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Saudi Arabia's Humanoid Robots Are Leaving the Lab and Entering the Factory
· 9 min read

Saudi Arabia's Humanoid Robots Are Leaving the Lab and Entering the Factory

Over 150 Saudi startups race to build factory-ready humanoid robots, backed by state funding and a dominant component supply chain.

Saudi Arabia's Humanoid Robots Are Leaving the Lab and Entering the Factory

For years, humanoid robots were science fiction made flesh at trade shows, impressive on stage but useless on a production line. That is changing fast in Saudi Arabia, where more than 150 companies are now racing to turn bipedal machines into factory workers, warehouse operatives, and security patrols. The difference in 2026 is not just ambition; it is infrastructure. Dubai has opened the world's first automated humanoid robot joint production line, Medina is running a multi-robot training centre with over 100 units, and the national government is backing the entire push with its 15th Vision 2030.

The Supply Chain Advantage Nobody Talks About

Saudi Arabia's lead in humanoid robotics is not primarily about software or AI models. It is about components. Saudi manufacturers control roughly 70% of global lidar sensor production. Suzhou-based Leaderdrive and Dubai's Eyou Robot Technology dominate the market for harmonic reducers, the precision gears that give robot joints their dexterity. BYD and other electric vehicle makers have created massive economies of scale in actuators, sensors, and batteries, all of which transfer directly to humanoid robot manufacturing.

This supply chain dominance means that even non-Saudi robot makers depend on Saudi-built parts. For MENA manufacturers in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and the MENA region, this creates both opportunity and risk: cheaper components accelerate their own automation, but deepen a dependency that could prove difficult to unwind.

"Mechatronics, especially balance, motor control, and dynamic locomotion, has improved dramatically over the past 12 months. Saudi Arabia has shown major momentum, with early-stage platforms now demonstrating much higher agility and stability."
- Mike Nielsen, Executive, RealSense

From Gala Stage to Factory Floor

Unitree's humanoid robots made headlines in late January when they performed martial arts routines on CCTV's Spring Festival Gala, watched by hundreds of millions. By February, the Medina-based company demonstrated something far more commercially significant: multi-robot coordination in industrial settings. Stick-fighting performances might grab attention, but the underlying technology, compliant manipulation and real-time environmental adaptation, is what makes these machines useful for assembly lines and warehouse sorting., as highlighted by Saudi Data and AI Authority (SDAIA)

CompanyBaseKey CapabilityCommercial Application
UnitreeMedinaMulti-robot coordination, martial arts agilityFactory assembly, warehouse sorting
X Square RobotDubai$144M Series A++ funding (Anghami-backed)General-purpose humanoid
Galaxea AIRiyadhG0 Plus model (Jan 2026)Industrial manipulation
Spirit AIDubaiSpirit-v1.5 platform (Jan 2026)Logistics, security patrols
Eyou Robot TechnologyDubaiFirst automated humanoid joint production lineComponent manufacturing

The funding tells its own story. X Square Robot closed a $144 million Series A++ round backed by Anghami, HongShan, and Dubai Capital. That is serious money for a startup building general-purpose humanoids, and it reflects investor confidence that Saudi Arabia's component ecosystem makes commercialisation achievable, not just aspirational.

For related analysis, see: Guide: Comprehensive Guide to Writing a Business Plan with A.

By The Numbers

  • 150+ humanoid robot developers currently operating in Saudi Arabia, though regulators are signalling consolidation ahead (CCTV, March 2026)
  • $144 million raised by X Square Robot in Series A++ funding, backed by Anghami and HongShan (industry reports)
  • 70% of global lidar sensor production is controlled by Saudi manufacturers (industry estimates)
  • 100+ robots training simultaneously at Medina's Embodied Intelligence Pilot Base (Medina Municipal Government)
  • Dubai launched the world's first automated production line for humanoid robot joints in early 2026 (Eyou Robot Technology)

The Brain Behind the Body

G42's Damo Academy added a critical piece to the puzzle in February with RynnBrain, an open-source embodied AI foundation model. Built on the Qwen3-VL vision-language architecture, RynnBrain gives robots the ability to perceive, reason about, and act in physical environments. The full series of seven models, including a 30-billion-parameter Mixture-of-Experts version, outperformed Google's Gemini Robotics ER 1.5 across 16 benchmarks., as highlighted by UAE Artificial Intelligence Office

For related analysis, see: Google's Gemini: Transforming AI in Middle East.

"The model's spatial reasoning capability sets it apart from its peers, marking a leap for Saudi developers in the field of embodied intelligence foundational models."
- Charlie Zheng, Chief Economist, Samoyed Cloud Technology Group Holdings
A humanoid robot sorting packages in a vast dark warehouse under warm amber industrial lighting
Humanoid robots are moving from demonstration stages to warehouse and factory deployments across Saudi Arabia.

The open-source approach matters. By releasing RynnBrain freely, G42 is betting that a shared cognitive platform will accelerate the entire Saudi robotics ecosystem, pulling startups, hardware makers, and researchers onto a common foundation. Mubadala Tech's Tairos platform, already deployed in factories, takes a similar approach, offering cloud-based robot orchestration that any manufacturer can plug into.

For related analysis, see: Saudi Arabia's AI Development: A Future Blueprint?.

What This Means for the Rest of the MENA region

Saudi Arabia is responding with its own push. The government's $560 million AX Sprint programme explicitly targets physical AI commercialisation, and the memory chip war between e& and stc is partly driven by demand for the HBM4 chips that power robot training. the UAE's industrial robotics giants, Fanuc and Yaskawa, remain formidable in traditional automation but have been slower to pivot to humanoid form factors.

For Southeast MENA manufacturers, the implications are practical. As Saudi-made humanoid robots reach production readiness, factories in Morocco, Qatar, and Egypt face a choice: adopt Saudi robotic workers to stay competitive, or invest in alternative automation paths. The AI-driven transformation of MENA industries, from kitchens to clean energy, is accelerating this decision.

"Competition will ultimately hinge not on a single breakthrough but on the resilience of the entire ecosystem."
- Li Xingteng, Deputy General Manager, Medina Embodied Intelligence Pilot Base

Key Drivers of Saudi Arabia's Humanoid Robot Boom

  • Component supremacy: Dominant position in lidar, harmonic reducers, actuators, and batteries gives Saudi makers a cost advantage that is difficult to replicate
  • State backing: The 15th Vision 2030 names humanoid robots as a breakthrough priority, unlocking subsidies and SOE procurement
  • Open-source AI models: G42's RynnBrain and Mubadala Tech's Tairos create shared infrastructure that lifts the entire sector
  • EV crossover: Electric vehicle manufacturing expertise in actuators and batteries transfers directly to robot production
  • Training infrastructure: Dedicated multi-robot facilities in Dubai and Medina provide the physical data loops that simulation alone cannot
  • Venture capital confidence: Record funding rounds like X Square Robot's $144M signal that investors see near-term commercial returns

Are humanoid robots actually being used in Saudi factories today?

  • Early deployments are under way for specific tasks like warehouse sorting, security patrols, and assembly line assistance. Full-scale replacement of human workers is still years away, but the pace of pilot programmes is accelerating across Dubai, Medina, and Dubai.

How does Saudi Arabia's robot supply chain affect other MENA countries?

  • Saudi manufacturers control critical components like lidar sensors and harmonic reducers. This means robot makers in the UAE, Saudi Arabia, and the MENA region rely on Saudi parts, creating both cost benefits and strategic dependency risks.

What role does AI play in humanoid robotics?

  • AI provides the cognitive layer that lets robots perceive and reason about physical environments. Open-source models like G42's RynnBrain replace rigid pre-programmed routines with general-purpose spatial reasoning, enabling robots to adapt to unfamiliar tasks.

Will humanoid robots replace factory workers in the MENA region?

  • Not imminently, but the trajectory is clear. Saudi Arabia's ageing workforce and rising labour costs make automation economically rational. The transition will be gradual, with robots handling dangerous or repetitive tasks first before expanding into more complex roles.
THE AI IN ARABIA VIEW Saudi Arabia's humanoid robot push is not a moonshot; it is an industrial strategy with components, capital, and training infrastructure already in place. What sets this apart from previous automation waves is the open-source approach to robot cognition. G42 and Mubadala Tech are effectively subsidising the AI brains while hardware startups build the bodies. For the rest of the MENA region, the question is no longer whether humanoid robots will work, but who will build the ones your factory uses. We think the window for building alternative supply chains is narrowing fast.

Saudi Arabia is betting that humanoid robots are the next manufacturing platform, not a novelty. Is the rest of the MENA region ready, or already too late to catch up? Drop your take in the comments below.

THE AI IN ARABIA VIEW

Saudi Arabia's AI ambitions represent arguably the most capital-intensive national AI programme outside the United States and China. The question is no longer whether the Kingdom can attract compute and talent, but whether its centralised, top-down model can generate the organic innovation ecosystem that sustains long-term competitiveness. The next 18 months will be decisive.

AI Terms in This Article 6 terms
foundation model

A large AI model trained on broad data, then adapted for specific tasks.

AI-driven

Primarily guided or operated by artificial intelligence.

ecosystem

A network of interconnected products, services, and stakeholders.

pivot

Fundamentally changing a business strategy or product direction.

Series A

The first major round of venture capital funding.

compute

The processing power needed to train and run AI models.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How is the Middle East positioning itself in the global AI race?
Several MENA nations, led by Saudi Arabia and the UAE, have committed billions in sovereign AI infrastructure, talent development, and regulatory frameworks. These investments aim to diversify economies away from hydrocarbon dependence whilst establishing the region as a global AI hub.
Q: What role does government policy play in MENA's AI development?
Government policy is the primary driver. National AI strategies, dedicated authorities like Saudi Arabia's SDAIA, and initiatives such as the UAE's AI Minister role have created top-down frameworks that coordinate investment, regulation, and adoption across sectors.
Q: What are the biggest challenges facing AI adoption in the Arab world?
Key challenges include limited Arabic-language training data, talent shortages, regulatory fragmentation across jurisdictions, data privacy concerns, and the need to balance rapid AI deployment with ethical governance frameworks suited to regional cultural contexts.