saharobotik
SnapshotCompany claim
Company description not yet disclosed.
- Founded
- Not disclosed
- HQ
- Not disclosed
- Models
- 16
- Categories
- 3
ContactCompany claim
- Address
- Bilişim Vadisi, Muallimköy Mahallesi, Deniz Cd.No:143-5, 41400 Gebze/Kocaeli, Turkey
Product families
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Claim this profile1. Executive Overview {#executive-overview}
Saha Robotics, operating under the domain saharobotik.com, is a service-robotics company with a portfolio of sixteen products spanning autonomous indoor delivery, hospitality service, mobile advertising, and customer-location tracking. The breadth of that lineup — built around a recurring set of proprietary technologies including SAHA SLAM autonomous navigation and 360° LiDAR scanning — indicates a company that has moved well beyond a single-product stage and is targeting multiple verticals simultaneously: hospitals, hotels, restaurants, retail environments, corporate offices, and logistics facilities.
The company's core value proposition is operational automation of last-metre logistics and guest-facing service inside buildings. Its robots handle multi-floor navigation via elevator integration, interact with IoT-connected building infrastructure (automatic doors, turnstiles), and feed into existing workflows through integrations such as FlowAPI for point-of-sale systems. The Speedy Tag UWB-based customer-location device extends that proposition to table-level precision delivery, suggesting Saha Robotics is building an ecosystem rather than selling isolated units.
Not yet disclosed: founding date, country of incorporation, headcount, and revenue. Visitors with first-hand knowledge of these details are invited to submit corrections through the claim process.
Latest news
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2. The Company Story {#the-company-story}
Saha Robotics presents itself through the saharobotik.com domain and a contact address of info@saharobotik.com. The dual-language product naming visible across the portfolio — Turkish ("Speedy Kurye," "Speedy Servis," "HeyHolo! Yapay Zeka Garson," "Rápido Pixel," "Courier Rápido") alongside English equivalents — strongly suggests a company with a Turkish-market foundation that has internationalised or is actively internationalising its commercial reach. "Kurye" is the Turkish word for courier; "Garson" is Turkish for waiter; "Yapay Zeka" means artificial intelligence in Turkish. Our read: the Turkish market is likely the company's home base and earliest deployment environment, with the English and Portuguese-inflected naming ("Rápido," "Garçom de IA") reflecting export or reseller channel development.
The product architecture itself tells a maturation story. The presence of three distinct delivery robot listings (Courier Rápido, Speedy Kurye, Speedy Courier) and multiple hospitality-service robot variants (Speedy Service, Speedy Service Robot, Speedy Servis) that share overlapping but non-identical feature sets suggests iterative product development — successive generations or market-localised variants of core platforms rather than entirely separate engineering programmes. The Speedy Pixel advertising robot similarly appears in three configurations (Speedy Pixel, Speedy Pixel Pro, Speedy Pixel Duo), indicating a deliberate tiering strategy around display capability and AI voice features.
Not yet disclosed: specific founding year, named funding rounds, named enterprise deployments, or corporate milestones. Saha Robotics is invited to claim or correct these details.
3. Product Portfolio {#product-portfolio}
Products & versions






The sixteen-product portfolio organises naturally into four functional families. The first and largest is indoor autonomous delivery, anchored by the Speedy Courier / Speedy Kurye / Courier Rápido platform. These robots transport packages, documents, and supplies within buildings, navigate multiple floors via elevator integration, secure contents behind PIN-code-locked compartments, and push real-time status updates via SMS, phone call, or email. Target verticals are hospitals, hotels, offices, and logistics facilities; the contactless-delivery feature addresses hygiene-sensitive environments directly.
The second family is hospitality service robotics, comprising the Speedy Service / Speedy Servis / Speedy Service Robot variants. These units deliver food and beverages to seated guests, collect used tableware, support QR-code and HeyHolo!-device-based ordering, and include a "celebration mode" for personalised guest moments. They navigate complex restaurant and hotel floor plans using advanced sensors and IoT integrations including automatic doors and elevators. Complementing them is the HeyHolo! AI Waiter line (listed in English, Turkish as "Yapay Zeka Garson," and Portuguese as "Garçom de IA") — a stationary or near-stationary AI interaction device that handles order-taking, payment processing, cross-selling, and real-time analytics through FlowAPI-based POS integration.
The third family is mobile advertising and guidance, built around the Speedy Pixel platform in three tiers: the base Speedy Pixel (32-inch HD touchscreen, SAHA SLAM navigation, remote content management), the Speedy Pixel Pro (adds AI voice command with natural language processing and Powerdock autonomous charging), and the Speedy Pixel Duo (dual 32-inch touchscreens for two-sided engagement, 360° LiDAR). All three support fleet and traffic management for multi-robot deployments and are aimed at retail, malls, trade shows, airports, and corporate offices.
The fourth, ecosystem-enabling category is the Speedy Tag — a UWB-based customer-location device with approximately one year of battery life, plug-and-play setup, a ten-unit charging station, and a three-hour recharge cycle. It bridges the physical location of a customer (or table) with the delivery robot's navigation layer, enabling table-accurate service without manual dispatch. This device signals that Saha Robotics is not simply selling robots but building a connected in-venue service layer.
4. Technology Stack {#technology-stack}
The most consistently named proprietary technology across the portfolio is SAHA SLAM — a simultaneous localisation and mapping system that underpins autonomous navigation in the Speedy Pixel and Speedy Pixel Duo robots and is referenced in several delivery and service robot descriptions. Our read: SLAM is almost certainly used across the entire mobile robot range, with "SAHA SLAM" being the company's branded implementation, likely customised for indoor, multi-surface, and multi-floor environments rather than being an off-the-shelf open-source stack alone.
360° wide LiDAR scanning is specified on the Speedy Pixel Duo and referenced in the Speedy Service Robot, providing obstacle detection in dynamic environments. Our read: LiDAR is the primary safety and mapping sensor; camera-based or ultrasonic supplementary sensing may exist but is not separately specified in public materials.
UWB (Ultra-Wideband) positioning powers the Speedy Tag, enabling sub-metre indoor location resolution for table-level robot delivery. This is a more precise positioning technology than Bluetooth or Wi-Fi triangulation. Our read: the integration of UWB with SAHA SLAM suggests the navigation layer can consume external position signals, not just self-generated maps — an architectural flexibility that matters in reconfigurable venues.
IoT building integration is a recurring feature across delivery and service robots: elevators, automatic doors, and turnstiles are all listed as integrated devices. Our read: Saha Robotics has invested in building-protocol middleware, likely using common APIs (BACnet, REST, or proprietary bridges), though the specific protocols are not publicly detailed.
FlowAPI is named as the POS integration layer for the HeyHolo! AI Waiter family. Our read: this is either a proprietary API wrapper Saha Robotics has built to normalise connections to multiple POS systems, or it references a third-party integration platform — not enough public detail to distinguish.
Saha Remote / Remote Panel is referenced as a cloud-based monitoring and content management system for both the service robot fleet and the Speedy Pixel advertising robots. Our read: this implies a SaaS operations layer, which is commercially significant as it enables recurring-revenue relationships beyond hardware sales.
Advanced suspension systems are called out on multiple platforms (Speedy Service Robot, Speedy Pixel Duo, Rápido Pixel), addressing the practical reality of uneven flooring, door thresholds, and ramps inside real hospitality and retail venues.
Limited public technical detail exists on: compute hardware, battery chemistry, payload weight specifications, maximum speed, or specific SLAM algorithm underpinnings.
5. Research, Papers, Authors, Labs {#research-papers}
Company-linked papers
Saha Robotics does not appear to be a research-publishing organisation in the academic sense. No papers, preprints, or named research authors are surfaced in the company's public-facing materials. This is entirely normal for a commercial service-robotics firm whose focus is product development and deployment rather than academic contribution.
6. Media Evidence {#media-evidence}
Media library
No media coverage is linked or cited in the source data extracted from saharobotik.com. This does not confirm an absence of coverage; it reflects the current limits of the data available. Saha Robotics is invited to submit press links, case study publications, or trade-show appearances for inclusion.
7. Commercial Reality {#commercial-reality}
Customers & deployments
Revenue, customer counts, unit deployments, and return-on-investment figures are not disclosed in any public-facing materials available for this report. These metrics should be treated as Not disclosed.
The product portfolio's scope — sixteen SKUs, multi-vertical targeting, multi-language listings, a cloud operations layer, and an ecosystem accessory in the Speedy Tag — is consistent with a company that has at least some live commercial deployments, but no named customers, reference sites, or deployment case studies are surfaced in the available data. Our read: the multi-language naming (Turkish, English, Portuguese-register) suggests active commercial efforts across more than one geography, but this remains an inference.
Saha Robotics is invited to share deployment figures, named customer references, or verified ROI data for inclusion in this report.
8. Markets and Use Cases {#markets-use-cases}
The use-case and industry tags extracted from the product catalogue define a clear market map. Saha Robotics addresses five primary verticals:
Hospitals and healthcare facilities are targeted by the delivery robot family for medical supply and document transport — a use case where contactless, PIN-secured, 24/7-available delivery has strong hygiene and labour-efficiency rationale. Multi-floor navigation via elevator integration is particularly relevant in hospital environments, which are characteristically multi-storey and operationally continuous.
Hotels and hospitality venues are addressed by both the delivery robots (room-service documents, supplies) and the Speedy Service / Speedy Servis robots for food and beverage delivery and dish collection. The celebration mode feature specifically targets the guest-experience dimension of premium hospitality. The HeyHolo! AI Waiter provides a front-of-house ordering interface for F&B outlets within hotel properties.
Restaurants and cafés are the primary market for the Speedy Service family and HeyHolo!, with use cases spanning order-taking, food delivery to tables via UWB-guided Speedy Tag integration, dish return, and POS-connected payment processing.
Retail environments, shopping malls, and airports are the core deployment context for the Speedy Pixel advertising robot family. Mobile advertising, interactive product information, AI-guided wayfinding, and dynamic promotional content are the primary use cases. The Speedy Tag is also listed for food courts and airport lounges.
Corporate offices and trade shows are cited for the Speedy Pixel and Speedy Pixel Pro, where autonomous content delivery, guided visitor interactions, and internal wayfinding are the relevant applications.
Logistics and general commercial buildings round out the delivery robot target list, covering internal mail rooms, document distribution, and supply chain last-metre tasks.
9. Competitive Landscape {#competitive-landscape}
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 |
The indoor service-robotics market that Saha Robotics competes in is active globally, with established players in hospitality delivery, autonomous mobile advertising, and AI-assisted ordering. The competitive dynamics are shaped by factors including SLAM navigation maturity, building-system integration depth, vertical-specific feature development (healthcare compliance, F&B POS ecosystems), and the ability to offer fleet-management software alongside hardware. Saha Robotics's differentiation appears to rest on its multi-family portfolio breadth, the SAHA SLAM proprietary navigation layer, the UWB-based Speedy Tag ecosystem accessory, and the FlowAPI POS integration for the HeyHolo! line — features that, taken together, position it as an integrated in-venue automation platform rather than a single-category robot vendor.
The module above identifies same-category peers. This report does not editorially characterise competitors; the module carries that comparison.
10. Country Advantage / Geopolitical {#geopolitical}
Our read: the Turkish-language product naming and the .com domain paired with a Turkish contact address suggest a Turkish operational base. Turkey occupies a strategic manufacturing and export position bridging European and Middle Eastern markets, and the Turkish robotics and technology sector has seen growing investment. However, no publicly disclosed manufacturing locations, export agreements, regulatory certifications, or government partnerships are available to ground a substantive geopolitical analysis. The Portuguese-register product names (Courier Rápido, Rápido Pixel, HeyHolo! Garçom de IA) may indicate Brazilian or Iberian market development, which would carry its own supply-chain and regulatory considerations.
Not yet disclosed: country of incorporation, manufacturing location, export markets, or relevant certifications (e.g., CE marking, FDA guidance for medical delivery). Saha Robotics is invited to clarify.
11. Hype vs Real vs Ugly {#hype-real-ugly}
Claim tracker
Company claims — taken at face value from site copy:
- "Autonomous package delivery within facilities" and "24/7 continuous operation" — these are company claims. Independent verification of uptime performance is not available.
- "Multi-floor navigation using elevators" — company claim. This capability, if fully realised, represents meaningful engineering depth; no third-party validation is available.
- "AI-powered interaction" and "cutting-edge AI" for HeyHolo! — company claim language. The specific AI models, accuracy rates, or language support breadth are not detailed publicly. Our read: "cutting-edge AI" is marketing register; the relevant substantive claim is multilingual NLU-based order-taking with POS integration, which is a real and commercially useful capability if delivered.
- "UWB-based robot navigation for direct table service" via Speedy Tag — this is a technically specific claim (UWB, not merely Bluetooth) that implies genuine precision positioning investment. Our read: this is the kind of specific technical assertion that is verifiable and, if accurate, meaningfully differentiates the table-delivery use case.
- "Real-time analytics and reporting" for HeyHolo! — company claim; no sample dashboards, data definitions, or third-party audit are publicly available.
- "Advanced suspension for smooth navigation on various surfaces" — company claim present across multiple SKUs; no independent surface-testing data is available.
Not yet disclosed: Customer satisfaction scores, robot accuracy rates, delivery completion rates, mean-time-between-failure figures, or any independent benchmarking. These are standard due-diligence requests for any prospective buyer or investor.
12. Future Scenarios {#future-scenarios}
Bull case — Our read: Saha Robotics has constructed a multi-product, multi-vertical portfolio anchored by proprietary navigation (SAHA SLAM), a cloud operations layer (Saha Remote), and an ecosystem accessory (Speedy Tag) that extends its value beyond any single robot sale. If the company achieves reference deployments in two or three named hospital or hotel chains — particularly in markets where labour costs are rising — the portfolio's breadth becomes a sales-cycle accelerator. The Turkish base potentially provides cost-competitive manufacturing for European and Middle Eastern expansion. The Portuguese-register products suggest a growth vector into Brazil, one of the world's largest hospitality markets.
Base case — Our read: Saha Robotics continues to develop its multi-vertical offering and secures deployments primarily in Turkish and adjacent regional markets. Revenue grows incrementally through a mix of hardware sales and, potentially, recurring SaaS fees from the Saha Remote operations platform. The company remains a regional specialist rather than a global brand, with the Speedy Tag ecosystem and FlowAPI POS integration providing competitive stickiness in its core restaurant and hotel segments.
Bear case — Our read: The breadth of the portfolio — sixteen SKUs across four functional families, in multiple languages, without disclosed deployments — raises the question of commercial traction relative to development investment. If named-customer reference sites cannot be established, enterprise buyers in healthcare and hospitality (who are risk-averse about operational technology) may delay adoption. Larger global service-robotics platforms with more documented deployment histories and stronger capital positions could crowd out the market before Saha Robotics achieves the reference-site density needed for accelerated sales cycles.
13. What to Watch {#what-to-watch}
- First named reference deployments: A hospital, hotel chain, or restaurant group publicly associated with Speedy Courier or Speedy Service would materially validate commercial traction.
- SAHA SLAM technical disclosure: Any whitepaper, patent filing, or benchmarked navigation performance data would clarify the proprietary depth of the navigation stack.
- Speedy Tag ecosystem uptake: Whether the UWB accessory is sold alongside robots at meaningful attach rates is a signal of platform versus point-product positioning.
- FlowAPI POS integrations: Disclosure of which POS systems are supported (and whether major chains are covered) would determine the friction of restaurant-sector adoption.
- Geographic expansion signals: Trade-show presence, local-language press, or distributor announcements in Brazilian, Gulf, or European markets would confirm the internationalisation intent implied by the multi-language product naming.
- Saha Remote SaaS pricing: Any public pricing or subscription model disclosure would indicate whether the company is building recurring revenue or selling hardware only.
- Funding or partnership announcements: Any disclosed investment round or OEM/channel partner agreement would be a material indicator of growth trajectory.
- Regulatory certifications: CE marking for European markets, or equivalent certifications for healthcare environments, would be prerequisites for scaling in regulated verticals.
14. Sources & Methodology {#sources-methodology}
Primary source: All factual claims in this report are grounded exclusively in data extracted from saharobotik.com — specifically the product listings, feature descriptions, use-case and industry tags, and contact information available on the company's public-facing website. All such content carries company-claim provenance: it reflects what Saha Robotics states about itself, not independently verified performance or deployment data.
Computed relations: Product family groupings, vertical market mappings, and technology-stack inferences are derived analytically from the extracted product data. Where inference is applied, it is labelled "Our read:" throughout the report.
What this report does not do: It does not incorporate unsourced third-party claims, invented financial figures, fabricated customer references, or competitive characterisations unsupported by the data. Gaps are labelled as gaps and paired with an invitation for the company to submit corrections or additional disclosures.
Rubric applied uniformly to every company in this series:
- Lead with verified strengths.
- Label every inference.
- Label every company claim as a company claim.
- Render every undisclosed metric as "Not disclosed" with an invite to correct.
- Ground no negative as a stated fact without a source.
- Apply the same standard regardless of company size, geography, or product category.
Saha Robotics or any party with material corrections is invited to contact the editorial team for claim review and potential update of this report.

Speedy Courier Robot is an autonomous delivery robot designed to transport packages, documents, and supplies within buildings, hospitals, hotels, and other large facilities. It features multi-floor navigation via elevators, secure compartments, real-time tracking, and contactless delivery. The robot integrates with building systems and operates 24/7.
- •Autonomous package delivery within facilities
- •Multi-floor navigation via elevator integration
- •Secure compartments with PIN code access
- •Real-time tracking and delivery status updates
- •Instant notifications (SMS, phone, email) upon delivery
- •Integration with building systems, automatic doors, and elevators
- •Contactless delivery for enhanced hygiene
- •24/7 continuous operation
- •Autonomous charging via Speedy Powerdock
- •Advanced suspension for smooth navigation
Detailed specs not disclosed.
Technology stackOur read
Inferred from product specs — click through to the technology wiki:
ResearchComputed
Product comparisonComputed
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