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Astra
Apptronik
Not yet assessed
- Height
- 5'8"
- Payload
- —
- Verified autonomy
- not assessed
- Real deployment
- not assessed
- Status
- —
- Price
- —
Astra
ApptronikThe extracted facts span multiple unrelated products and entities all named 'Astra' — including Apptronik's Apollo humanoid robot (the dominant robotics subject), a life-advice mobile app, Topaz Labs' video upscaling service, an IAI business jet, IBM's streaming platform, and a cryptocurrency. The robotics-relevant system is Apptronik's Apollo humanoid robot, headquartered in Austin, Texas, with ~$1 billion total capital raised and a ~$5.3 billion post-money valuation as of early 2026. Apollo is a general-purpose humanoid robot targeting logistics and manufacturing tasks such as case picking, palletizing, and trailer unloading, offered via a Robot-as-a-Service model. No independent reviews, teardowns, or user reports of Apollo's actual autonomous task performance are present in the supplied facts — only vendor/official claims.
Availability
Specification
- [Apptronik Apollo] height
- 5'8"
- [Apptronik Apollo] weight
- 160 lbs
- [Apptronik Apollo] payload
- 55 lbs
- [Apptronik Apollo] battery_runtime
- 4 hours per battery pack
- [Apptronik Apollo] degrees_of_freedom
- 24 DoF total, 12 on hands; equipped with Psyonic Ability Hands
Price
No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.
Good · Bad · Ugly
Evidence-graded claims from the Apptronik deep report
Apptronik has raised nearly $1 billion in total capital (>$935M Series A) at a ~$5 billion valuation
The >$935M Series A figure is confirmed by an official GlobeNewswire press release [11] — an independently distributed wire service — and corroborated by multiple commerce sources [5][7][8][9] converging near $5B valuation, though the exact valuation ($5B vs $5.5B) and precise total capital figure vary slightly across sources.
from Apptronik deep report →
Apollo is a general-purpose humanoid robot capable of task-switching across diverse logistics and manufacturing workflows
Vendor sources [1][6] describe Apollo as general-purpose with multiple enumerated use cases, but no independent benchmark, third-party test, or customer deployment report verifies cross-task switching capability in real-world conditions.
from Apptronik deep report →Apollo has a 55 lb payload capacity, stands 5'8" tall, weighs 160 lbs, and runs for 4 hours per battery pack
These specifications are stated on Apptronik's official website [1] with high internal consistency, but no independent teardown, third-party lab test, or regulator filing has verified them, making them vendor-claimed only.
from Apptronik deep report →Apptronik has partnered with Google DeepMind to integrate Gemini AI into Apollo, positioning it as a foundation-model-powered robot
The partnership is confirmed by official press releases [10][11][12] and corroborated by commerce sources [6][9], but no independent technical assessment or Google DeepMind publication verifies what Gemini integration actually delivers in deployed Apollo units.
from Apptronik deep report →Apptronik has partnered with Jabil for mass production of Apollo
The Jabil manufacturing partnership is cited in official press releases [10][11] and community sources [6], but no independent reporting on production volumes, delivery timelines, or units shipped has been identified in the dossier.
from Apptronik deep report →Apptronik's RaaS pricing is approximately $21/hour currently, with a projected decline to ~$17/hour by end of decade
The $21/hour figure is cited by a commerce/analyst source [6] and not contradicted elsewhere, but it is not independently verified by any customer contract, regulatory filing, or neutral third-party report, and the forward projection is entirely speculative.
from Apptronik deep report →
About the company
Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.

