Atlas - The Agile Anthropomorphic Robot, Boston Dynamics, Inc., Waltham, Massachusetts, USA


The Beginning of Your Tomorrow

Jan 5, 2026

We’re excited to announce the product version of our Atlas® robot. This enterprise-grade humanoid robot offers impressive strength and range of motion, precise manipulation, and intelligent adaptability—designed to power the new industrial revolution.
 
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Hyundai introduces its next-gen Atlas robot at CES 2026

Jan 6, 2026

Watch Hyundai Motor Group and Boston Dynamics show off their next-generation all-electric Atlas robot, designed for factory work.
 

Atlas Airborne
Feb 7, 2026

Now that the Atlas enterprise platform is getting to work, the research version gets one last run in the sun. Our engineers made one final push to test the limits of full-body control and mobility, with help from the RAI Institute.
 

Form & Function of Enterprise Humanoid Design | Boston Dynamics Tech Talk | Atlas

Mar 18, 2026

The production version of Atlas is a departure from the typical humanoid form factor, favoring industrial utility over human likeness. Intended for purposeful work in an industrial setting, Atlas has a form factor that signals its role as a machine rather than a companion or friendly assistant. Join two lead hardware engineers and our head of industrial design for a technical discussion of how key product requirements, ranging from passive thermal management to a modular architecture, dictated a bold new vision for a humanoid.
 

How does Atlas learn? | Inside the Lab

May 18, 2026

Just months after its debut, Atlas is proving why it is the world’s most capable and dynamic humanoid robot, ready for real work. Lifting a mini-fridge is a feat of strength, but the true breakthrough is in the underlying reinforcement learning and controls systems. The robot is learning to navigate real world adaptability: handling heavy objects by bracing and accounting for the mass and inertia; using whole-body control, not just hands to maneuver; and demonstrating superhuman range of motion and balance. This marks a critical shift in robotics where humanoids move beyond the lab and into dynamic industrial settings.
 
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