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Today β€” 16 December 2025Main stream

China Sells Humanoid Robot for the Price of an iPhone

15 December 2025 at 21:23
China BUMI ROBOT

Highlights:

  • China’s $1400 Bumi humanoid highlights a sharp price gap with US robots like Tesla Optimus and Digit
  • Experts warn China’s low-cost push may fuel scale, not profits, in the global humanoid race
  • The trend deepens the US–China tech and AI rivalry, with different paths to dominance

China Pushes Ultra-Low-Cost Humanoids

China’s Songyan Power will supply 1000 Bumi humanoid robots to Huichen Technology under a new deal. Bumi is a small, lightweight humanoid robot that can walk, run, dance, respond to voice commands, and be programmed using simple drag-and-drop tools. It is designed for interactions with children, for education, and beginner robotics learning.

Priced at 9998 yuan (about $1400), Bumi is currently the world’s cheapest humanoid robot, making it accessible to schools and families rather than just companies or factories. Sales are set to begin in January 2026, with China becoming one of the first countries to push humanoid robots toward everyday consumer use.

A Sharp Contrast With the US Market

In US, humanoid robots are still much more expensive. Tesla’s Optimus is expected to cost $20000–$30000 at scale, while Agility Robotics’ Digit sells for around $250000 and is built for warehouses and factories.

US players prioritize industrial productivity and safety over consumer adoption, resulting in slower scale but clearer revenue models.

What This Means for the Tech and AI Rivalry

China’s strategy focuses on speed, manufacturing scale, and price disruption, even at thin margins. The US approach emphasizes advanced AI, autonomy, and enterprise value. This split reflects a broader AI and tech competition: China is betting on hardware scale and ecosystem dominance, while the US is betting on software intelligence and high-value applications.

Global Impact and Risks

Low-cost Chinese humanoids could accelerate global adoption in education and research, but experts warn that price wars may weaken long-term innovation. For global markets, the humanoid race is becoming another front in the US–China tech competition, with very different visions of how robots will enter everyday life.

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The post China Sells Humanoid Robot for the Price of an iPhone appeared first on Gizmochina.

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