Every humanoid worth knowing.
Sorted by Reality Score — the most source-backed and independently verified robots rise, even when they are research, education, or historical platforms rather than current labor robots. 31 robots on the roster.
HumanoidRoster tracks robots with a human-like body plan that are publicly shown, documented, or credibly reported. The main roster prioritizes complete bipedal humanoids, upper-body humanoids with manipulation, historically important platforms, and research platforms that materially shaped the field.
Wheeled systems are included only as explicit exceptions when the product is marketed and evaluated as a humanoid labor robot. Watchlist, excluded, and archived entries are labeled so readers can see the boundary calls instead of guessing why a system is or is not on the active roster.

France's small humanoid that quietly became a research and education standard.

The humanoid that knew it was a logistics robot.

Italy's child-sized open humanoid platform for embodied AI research.

The first humanoid to walk a BMW assembly line.

Figure's third-generation humanoid, now being shown in around-the-clock autonomous operation.

NASA-bred, Texas-built, Mercedes-piloted.

Spain's full-size biped humanoid research platform for whole-body control.

China's answer, at a fraction of the price.

Smaller, cheaper, faster to your warehouse than its big brother.

Boston Dynamics' admission that hydraulics were a dead end.

A humanoid that doesn't look like one.

The UK's expressive social humanoid — stunning face, limited labor-robot evidence.

EngineAI's heavy-load full-size humanoid, built around high torque, long endurance, and martial-arts-grade demos.

The publicly-traded humanoid running Chinese assembly lines.

AgiBot's flagship full-size commercial humanoid claim.

A wheeled embodied robot for data collection and industrial tasks, not a classic biped.
Included as a wheeled humanoid exception because AgiBot positions it inside its embodied/humanoid robot lineup and it is useful market context.

Humanoid's UK-built Alpha platform, spanning wheeled and bipedal variants for industrial work.
Humanoid describes Alpha across wheeled and bipedal variants; this profile should not be treated as a single pure bipedal morphology.

A humanoid built like a car — at car-factory scale.

A lower-cost full-size A2 variant aimed at performance and commercial demos.

A third-generation humanoid with tactile skin and a 27-DoF dexterous hand.

An AGI bet wrapped in a humanoid.

A stage-first humanoid built for synchronized performance, not factory claims.

A full-size humanoid sold on anthropomorphic gait and high-motion demos.
Kepler's industrial humanoid pitch for factories, handling, and rugged work.
A German industrial humanoid built around Physical AI, dexterous hands, and production-floor work.

Rehab-built, research-shipped, cheaper than the rest.

Same rehab DNA, more articulation, real hands now.

XPENG's Physical AI humanoid program for factories and future mobility ecosystems.

GigaAI's wheeled household humanoid exception, aimed at real apartment chores rather than factory work.
Included as a wheeled humanoid exception because it is marketed and discussed as part of the household humanoid/embodied-AI market and is important for market context.

Germany's glossy new general-purpose humanoid claim — promising, but still early.

UBTECH's new commercial-service Walker variant, officially shown in a dance demo but not yet spec-published.