Crédit photo: Lottie animation by Centre Robotics (LottieFiles Free, used with credit). · source
The humanoid robotics industry has reached a genuine milestone this week. And I want to be careful with that word, because I use it sparingly. 1X has opened pre-orders for Neo, a home humanoid robot, at $19,500. This is not a research prototype. This is not a "contact us for enterprise pricing" situation. This is a consumer product with a buy button.
But here's where I have to complicate my own enthusiasm: a milestone is not the same as a breakthrough. The fact that you can order a humanoid robot for your home does not tell us whether you should, or whether it will do anything useful once it arrives. Let me walk through what we actually know.
1X, the Norwegian-American company that emerged from the robotics scene with backing from OpenAI, is positioning Neo as "the world's first consumer-ready humanoid robot designed to transform life at home." The robot stands 168 centimetres tall, weighs 30 kilograms, and is being marketed for household tasks like folding laundry and general domestic assistance.
The $19,500 price point is interesting. The Verge notes that this is significantly higher than 1X's marketing has suggested over the past year, but several times lower than where serious analyst estimates placed commercial home humanoid pricing for 2026. So we're in this awkward middle ground: expensive enough to be inaccessible to most households, cheap enough to suggest the company isn't just selling a handful of units to wealthy early adopters.
TechCrunch reports that 1X is framing the initial cohort as an "early-adopter programme," which is corporate-speak for "we know this isn't ready for mainstream consumers yet." That framing matters. It's worth noting that this is not being positioned as a finished product for the mass market.
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This is where I need to be a bit pedantic, because the coverage I've seen conflates several different things.
Home robotics is not new. We've had Roombas for over two decades. Domestic manipulation (picking things up, moving them, basic organisation) has been demonstrated in research settings since at least the early 2010s. What's new here is the form factor combined with the price point combined with actual commercial availability.
Actually, the research shows that humanoid form factors for home tasks have been contentious in the academic literature for years. The argument for humanoids is that homes are designed for human bodies: stairs, door handles, countertop heights, and so on. The argument against is that humanoids are mechanically complex, expensive to build, and prone to failure modes that simpler robots avoid. A wheeled robot with a single arm can fold laundry. It doesn't need legs.
1X is betting that the humanoid form factor provides enough versatility to justify the added complexity. The jury is still out on whether that bet pays off. I haven't seen peer-reviewed work demonstrating that Neo (or any commercial humanoid) can reliably perform the range of tasks 1X is marketing. The demos look impressive. Demos often do.
If you compare $19,500 to a car, it's cheap. If you compare it to a high-end appliance, it's expensive. If you compare it to what analysts expected commercial humanoids to cost in 2026, it's remarkably low (some estimates I've seen placed initial pricing north of $50,000 or even $100,000 for a capable system).
But here's the question that matters: what's the cost per useful task completed? We don't have data on this yet. If Neo can reliably fold laundry, load a dishwasher, and perform basic tidying, $19,500 might represent genuine value for certain households (particularly those with mobility limitations or demanding schedules). If it requires constant supervision, breaks frequently, or can only perform a narrow set of tasks, the economics fall apart.
Robohub raises the broader question that I think deserves more attention: do we actually want humanoid robots in our homes? The piece, written by Eduardo B. Sandoval at UNSW Sydney, gestures at the social and psychological dimensions that the technical coverage tends to ignore. Having a human-shaped machine in your living space is qualitatively different from having a Roomba. The sample size on how humans respond to this over extended periods is, well, basically zero outside of controlled research settings.
We don't know Neo's actual reliability in unstructured home environments. Research labs are controlled. Your kitchen is not. The gap between demo performance and real-world performance in robotics is often substantial, and this hasn't been replicated in independent testing that I'm aware of.
We don't know the failure modes. What happens when Neo encounters a situation it can't handle? Does it stop safely? Does it attempt the task anyway and break something? Does it require human intervention? The company hasn't disclosed detailed specifications on this.
We don't know the maintenance requirements. Humanoid robots have a lot of moving parts. Actuators wear out. Sensors degrade. What's the expected service life? What does repair cost? These questions matter enormously for the actual economics.
We also don't know how many units 1X expects to ship. The company didn't disclose exact figures for the early-adopter programme, which makes it difficult to assess whether this is a serious commercial launch or an extended beta test with paying participants.
I know I'm being picky here, but I think this distinction matters.
The underlying technology (humanoid locomotion, manipulation, vision systems, learned policies for task execution) is largely incremental over prior work. 1X has been developing Neo for several years, and the technical capabilities shown in demos are consistent with the state of the art in research robotics. This is not a fundamental breakthrough in what robots can do.
What's new is the commercial packaging. Someone at 1X made the decision that the technology is mature enough to sell to consumers. That's a business milestone, not a technical one. It's still significant. The transition from "research prototype" to "product you can buy" involves enormous work in manufacturing, quality control, safety certification, customer support infrastructure, and a dozen other domains that academics (myself included) tend to undervalue.
So yes, this is a milestone. The first commercial home humanoid at a (relatively) accessible price point is genuinely new. But the capabilities themselves are not a paradigm... actually, let me rephrase that. The capabilities themselves are not a dramatic leap beyond what we've seen in research settings.
If I were advising 1X (they haven't asked), I'd want to see three things.
First, independent testing. Get Neo into the hands of robotics researchers who aren't affiliated with the company and let them publish honest assessments. The PR demos are slick. Third-party validation would be more convincing.
Second, transparent reliability data. After six months of the early-adopter programme, publish failure rates, common issues, and customer satisfaction metrics. This is how you build trust with a skeptical audience.
Third, a clear roadmap for capability expansion. What tasks will Neo be able to perform in version 2.0? How does the company plan to improve the system over time? Is this a platform that gets better, or a static product?
I'm cautiously optimistic, which is not a phrase I use often about consumer robotics. The price is lower than I expected. The form factor makes sense for the target use cases. 1X has serious technical talent and serious backing. But optimism is not the same as confidence. The history of consumer robotics is littered with products that looked great in demos and disappointed in living rooms.
We'll know more once early adopters start reporting their experiences. Until then, this is a milestone worth noting, but not yet a transformation worth celebrating.