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Locus Vector XL

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Locus Vector XL

Locus Vector XL

Locus Robotics

Not yet assessed

Height
Payload
Verified autonomy
not assessed
Real deployment
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Status
Price
verified / really deployed unverified / demo-stage

Locus Vector XL

Locus Robotics
Unverified

Locus Vector XL is a high-payload autonomous mobile robot (AMR) developed by Locus Robotics (Wilmington, MA), designed for warehouse fulfillment tasks including shelf/rack moving, point-to-point material handling, and integration with conveyors and sortation systems. The Vector carries up to 600 lbs (with a separate 'Locus Max' variant rated at 3,000 lbs) and operates as part of the broader Locus ecosystem (Origin, Vector, Array) orchestrated by the LocusONE™ platform. It has achieved CE certification and is actively deployed across 3PLs and global retailers in Europe and beyond. The system operates collaboratively with human workers for picking tasks, meaning humans still perform the physical pick while robots handle transport — though the newer Locus Array product targets fully autonomous picking. Pricing follows a RaaS subscription model (~$950/month per bot plus a one-time deployment fee), with deployment achievable in days to three months.

Availability

Shipping

Specification

payload_capacity
600 lbs (Vector); 3,000 lbs (Locus Max variant)

Price

No public price — contact the supplier for a quote.

Good · Bad · Ugly

Evidence-graded claims from the Locus Robotics deep report

Good
  • Autonomous picking speed of the best AI model benchmarked on a real warehouse task is ~64 picks/hour, versus ~1,300 picks/hour for a human

    An independently conducted community benchmark [18] tested four robot AI models on a real industrial picking task and found the best model achieved ~64 picks/hour; the ~1,300 picks/hour human baseline was also measured in the same study — though the benchmark does not specifically test the Locus Array hardware, leaving a gap in direct product-level validation.

    from Locus Robotics deep report →
  • GEODIS deployed 1,000 LocusBots across 14 global warehouse sites (U.S. and Europe) over 24 months

    A GEODIS press release [11] — an independent customer announcement — directly confirms the expanded agreement to deploy 1,000 LocusBots across 14 sites in the U.S. and Europe; this is a customer-issued statement, though actual operational outcomes (throughput, labor savings) at those sites are not independently audited.

    from Locus Robotics deep report →
  • The legacy Origin/Vector AMR model requires human associates to perform the physical pick; robots navigate and carry totes but do not manipulate items

    The MWPVL independent consultant review [9] and the Forrester TEI report [5] both explicitly describe the operational model as robots guiding human associates to pick locations while workers perform the physical pick, with a bot-to-picker ratio of ~3.5:1; this is further corroborated by the official picking page [4].

    from Locus Robotics deep report →
  • Locus Robotics has raised over $330M in venture funding at a ~$2B valuation (as of Series F, November 2022)

    The Series F press release [10] and Nasdaq Private Market listing [8] independently confirm the $117M Series F round bringing total funding over $330M at a ~$2B valuation; however, this reflects a 2022 snapshot and no subsequent funding round or updated valuation has been reported in the dossier.

    from Locus Robotics deep report →
Bad
  • Locus Array hardware features an omnidirectional base, vision system, robot arm with NeuraGrasp AI-powered gripper, vertical reach up to 10 feet, and centimeter-level precision near double-deep shelving

    Robot Report [14] (independent trade press) and the official site [1] corroborate the hardware description including the NeuraGrasp gripper from the Nexera Robotics acquisition, but no independent third-party test has verified the claimed 10-foot reach, centimeter-level precision, or gripper adaptability across shape/surface/material in a production environment.

    from Locus Robotics deep report →
  • Locus Robotics robots are safe for human-shared environments and require no human-exclusive safety zones, including deployment on mezzanines

    The MWPVL independent consultant review [9] corroborates the vendor's claim that no human-exclusive zone is required, but this assessment appears to be based on vendor-provided information rather than independent safety certification or regulatory audit, and no third-party safety standard compliance documentation is cited in the dossier.

    from Locus Robotics deep report →

About the company

Editorial directory of real robot products from leading global manufacturers. Each entry links to the manufacturer's official page.