Back/Barclays Predicts Humanoid Robots Scale Commercially by 2027; Market $40–200B by 2035
tech·February 5, 2026·bcs

Barclays Predicts Humanoid Robots Scale Commercially by 2027; Market $40–200B by 2035

ED
Editorial
Cashu Markets·2 min read
TL;DR
  • Barclays: humanoid robots moving to production by late 2026–2027, enabling rapid commercial expansion.
  • Barclays projects market growth from ~$3bn today to $40bn base case, possibly $200bn by 2035.
  • Barclays estimates unit costs fell from ~$3m to about $100k, urging watchers to track costs, timelines, regulation.

Barclays Forecast: Humanoid Robotics Poised for Commercial Ramp

Barclays’ Eagle Eye research says humanoid robotics is moving from laboratory prototypes to production by late 2026 and into 2027, setting the stage for a rapid commercial expansion. The note projects the market, worth roughly $3 billion today, widening to about $40 billion under its base-case outlook and potentially reaching $200 billion by 2035 if “physical AI” scales across labour‑intensive sectors. Barclays highlights that recent advances in AI give humanoids contextual and visual reasoning combined with arms and legs, enabling one adaptable robot to replace many single‑task machines that have dominated factories for decades.

The research stresses cost declines and demographic drivers that strengthen the substitution case for businesses. Barclays estimates a typical humanoid unit that cost roughly $3 million a decade ago can be around $100,000 today, sharply improving economics for deployment as populations age, urbanisation rises and worker preferences shift. Initial deployment demand is expected to concentrate among industrial firms, automakers, ports and warehousing, where precision and repetitive tasks create clear near‑term use cases; household robots arrive later, into the early 2030s.

Analyst Zornitsa Todorova relays takeaways from Davos that humanoids create near‑term tailwinds not only for hardware makers but also for firms that deploy them across manufacturing, logistics, agriculture, defence and, over time, healthcare and elderly care. The note also flags national security implications, warning humanoids will soon appear on modern battlefields. Barclays urges industry watchers to track unit cost declines, deployment timelines through 2027, regulatory and safety developments, and partnerships between incumbents and startups as the sector transitions from pilots to scaled production.

Early Adopters and Real-World Examples

Barclays cites real‑world trials such as work at BMW’s Spartanburg plant, where humanoid robots perform precision duties like loading sheet‑metal parts into welding fixtures. These early implementations demonstrate how humanoids can take on varied tasks that previously required multiple specialised machines or human operators.

Companies to Watch and Commercial Transition

The bank names Boston Dynamics, Agility Robotics, ANYbotics, Clearpath Robotics, Open Robotics and Unitree as leading firms to watch as the market scales. Barclays frames its $40 billion base case as conservative and its $200 billion upside as contingent on rapid automation across sectors, underscoring that partnerships and regulatory clarity will shape how quickly the industry moves from pilots to wide commercial adoption.