Crédit photo: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
Memorial Day sales are supposed to be about deals. But after spending the weekend combing through retailer listings and manufacturer promotions, I'm struck by how little actual robotics hardware made it into the discount pile.
Look, I've seen enough spec sheets and pricing cycles to know when a "sale" is just last quarter's inventory getting cleared out. And that's mostly what we're looking at here.
The honest answer: not much worth writing home about.
ZDNet rounded up the best Memorial Day deals across consumer electronics, and the robotics category is thin. We're talking robot vacuums, mostly. A few smart home devices that have "robot" in the marketing copy but are, basically, just sensors with WiFi.
Here's what I found across major retailers:
Robot vacuums: 15-25% off on mid-tier models from iRobot, Roborock, and Ecovacs. The flagship models? Maybe 10% if you're lucky.
Lawn mowers: A handful of robotic mower discounts, though the real savings (such as they are) came earlier in spring.
Educational kits: Some STEM robotics kits marked down, which is actually decent if you're buying for kids.
Industrial hardware: Nothing. Zero. As expected.
The consumer robotics space has a pricing problem that sales events can't fix. A Roomba j9+ still runs north of $800 even with a Memorial Day discount. That's a lot of money for a device that gets confused by black rugs.
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From my time building hardware at Fanuc, I can tell you that industrial robotics doesn't do retail sales cycles. The economics are completely different.
A six-axis industrial arm costs anywhere from $25,000 to $400,000 depending on payload capacity and precision requirements. These aren't impulse purchases. They're capital expenditures with 18-month procurement cycles, integration costs that often exceed the hardware price, and maintenance contracts that run for years.
Nobody's putting a collaborative robot on sale for Memorial Day. The sales process involves site visits, custom programming, safety assessments. It's a fundamentally different market.
That said, I've noticed some interesting shifts in how industrial automation gets sold. A few companies are experimenting with subscription models and robotics-as-a-service offerings that could, eventually, make the pricing more transparent. But we're not there yet.
This is where I get skeptical of the whole category.
Robot vacuums have been around for over two decades now. The technology has improved (better navigation, stronger suction, self-emptying bases) but the core value proposition remains, sort of, underwhelming. You still need a regular vacuum for stairs, corners, and anything above floor level.
Robotic lawn mowers are more interesting, technically. They're solving a genuine problem. But the installation requirements (boundary wires or GPS mapping, depending on the system) add friction that limits adoption. And the prices remain steep: $1,500 to $3,500 for a decent model.
The category that actually excites me is robotic pool cleaners, which have gotten genuinely good in the past few years. Cordless models with smart navigation that actually work. But that's a niche market.
Memorial Day sales tell us something about where consumer robotics actually sits in the market: it's still a luxury category, not a mainstream one.
The companies that will change this are the ones figuring out how to hit price points below $500 for useful, reliable robots. We're seeing some progress there from Chinese manufacturers, though quality control remains inconsistent based on the teardowns I've looked at.
For now, my advice is pretty simple. If you were already planning to buy a robot vacuum and you found a 20% discount, fine. Go ahead. But don't buy robotics hardware just because there's a sale sticker on it.
The best time to buy industrial automation equipment, incidentally, is Q4 when companies are trying to hit annual targets. That's when the real negotiations happen. But that's a story for another time.