Pudu Robotics, the Shenzhen-based commercial service robotics company, has raised nearly USD 150 million in a new funding round, pushing its valuation above USD 1.5 billion. Cumulative funding across all rounds now exceeds USD 300 million. The company reported 100% year-over-year revenue growth in 2025 and holds a 23% global market share in commercial service robotics, according to Frost & Sullivan data, ranking first worldwide.
Proceeds will be directed toward embodied AI development, product portfolio expansion, global market growth, manufacturing scale-up, and supply chain investment.
Business Composition and Commercial Scale
Pudu’s revenue is now dominated by its commercial cleaning segment, which accounts for more than 70% of total revenue. The company’s industrial delivery robots have seen rapid uptake, with over 4,000 units shipped within one year of their market launch. Across all product lines, Pudu has shipped more than 120,000 units globally and is deployed in more than 80 countries and regions.
Its customer base includes major global retail operators such as Carrefour, Walmart, and EDEKA. The breadth of that customer list reflects both the scale of Pudu’s sales operation and the extent to which commercial service robots have moved from novelty deployments into recurring procurement across large enterprise accounts.
Technology and Product Architecture
Pudu builds its product lines on a “One Brain, Multiple Embodiments” architecture – a unified AI platform that supports a range of physical form factors, from specialized task robots to semi-humanoid and humanoid systems. Core technologies span mobility, manipulation, and interaction, with full-stack development of navigation algorithms, multi-robot scheduling systems, motion controllers, and integrated joint modules handled in-house.
The company operates R&D centers in Chengdu and Hong Kong alongside its Shenzhen headquarters. That distributed R&D structure supports a product portfolio spanning four lines: service delivery, commercial cleaning, industrial delivery, and general embodied AI robotics – a range that positions Pudu across both the near-term commercial market and the longer-term humanoid opportunity.
Strategic Context
The funding round arrives as commercial service robotics transitions from a niche category into a mainstream procurement consideration for retail, hospitality, healthcare, and facility management operators globally. Pudu’s 2025 revenue growth and cleaning segment dominance suggest that autonomous cleaning – a structured, repeatable, high-frequency task – is currently the clearest path to commercial scale in service robotics, ahead of more complex manipulation or interaction use cases.
The company’s stated goal is to build a global intelligent robotics infrastructure serving 10 billion people. Whether that ambition is realized through cleaning robots, humanoids, or the full portfolio will depend on how quickly the embodied AI capabilities Pudu is investing in can be productized into deployable solutions at the pace the company’s commercial growth now demands.