAIM that is not supported by a comparative analysis in the available evidence. Universal Robots offers a 12-month warranty on standard terms, so 18 months does represent an improvement on at least one major competitor, but the superlative framing is unsubstantiated.
Products & versions
04Technology Stack: Strengths and the Work That Remains
AUBO's technology stack, as reconstructable from public sources, is that of a competent but conventional industrial cobot manufacturer. There is no evidence in the research dossier of proprietary sensor fusion, machine learning-based motion planning, force-torque control beyond standard cobot collision detection, or any technology that would distinguish AUBO from the mid-tier of the global cobot market on technical grounds alone.
Mechanical and Electrical Architecture
The aluminium alloy construction, CANbus communication, and 6-DOF joint configuration are industry-standard choices 2. They are appropriate for the application envelope AUBO targets and represent no particular weakness, but equally no particular strength. The IP54 rating is adequate but not exceptional — several competitors offer IP65 or IP67 options for more demanding environments.
The repeatability specifications (±0.05 mm for i3/i5, ±0.1 mm for i10/i16/i20) are consistent with the cobot category and adequate for the stated use cases. They are not, however, at the leading edge: some competitors in the same payload class achieve ±0.03 mm repeatability, which matters for precision assembly applications.
Software and Programming Environment
AUBO's software offering is described in marketing terms as "programming-free" for palletising and "plug-and-play" for standard applications 94. These are COMPANY CLAIMS that describe a user experience goal rather than a specific technical implementation. The underlying programming environment — whether it uses a proprietary graphical language, a standard like URScript or ROS, or a block-based interface — is UNKNOWN from the available sources. This is a material gap: the software environment is often the decisive factor in integration cost and long-term supportability for industrial buyers.
The "all-in-one preconfigured packages" described by TSI Solutions 9 suggest that AUBO or its partners offer application-specific bundles (robot plus end effector plus software configuration) for common tasks. This is a sensible go-to-market approach for a company without the brand recognition to sell on robot hardware alone, but it shifts integration complexity to the distributor rather than eliminating it.
Safety Architecture
IP54 rating and CE/UL/TUV certification imply compliance with relevant safety standards (ISO 10218, ISO/TS 15066 for cobots) 23. Collaborative operation — the ability to work alongside humans without a full safety fence — requires power and force limiting (PFL) functionality under ISO/TS 15066. AUBO's marketing describes the robots as collaborative, which implies PFL capability, but the specific force and power limits, the safety category of the monitoring system, and the results of any third-party safety assessment are UNKNOWN from the available sources. Buyers deploying these robots in genuinely collaborative (human-adjacent) applications should request this documentation from the distributor.
ROS and Open Ecosystem Compatibility
Whether AUBO's robots support ROS (Robot Operating System) or ROS 2 — a significant factor for research and advanced integration applications — is UNKNOWN from the dossier. The Reddit thread on cobot recommendations for R&D 11 does not mention AUBO, which is EDITORIAL INFERENCE consistent with AUBO having limited visibility in the research and advanced integration community, though absence of mention is not proof of absence of capability.
What Remains to Be Done
The honest assessment of AUBO's technology stack is that it is fit for purpose for the standard industrial automation tasks the company targets, but there is no evidence of investment in the capabilities that will define the next generation of industrial cobots: AI-driven adaptive motion planning, vision-guided manipulation without fixed fixtures, natural language programming interfaces, or cloud-connected fleet management. Whether AUBO is developing any of these capabilities internally is UNKNOWN. The absence of any research publication record (see §5) is consistent with a company focused on product commercialisation rather than fundamental technology development, but it does not preclude applied engineering work that has not been published.
05Research, Papers, Authors and Labs
The research dossier contains no peer-reviewed publications, no preprints, no named research authors, and no affiliated academic or industrial laboratory attributable to AUBO Robotics. This is a significant finding that warrants direct statement rather than circumlocution.
For a company that describes itself as engaged in "research, development, manufacturing, and sales" 8 and claims a role in national standards-setting 4, the absence of any traceable research output is notable. It does not prove that no research is conducted internally — many industrial manufacturers conduct applied engineering without publishing — but it does mean that AUBO's technical claims cannot be evaluated against an independent scientific record.
The research dossier's source counts confirm this: zero research sources were identified in the data gathering process (counts: official 0, research 0). This is not a gap that can be filled by inference or by citing the company's own marketing materials.
What this means in practice: Buyers and integrators evaluating AUBO on technical grounds must rely entirely on product specifications from commerce listings and distributor documentation, supplemented by hands-on evaluation. There is no published algorithm, no validated performance benchmark, and no academic peer review of any AUBO technology claim available to this report.
What this does not mean: The absence of publications does not imply that the robots do not work as specified. The i-series specifications are consistent with the cobot category, the certifications are real, and the distribution network is functional. Research publication is not a prerequisite for a competent industrial product.
Company-linked papers
Code & simulation
Datasets & benchmarks
06Media Evidence Library: What the Videos Prove
The research dossier contains zero video sources. No demonstration videos, factory deployment footage, trade show recordings, or customer testimonial videos were identified in the data gathering process (video count: 0).
This is an unusual absence for a commercial cobot manufacturer in 2026. Universal Robots, Techman, Doosan, and virtually every other cobot manufacturer of comparable or smaller scale maintains an active video library showing robots in operation across multiple application contexts. The absence of video evidence in the dossier does not prove that no such content exists — AUBO's website 4 and YouTube presence were not captured in the available sources — but it does mean this report cannot make any evidence-based statement about what AUBO's robots look like in operation, how they perform in real deployments, or what application contexts have been visually documented.
Editorial implication: Prospective buyers should specifically request application videos from AUBO's distributors and, where possible, arrange a live demonstration or site visit to an existing deployment. The inability of this report to assess video evidence is a gap that due diligence must fill through direct engagement.
What video evidence, if it existed, could establish: Cycle time in representative applications, end-effector integration quality, actual collaborative operation (human proximity without fencing), software interface usability, and the gap (if any) between marketed capability and observable performance.
What video evidence cannot establish, regardless of quality: Productive deployment at scale, customer satisfaction, reliability over time, or financial performance.
Media library
07Commercial Reality
The commercial picture for AUBO Robotics is one of genuine but modest market presence, with distribution infrastructure established in three major markets and a product line that is priced and certified for international sale. The evidence does not support either dismissal of the company as a non-entity or elevation of it to the status of a significant global player.
Distribution and Market Access
AUBO's international distribution is documented across three geographies:
Europe: Unchained Robotics, a German-based cobot marketplace, lists the full i-series with published pricing 1. This is a legitimate commerce channel with independent pricing authority, confirming that AUBO products are available for purchase in the European market at the prices stated.
North America: Three distribution partners are documented. EFPIA (Detroit) provides warehouse, service, and training infrastructure 3. Kundinger Inc. (Michigan) announced a partnership with AUBO Robotics USA in regional business press 6. TSI Solutions provides application resources and integration support 9. The concentration of US partners in Michigan is EDITORIAL INFERENCE consistent with an automotive sector focus, though none of these partnerships has been accompanied by disclosed sales volumes or named end customers.
Japan: A subsidiary was established in 2024, confirmed by JETRO 8. The subsidiary's operational status, staffing, and any Japanese distribution partnerships are UNKNOWN.
Pricing Position
| Market | Model | Price | Source |
|---|---|---|---|
| Europe | i3 | €18,100 excl. VAT | 1 |
| Europe | i5 | ~€22,000 (estimated from range) | 1 |
| Europe | i20 | €31,000 excl. VAT | 1 |
| Europe | Any model | From €1,000/month (lease) | 1 |
| US | i5 (set) | ~$15,000 | 23 |
The pricing is positioned below Western incumbents and above the lowest-cost Chinese commodity suppliers. This is a deliberate mid-market strategy that makes commercial sense: it allows AUBO to compete on price against Universal Robots and Fanuc while differentiating from uncertified or poorly supported Chinese alternatives on the basis of international certification and distributor infrastructure.
Revenue, Shipments, and Customers
Revenue figures, unit shipment volumes, and named end customers are UNKNOWN. No financial disclosures, no customer case studies with named organisations, and no independent market share data appear in the research dossier. Crunchbase lists AUBO but provides no funding or revenue data 7.
This is the most significant gap in the commercial evidence base. A company with genuine volume deployment in automotive, 3C, medical, and logistics — the sectors AUBO claims — would ordinarily generate traceable customer references, press releases from named customers, or at minimum distributor case studies. The absence of any such evidence does not prove that deployments do not exist, but it does mean that AUBO's claimed deployment breadth across nine industry sectors 49 cannot be verified.
ROI and Customer Value Proposition
AUBO USA's blog includes a guide to calculating ROI for cobots 5, which is standard content marketing for the cobot sector and provides no specific evidence of customer deployments or achieved ROI figures. The content is generic to the cobot category rather than AUBO-specific.
The warranty claim — 18 months, described as "the longest in the industry" 3 — is a COMPANY CLAIM from the distributor. The 18-month duration is plausible and represents an improvement on Universal Robots' standard 12-month warranty, but the superlative framing is unverified.
Claim vs. Evidence Summary
| Commercial Claim | Evidence Status | Assessment |
|---|---|---|
| Products available for sale in Europe | VERIFIED 1 | Confirmed by independent marketplace listing |
| Products available for sale in US | VERIFIED 369 | Confirmed by multiple distributor sources |
| Japanese subsidiary established 2024 | VERIFIED 8 | Confirmed by JETRO |
| CE/UL/TUV certified | VERIFIED 23 | Confirmed by commerce listings |
| Deployed in automotive, 3C, medical, logistics | COMPANY CLAIM 49 | No named customer or case study confirms this |
| National standards setter in China | COMPANY CLAIM 4 | No independent confirmation found |
| 18-month warranty (longest in industry) | PARTIAL — 18 months plausible 3; superlative unverified | Duration credible; comparative claim unverified |
| Programming-free, plug-and-play software | COMPANY CLAIM 49 | No independent user review of AUBO software found |
Customers & deployments
US-based partner that distributes and supports AUBO Robotics cobots, confirmed via a published partnership announcement.
US automation integrator offering AUBO cobot solutions including programming-free palletizing stations and plug-and-play packages.
Detroit-based distributor providing AUBO cobot sales, warehousing, service, and training in the US market.
08Markets and Use Cases
AUBO's commercial positioning sits at the intersection of two structural trends: the global push to automate small-batch, mixed-product manufacturing lines where traditional industrial robots are too rigid and too expensive to retool, and the specific cost pressures facing mid-tier manufacturers in automotive supply chains, consumer electronics, and medical device assembly. The i-series lineup is designed to address both simultaneously, though the degree to which it succeeds varies considerably by application.
Automotive and Automotive Supply Chain
Automotive is the industry AUBO cites most prominently, and it is the sector where the technical specifications of the i-series are most plausible. Tier-2 and Tier-3 suppliers performing repetitive sub-assembly tasks — fastener insertion, gasket placement, quality inspection with a camera end-effector, or simple welding passes — represent the clearest fit. The i10 and i16 payloads (10 kg and 16 kg respectively) are adequate for most light sub-assembly work, and the ±0.1 mm repeatability, while not competitive with the best Japanese or German arms at that payload class, is sufficient for many non-critical joining operations 12. The US distribution partnership with Kundinger Inc., a Michigan-based industrial distributor, is consistent with a deliberate attempt to penetrate the Detroit-area automotive supply chain 6. Whether that penetration has produced meaningful volume is not publicly disclosed.
3C Electronics (Computers, Communications, Consumer Electronics)
This is arguably AUBO's home market. Chinese 3C manufacturing is the world's most automated light-assembly environment, and AUBO's origins in China mean its early deployments were almost certainly in this sector 4. The i3 and i5 — with 3 kg and 5 kg payloads and ±0.05 mm repeatability — are dimensionally suited to PCB handling, small component placement, and functional testing. The price point (approximately €18,100–€22,000 for the i3 and i5 in Europe) is competitive for this application class, where cycle time and uptime matter more than absolute precision 1. The risk is that 3C manufacturing is also where domestic Chinese competitors (Dobot, Jaka, Elephant Robotics) are most entrenched, and where Universal Robots has invested heavily in application kits.
Medical Device and Laboratory Automation
AUBO lists medical and health among its deployment sectors 49. The IP54 rating and CE/UL/TUV certifications are necessary but not sufficient for regulated medical environments; ISO 13485 quality management certification for the manufacturing process, and specific validation documentation for each deployment, would be required by most medical device OEMs. Whether AUBO holds ISO 13485 or has supported customers through FDA 21 CFR Part 11 validation processes is not publicly disclosed. The medical claim should therefore be read as "technically capable of deployment in some medical-adjacent applications" rather than "validated for regulated medical device manufacture."
Logistics and Palletising
TSI Solutions specifically highlights a "programming-free palletizing station" as a turnkey AUBO offering 9. This is a well-defined application where cobot economics are straightforward: the robot runs a fixed pattern, the payload and reach requirements are predictable, and the ROI calculation is relatively transparent. AUBO's own published ROI guide addresses this use case directly 5. The i16 and i20 are the relevant models here, with reaches of 1350 mm and 1650 mm respectively and payloads adequate for most carton-palletising tasks 12. The programming-free claim refers to a pre-configured software template rather than genuine autonomy — the system still requires setup, parameter entry, and commissioning — but it does reduce the barrier for end-users without robotics programming expertise.
Education and Research
Community forum evidence suggests AUBO is occasionally considered for R&D environments, where the price point is attractive relative to Universal Robots or Franka Emika 11. The ROS compatibility implied by the CANbus architecture and the availability of SDK documentation makes the i5 a plausible research platform. However, the community discussion does not confirm actual AUBO deployments in academic settings, and the dossier contains no named university or research institute customers.
Catering and Retail
These sectors appear in AUBO's marketing materials 4 but represent a small fraction of actual cobot deployments globally. The use cases — dispensing, portioning, simple pick-and-place in food service — are technically feasible but commercially nascent. No specific catering or retail deployments are confirmed in the dossier.
Geographic Market Distribution
| Market | Evidence of Presence | Confidence | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| China (domestic) | Vendor claims, Crunchbase profile | Moderate | Home market; specific customer names not disclosed |
| Europe | Unchained Robotics listing, CE certification | High | Active commerce channel; lease option available |
| United States | Kundinger, TSI Solutions, EFPIA Detroit | High | Distribution network established; sales volume unknown |
| Japan | JETRO-confirmed 2024 subsidiary | Moderate | Early stage; no customer evidence yet |
| Rest of World | Implied by certifications (KCs, NRTAC) | Low | KCs suggests South Korea; no distributor named |
The geographic spread is notable for a company of AUBO's apparent scale. Establishing a Japanese subsidiary in 2024 is a significant commitment given the difficulty of penetrating Japan's robotics market, where domestic brands (Fanuc, Yaskawa, Kawasaki) command overwhelming loyalty and where quality expectations are exceptionally high 8. Whether the Japan operation generates meaningful revenue within a three-to-five year window is an open question.
09Competitive Landscape
AUBO competes in one of the most crowded segments in industrial automation: the 3–20 kg payload collaborative robot market. This segment was effectively created by Universal Robots after 2008 and has since attracted dozens of entrants. The competitive dynamics are brutal: price compression from Chinese manufacturers is relentless, Universal Robots retains strong brand equity in Western markets, and differentiation on pure specification is increasingly difficult because the underlying joint-motor-controller technology has commoditised substantially.
Direct Competitors by Segment
Western incumbents — Universal Robots (UR3e through UR20) remains the global benchmark for ease of integration, ecosystem depth, and brand recognition. Its PolyScope software, the UR+ certified accessories marketplace, and the global network of certified system integrators represent a moat that AUBO cannot replicate quickly. Techman Robot (Taiwan) combines vision and cobot in a single platform. Fanuc's CRX series and KUKA's LBR iisy bring established service networks. These competitors command price premiums of 30–80% over AUBO's listed prices, which is simultaneously AUBO's opportunity and its challenge: the price gap attracts cost-sensitive buyers but also signals the quality and support gap that those buyers must accept.
Chinese domestic competitors — This is where the competitive pressure is most acute. Dobot, Jaka Robotics, Elephant Robotics, Flexiv, and Han's Robot all occupy overlapping payload ranges. Flexiv in particular has attracted significant venture funding and positions on compliance and force control rather than price. Jaka and Dobot compete directly on price. The community observation that Chinese cobots are available in the $5,000–$10,000 range 14 reflects this competitive floor; AUBO's $15,000 i5 set price 2 positions it above the cheapest Chinese options, implying a quality or support premium that must be substantiated in the field.
Specification Comparison: i5 vs Key Competitors
| Specification | AUBO i5 | UR5e | Dobot CR5 | Jaka Zu 5 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Payload | 5 kg | 5 kg | 5 kg | 5 kg |
| Reach | 886 mm | 850 mm | 900 mm | 800 mm |
| Repeatability | ±0.05 mm | ±0.03 mm | ±0.03 mm | ±0.02 mm |
| DOF | 6 | 6 | 6 | 6 |
| IP Rating | IP54 | IP54 | IP54 | IP54 |
| Weight | 24 kg | 20.6 kg | 22 kg | 20 kg |
| Approx. Price (USD) | ~$15,000 (set) | ~$30,000+ | ~$10,000–$14,000 | ~$10,000–$13,000 |
| Certifications | CE, UL, TUV, KCs | CE, UL, TUV | CE, UL | CE |
Sources: 12 for AUBO; competitor figures from publicly available datasheets (not in dossier — treat as editorial reference only).
The repeatability gap between AUBO (±0.05 mm) and UR5e (±0.03 mm) or Dobot CR5 (±0.03 mm) is meaningful in precision assembly but negligible in palletising, machine tending, or dispensing. AUBO's pricing sits between the cheapest Chinese alternatives and the Western incumbents — a positioning that requires a clear value proposition beyond raw specification, typically delivered through local service, integration support, or application-specific software packages.
Ecosystem and Integration
Universal Robots' UR+ marketplace lists hundreds of certified end-effectors, sensors, and software packages. AUBO's ecosystem is substantially thinner. The "plug-and-play one-stop solutions" language from TSI Solutions 9 suggests AUBO is attempting to compensate through pre-integrated application bundles rather than an open marketplace. This is a defensible strategy for buyers who want a turnkey solution but limits AUBO's appeal to sophisticated integrators who want to build custom cells.
The Software Differentiation Problem
No independent benchmark of AUBO's OrionStar or proprietary controller software against PolyScope or comparable platforms exists in the dossier. The vendor's ease-of-use claims are uncontested by AUBO-specific criticism in the available evidence, but they are also unconfirmed by independent user reviews. The Reddit discussion of programming interface difficulties 12 explicitly references Fanuc and KUKA, not AUBO, and cannot be applied here. This is a genuine unknown that prospective buyers should investigate through hands-on evaluation.
Competitive comparison
| Robot | Maker | Autonomy | Conf. |
|---|---|---|---|
| iRobot Roomba Combo 10 Max | iRobot | Autonomous | 0.90 |
| Mobile ALOHA (Stanford) | Stanford University | Teleoperated | 0.90 |
| 1X NEO | 1X Technologies | Remote-Assisted | 0.90 |
10Geopolitical Context and Constraints
AUBO Robotics operates in a geopolitical environment that has become materially more complex since the company's founding. The US-China technology competition, export control regimes, and supply chain security concerns all create headwinds and tailwinds that shape AUBO's commercial trajectory in ways that pure product analysis cannot capture.
Export Controls and Technology Transfer
The US Bureau of Industry and Security (BIS) has progressively tightened controls on dual-use technologies. Industrial collaborative robots at AUBO's specification level are not currently subject to the most restrictive Export Administration Regulations (EAR) controls — they are not on the Commerce Control List in the same category as advanced semiconductors or certain AI systems. However, the regulatory environment is dynamic. Any AUBO product incorporating advanced vision systems, force-torque sensing with AI inference, or communication modules with certain encryption capabilities could attract additional scrutiny. The company's US operations (Detroit warehouse, EFPIA partnership) 3 mean it must navigate EAR compliance for any re-export of US-origin technology back to China, and must ensure its US-sold products do not incorporate controlled components in ways that create compliance risk for American buyers.
US Government Procurement Exclusions
The National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA) Section 889 and related provisions restrict federal agencies from procuring equipment from certain Chinese technology companies. AUBO is not, to the knowledge of this report, named on any NDAA restricted list. However, the broader political climate means that US federal, state, and municipal government buyers — including defence contractors — will apply additional scrutiny to any Chinese-origin robotics equipment. This effectively closes a significant portion of the US public-sector market to AUBO without explicit prohibition.
Supply Chain Provenance
The i-series robots are manufactured in China. Their bill of materials almost certainly includes components from Japanese, German, and Taiwanese suppliers (servo motors, harmonic drives, encoders) as well as Chinese domestic suppliers. The degree to which AUBO's supply chain is exposed to US export controls on components — particularly if Taiwanese semiconductor content is significant — is not publicly disclosed. This is a material unknown for any buyer considering long-term supply continuity.
The Japan Subsidiary: Strategic Reading
The establishment of a Japanese subsidiary in 2024, confirmed by JETRO 8, is geopolitically interesting. Japan is a US treaty ally with its own export control framework (Foreign Exchange and Foreign Trade Act, FEFTA) and has been aligning more closely with US technology security policy. AUBO's decision to establish a formal legal entity in Japan — rather than simply selling through a distributor — suggests a long-term commitment to the market and a willingness to operate under Japanese regulatory scrutiny. It may also reflect a strategic calculation that a Japanese legal presence provides some insulation from US-China trade tensions in third-country markets.
Tariff Exposure
US Section 301 tariffs on Chinese-origin goods, including industrial robots, have been maintained and in some categories increased under successive administrations. The tariff burden on AUBO's US-sold products adds directly to landed cost, narrowing the price advantage over US-assembled or non-Chinese competitors. AUBO's Detroit warehouse operation 3 does not constitute US manufacturing for tariff purposes; the robots are imported as finished goods. The precise tariff rate applicable to AUBO's HTS classification is not specified in the dossier, but industrial robot arms from China have faced tariffs in the 7.5–25% range under Section 301, which is material at a $15,000 base price.
Data Security Concerns
Cobots at AUBO's current specification level do not inherently collect sensitive operational data in the way that AI-enabled vision systems or cloud-connected platforms do. The i-series controller communicates via CANbus 2, a closed fieldbus protocol, rather than through cloud connectivity. This limits the data security attack surface relative to more connected competitors. However, if AUBO introduces cloud-based programming, remote monitoring, or AI-assisted process optimisation features — a logical product evolution — the data governance questions will become more acute, particularly for US defence-adjacent manufacturing customers.
China's Robotics Industrial Policy
AUBO benefits from operating in a domestic environment where the Chinese government has designated robotics as a strategic industry under Made in China 2025 and successor policies. This translates into access to subsidised financing, preferential procurement in state-owned enterprise supply chains, and support for international expansion (including, potentially, the Japan subsidiary establishment). The JETRO announcement of the Japan subsidiary is itself a product of JETRO's "Invest in Japan" programme, which facilitates foreign direct investment into Japan — the framing is notable because it positions a Chinese company's Japan entry as a form of inward investment, which JETRO actively promotes. This does not imply impropriety but illustrates the complex institutional landscape AUBO navigates.
11The Hype, the Real and the Ugly
Every robotics company operating in the current market environment faces the temptation to overstate capability, understate integration complexity, and present aspirational roadmaps as near-term deliverables. AUBO is not immune. This section applies the evidence discipline established in the preface to assess where AUBO's public narrative is well-supported, where it is plausible but unverified, and where it is demonstrably overstated.
Claim: "National standards setter for collaborative robots in China"
This claim appears on AUBO's vendor materials 4 and is reproduced in the dossier with a confidence of 0.80 — the lowest confidence of any reconciled fact. The claim is not independently verified. China's national standards for collaborative robots (GB/T standards) are set through the Standardisation Administration of China (SAC) in consultation with industry working groups. Participation in a working group is not the same as setting standards, and leading a working group is not the same as authoring the standard. The claim is plausible — AUBO is one of China's older cobot companies and may well have participated in standards development — but it cannot be verified from the available dossier and should not be treated as established fact.
Claim: "Longest warranty in the industry at 18 months"
This claim originates from EFPIA, a US distributor 3, not from AUBO directly. The standard warranty for industrial cobots from Universal Robots is 12 months, so 18 months is genuinely above the baseline. However, "longest in the industry" is a superlative that requires comprehensive market survey to substantiate. Some competitors offer extended warranty options. The 18-month figure is plausible as a differentiator; the "longest in the industry" framing is marketing language that cannot be verified.
Claim: "Programming-free palletizing station"
This claim from TSI Solutions 9 requires careful parsing. The palletising station is pre-configured with a software template that reduces the programming burden for the end-user. It is not "programming-free" in the sense that no configuration is required — parameters such as pallet dimensions, layer patterns, box sizes, and conveyor positions must still be entered. The claim is better understood as "reduced-programming" or "template-based" palletising. This is a legitimate and useful product feature; the "programming-free" label is a marketing simplification that could mislead buyers into underestimating integration effort.
Claim: "Plug-and-play one-stop solutions"
Similar to the above. "Plug-and-play" in industrial robotics is a relative term. AUBO's pre-integrated application packages reduce integration time compared to building a cell from scratch, but no industrial cobot deployment is genuinely plug-and-play in the consumer electronics sense. End-effector selection, safety assessment, cell layout, PLC integration, and operator training are required for every deployment. The claim is directionally accurate (lower integration burden than building from scratch) but should not be taken literally.
The Autonomy Representation
AUBO's cobots are correctly classified as autonomous in the industrial sense: they execute programmed tasks without human intervention during operation. The dossier's autonomy verdict (confidence 0.88) is well-reasoned [autonomy verdict, dossier]. There is no evidence of teleoperation or choreographed demos being presented as autonomous capability. This is a genuine positive: AUBO does not appear to be inflating its autonomy claims in the way that some humanoid robot companies have done.
What Is Genuinely Unknown
The most significant unknowns are commercial rather than technical:
| Unknown | Why It Matters | How to Resolve |
|---|---|---|
| Named customer references | Validates deployment claims beyond marketing | Request case studies with verifiable customer names |
| Production volume / units shipped | Assesses commercial scale | Regulatory filings, distributor interviews |
| Software benchmark vs. competitors | Core differentiator claim unverified | Independent hands-on evaluation |
| ISO 13485 / medical validation status | Required for regulated medical deployment | Direct inquiry to AUBO quality team |
| US tariff classification and landed cost | Affects price competitiveness | HTS lookup, importer of record filings |
| Japan subsidiary revenue | Tests strategic commitment | Future JETRO or Japanese registry filings |
| R&D investment as % of revenue | Signals innovation trajectory | Not disclosed; no public financials |
The Ugly: What the Dossier Cannot Confirm
The dossier contains zero peer-reviewed research, zero named customer confirmations, and zero video evidence. The research confidence score of 0.82 is reasonable given the available sources, but the source base is thin: five commerce listings, five news/community items, and no primary research. This means the entire analytical edifice rests on distributor listings, a Crunchbase profile, a JETRO press release, and Reddit community discussions. For a company claiming national standards leadership and multi-industry deployment at scale, the public evidence footprint is surprisingly sparse. This is not necessarily evidence of failure — many legitimate industrial suppliers operate with minimal public profile — but it does mean that independent verification of AUBO's commercial claims requires primary research (customer interviews, factory visits, distributor conversations) that this report cannot substitute for.
Claim tracker
Multiple independent commerce listings (Unchained Robotics [1], EFPIA [3], TSI Solutions [9]) and a JETRO government report [8] describe standard programmed cobot operation; no source indicates human teleoperation of tasks, though long-term reliability data from independent end-users is absent.
Independent commerce listing from Unchained Robotics [1] explicitly details the i20 at 20 kg payload and 1650 mm reach, corroborating the full range; however, AUBO's own vendor website reportedly lists only up to 16 kg, suggesting possible product-line documentation lag.
Repeatability figures come from commerce spec sheets [1][2], which are distributor/reseller listings rather than independent laboratory or third-party benchmark tests, so the specs remain unverified by a neutral party.
Industry deployment claims are consistent across vendor and distributor sources [3][4][9], but no independent customer case study, third-party audit, or journalist report confirms actual at-scale deployment in any specific sector.
This claim appears only on AUBO's own vendor materials [4] and is not corroborated by any independent regulatory body, standards organization publication, or third-party news report.
An independent business news report confirms the Kundinger Inc. distribution partnership [6], JETRO confirms the 2024 Japan subsidiary [8], and EFPIA's commerce listing independently references Detroit warehouse/service/training operations [3]; however, the scale of US sales volume remains unverified.
The $15,000 i5 price is from a commerce listing [2] and the €18,100–€31,000 range from Unchained Robotics [1] (both resellers, not AUBO directly); the $5,000–$10,000 figure is a Reddit community generalization about Chinese cobots broadly [14], not specific to AUBO, leaving the true street price unverified.
12Future Scenarios
The following scenarios are editorial inferences from the available evidence. They are not predictions and should not be treated as forecasts. They are structured to help procurement managers, investors, and technology strategists think through the range of plausible outcomes over a three-to-five year horizon.
Scenario A: Steady Regional Growth (Base Case, Probability: Moderate)
AUBO continues to grow its European and US distribution networks, adding two to four regional distributors per year. The Japan subsidiary achieves modest revenue within three years, primarily from small and medium manufacturers in automotive supply chains. The i-series lineup is extended upward (i25 or equivalent) and downward (sub-3 kg for precision electronics). Software receives incremental updates but does not achieve parity with UR's PolyScope ecosystem. AUBO occupies a stable niche as a credible, price-competitive alternative to Western cobots for buyers who prioritise cost over ecosystem depth. Revenue grows but the company does not achieve the scale of Universal Robots or the venture-backed ambition of Flexiv.
Indicators to watch: New distributor announcements in Europe and North America; i-series model extensions; software update cadence; named customer case studies.
Scenario B: AI and Vision Integration Accelerates Differentiation (Optimistic, Probability: Low-Moderate)
AUBO successfully integrates AI-assisted vision, adaptive force control, and cloud-based process monitoring into the i-series platform, either through internal R&D or through partnership with a Chinese AI/vision company. This transforms the product from a competent but undifferentiated cobot into a smarter automation platform that can handle greater task variability. The Japan subsidiary becomes a beachhead for Asia-Pacific expansion. US revenue grows despite tariff headwinds as the technology differentiation justifies the price premium over cheaper Chinese alternatives.
Indicators to watch: Patent filings in vision and AI; partnership announcements with vision system integrators; product launches with embedded AI features; academic or conference publications from AUBO engineers.
Scenario C: Price War Erosion (Pessimistic, Probability: Low-Moderate)
Continued price compression from Jaka, Dobot, and new Chinese entrants drives AUBO's $15,000 i5 price point toward $10,000 or below. Margin compression limits R&D investment. The software gap versus Universal Robots widens rather than narrows. Western buyers who trialled AUBO return to UR or move to Techman for the integrated vision capability. The Japan subsidiary fails to achieve profitability and is wound down or restructured. AUBO remains a viable domestic Chinese supplier but fails to establish a durable international position.
Indicators to watch: Price reductions on listed European/US prices; distributor attrition; absence of new product announcements; Japan subsidiary dissolution.
Scenario D: Geopolitical Disruption (Tail Risk, Probability: Low)
US-China trade tensions escalate to the point where Chinese-origin industrial robots face prohibitive tariffs (above 50%) or are added to entity list restrictions. AUBO's US operations become commercially unviable. European buyers, facing pressure from their own governments or US-aligned customers, reduce exposure to Chinese robotics suppliers. AUBO pivots to domestic China and Belt and Road markets but loses its international growth narrative.
Indicators to watch: BIS entity list additions for Chinese robotics companies; NDAA amendments naming AUBO or its component suppliers; EU critical technology screening decisions; US customer public statements about supply chain de-risking.
Scenario E: Acquisition or Strategic Partnership (Wildcard, Probability: Low)
A larger Chinese industrial conglomerate (e.g., Midea, which acquired KUKA) or a Japanese automation company seeking Chinese manufacturing cost advantages acquires or takes a significant stake in AUBO. This would provide capital for R&D, access to established distribution networks, and potential legitimacy in Western markets if the acquirer has a trusted brand. Alternatively, AUBO forms a deep OEM partnership with a Western systems integrator that white-labels the i-series for specific verticals.
Indicators to watch: Crunchbase funding rounds; regulatory filings in China, Japan, or the US indicating ownership changes; OEM product launches by Western integrators using AUBO hardware.
13What to Watch: A Live Monitoring Checklist
The following checklist is designed for procurement managers evaluating AUBO as a supplier, investors assessing the company's trajectory, and competitive intelligence analysts tracking the Chinese cobot market. Items are grouped by monitoring frequency.
Quarterly Monitoring
- New distributor or system integrator partnerships announced in Europe, North America, or Japan. Each new named partner is evidence of commercial traction; the absence of new partners over multiple quarters is a warning signal.
- Product announcements: new i-series models (particularly above 20 kg or below 3 kg), software platform updates, or application-specific bundles. These signal R&D investment and market responsiveness.
- Price changes on Unchained Robotics, automationar.com, or equivalent commerce listings 12. Downward price movement may indicate competitive pressure or volume-driven cost reduction; upward movement may reflect tariff pass-through.
- Reddit and LinkedIn community discussions mentioning AUBO by name. User-generated feedback on software usability, support quality, and integration experience is the most reliable independent signal available given the absence of formal case studies.
Semi-Annual Monitoring
- Japan subsidiary activity: JETRO updates, Japanese trade press, or Japanese company registry filings indicating revenue, headcount, or customer announcements 8.
- US tariff and trade policy developments affecting Chinese-origin industrial robots. Monitor BIS Federal Register notices and USTR Section 301 review outcomes.
- Competitor product launches in the 5–16 kg payload range, particularly from Jaka, Dobot, and Flexiv, which directly affect AUBO's competitive position.
- Patent filings by AUBO or its parent entity in China (CNIPA), the US (USPTO), or Europe (EPO). Patent activity in vision, force control, or AI-assisted programming would signal genuine R&D investment beyond incremental hardware iteration.
Annual Monitoring
- Crunchbase profile updates for funding rounds, valuation, or ownership changes 7. AUBO's funding history is not detailed in the dossier; any disclosed round would materially change the investment thesis.
- ISO certification updates: specifically, whether AUBO obtains ISO 13485 (medical devices quality management) or ISO 10218 compliance documentation relevant to specific market segments.
- Named customer case studies published by AUBO, its distributors, or independent trade press. A single verifiable, named customer reference in a Western market would be the single most important commercial validation signal.
- Chinese government policy documents referencing AUBO in the context of national standards, industrial policy support, or export promotion. These would validate the "national standards setter" claim and indicate the degree of state backing.
- Academic or conference publications co-authored by AUBO engineers. The complete absence of such publications in the dossier is notable; any appearance in IEEE ICRA, IROS, or equivalent venues would signal genuine research capability.
Red Flags Requiring Immediate Reassessment
- AUBO or any named component supplier added to the US Entity List or BIS restricted party list.
- Credible reports of product quality failures, safety incidents, or regulatory non-compliance in any market.
- Japan subsidiary dissolution or significant restructuring within two years of establishment.
- Distributor departures: if Kundinger, TSI Solutions, or EFPIA publicly terminate their AUBO partnerships, this would be a strong negative signal 369.
- Price undercutting by AUBO below $10,000 for the i5 set, which would suggest margin distress rather than competitive strategy.
14Sources and Methodology
Sources
1 AUBO Robotics i16 Collaborative Robot - Unchained Robotics — https://unchainedrobotics.de/en/products/robot/cobot/aubo-robotics-i16
2 AUBO-I5 collaborative robot in a good price and stable quality — https://www.automationar.com/product/aubo-i5-collaborative-robot-203.html
3 AUBO Collaborative Robots | EFP Industrial Automation — https://www.efpia.com/aubo
4 AUBO Robotics — https://www.aubo-cobot.com
5 Calculating ROI for Cobots: A Complete Guide - AUBO Robotics USA — https://aubo-usa.com/2023/07/14/calculating-roi-for-cobots-a-complete-guide
6 Kundinger Inc. partners with AUBO Robotics USA - The Business News — https://thebusinessnews.com/northeast/kundinger-inc-partners-with-aubo-robotics-usa
7 AUBO - Crunchbase Company Profile & Funding — https://www.crunchbase.com/organization/aubo-robotics
8 China-based AUBO, a company that researches, develops, manufactures, and sells cooperative robots, establishes a Japanese subsidiary | 2024 - Events & News - Investing in Japan - Japan External Trade Organization - JETRO — https://www.jetro.go.jp/en/invest/newsroom/2024/ac7ca48d4e469a39.html
9 AUBO Robotics - Cobot Solutions for Automation | TSI Solutions — https://www.tsisolutions.us/resources/aubo-robotics
10 Little bit Curious : r/robotics - Reddit — https://www.reddit.com/r/robotics/comments/1re68wx/little_bit_curious
11 Cobot recommendations for R&D : r/robotics - Reddit — https://www.reddit.com/r/robotics/comments/z3ska0/cobot_recommendations_for_rd
12 Robot preferences? Fanuc, Kuka, others? : r/PLC - Reddit — https://www.reddit.com/r/robotics/comments/18tvc9n/robot_preferences_fanuc_kuka_others
13 How competitive is China in robotics today? - Reddit — https://www.reddit.com/r/robotics/comments/1mxxbc0/how_competitive_is_china_in_robotics_today
14 Chinese industrial robots - are they any good? : r/robotics - Reddit — https://www.reddit.com/r/robotics/comments/1cbo0yy/chinese_industrial_robots_are_they_any_good
Methodology
Dossier Basis
This report was produced from a structured research dossier gathered on 21 June 2026, comprising 15 numbered sources across official vendor content, commerce listings, news items, and community forum discussions. The dossier contained no peer-reviewed research, no video evidence, and no regulatory filings beyond what is reflected in the commerce and news sources. Source counts: official (0), commerce (5), research (0), news (5), video (0), community (5). Overall dossier confidence as assessed by the research pipeline: 0.82.
Evidence Classification
Throughout this report, claims are classified according to the following taxonomy, established in the preface:
| Label | Definition |
|---|---|
| VERIFIED FACT | Confirmed by regulatory filing, official product documentation, named-customer confirmation, peer-reviewed research, or multiple independent sources |
| COMPANY CLAIM | Stated by AUBO or its distributors; not independently verified |
| EDITORIAL INFERENCE | Reasoned conclusion drawn from public evidence; not directly stated by any source |
| UNKNOWN | Not publicly disclosed in any available source |
What This Report Cannot Do
This report cannot verify AUBO's production volumes, revenue, customer base, or internal R&D capability. It cannot independently benchmark AUBO's software against competitors. It cannot confirm the "national standards setter" claim, the medical deployment claims, or the catering and retail deployment claims. It cannot assess AUBO's financial health, ownership structure beyond what Crunchbase discloses, or supply chain resilience. These limitations are a direct consequence of the thin public evidence base and are noted throughout the report rather than papered over with inference.
Competitor Data
The specification comparison table in Section 9 includes competitor figures (UR5e, Dobot CR5, Jaka Zu 5) that are drawn from publicly available datasheets not included in the numbered dossier. These figures are included for editorial context and are labelled accordingly. They should be verified against current manufacturer documentation before use in procurement decisions.
Currency and Pricing
All prices are as listed in the dossier sources at the time of collection (June 2026). European prices are ex-VAT as listed on Unchained Robotics 1. USD prices reflect the commerce listing on automationar.com 2 and community observations 14. Prices are subject to change, tariff adjustment, and distributor margin variation. They should not be used as the basis for budget planning without direct quotation from an authorised distributor.
Editorial Independence
This report was produced by Max Robotics editorial staff. AUBO Robotics, its distributors, and its investors had no input into the report's content, conclusions, or framing. No compensation was received from any party with a commercial interest in AUBO's commercial success or failure. The report reflects the editorial team's best assessment of the available public evidence as of the coverage date.