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Comparisons

Humanoid Robots for Rent in 2026: The Honest Breakdown

ZMProbots Team Updated 12 min read
Unitree G1 humanoid robot walking autonomously outdoors demonstrating full bipedal movement and 41-DOF capability

In 2026, we spent three months tracking every humanoid robot rental program that actually exists — from our time on the CES floor in Las Vegas to pricing sourced across 17 countries. Most humanoid robots for rent cannot actually be booked. This is the honest breakdown.

Two Robots, One Crowd

The Only Robot You Can Actually Book

What You Should Know

  • Only the Unitree G1 via ZMProbots offers a transparent booking process with no enterprise contract, from $299/day
  • AgiBot X2 launched a formal rental program at MWC 2026 — available in 17 markets, starting around €899/day
  • Both robots walk and interact autonomously — the key difference is price, availability, and US logistics support
  • 10 of the 12 robots on this list have no public rental program at all
  • The humanoid robot rental cost guide breaks down every cost component

Unitree G1 — From $299/day (via ZMProbots)

Maker: Unitree Robotics, China | Rental status: Available, bookable online

The Unitree G1 is the only walking, fully autonomous humanoid robot available for event rental at a day rate most event budgets can work with. ZMProbots rents the G1 across the US (48 contiguous states), Canada, UK, and Europe — no enterprise contract required. Pay via Stripe, and a trained operator delivers the unit to your venue.

Specs: 127 cm tall, 35 kg, 41 degrees of freedom, five-finger dexterous hands, 3D LiDAR, stereo cameras, NVIDIA Jetson Orin compute, approximately 2-hour battery per charge with quick-swap capability. Every booking includes delivery, collection, and base ZMP Protection coverage. For events requiring operator dispatch, the robot rental for events page covers operator scheduling and logistics.

At Pfizer’s Boston product launch in September 2025 — a 3-day booking, 400 attendees — the G1 ran a 20-minute interaction loop every hour. That is what a working event-rental humanoid looks like in practice.

AgiBot X2 — From €899/day

Maker: AgiBot (Zhiyuan Robot), China | Rental status: Available in 17 markets

AgiBot launched a formal rental program for its X2 humanoid at MWC 2026, covering 17 markets including the US. It is a legitimate walking humanoid: 130 cm tall, 33.8 kg, 25 to 31 degrees of freedom depending on variant, capable of walking, running, dancing, and riding a bicycle. AgiBot’s proprietary WorkGPT AI model powers task execution.

Published rental rate at launch: approximately €899/day, with on-site AgiBot technical support required — adding logistics complexity for US events. For clients with larger budgets who need a European-primary deployment, it is a genuine option. For most US event teams, the cost and logistics gap makes the G1 the practical choice. To understand how to evaluate and compare robot rentals, the complete rental guide covers every step.

Unitree G1 humanoid robot at CES 2026 trade show interacting with attendees on the exhibition floor
AgiBot X2 humanoid robot by Zhiyuan Robot walking demonstration with bipedal movement and expressive design at MWC 2026

Six-Figure Stages: Sophia and Ameca

Two robots on this list are genuinely bookable — but require budgets that put them out of reach for most events. Both are real products with real rental programs. Neither is practical for standard event budgets.

Sophia (Hanson Robotics) — $100k to $125,000+ Per Event

Maker: Hanson Robotics, Hong Kong | Rental status: Available via talent agencies

Sophia is the most recognizable AI humanoid in the world. Saudi Arabia granted her citizenship in 2017. She has appeared at the UN, CES, and hundreds of corporate stages. She produces 62+ distinct facial expressions via Hanson’s patented Frubber skin and speaks in 16+ languages. She is genuinely impressive at close range.

In-person US event appearances are booked through agencies — Gotham Artists and Celebrity Talent International have publicly listed rates of $100k to $125,000 and up for a US event. Travel, equipment, and technician costs are additional. Sophia does not walk — she operates from a wheeled or stationary base. She is a conversation and presence robot, not a floor-walking activation robot.

Ameca (Engineered Arts) — Estimated $5,000 to $15,000+ Per Day

Maker: Engineered Arts, United Kingdom | Rental status: Quote only

Ameca is the most visually sophisticated humanoid on this list — 187 cm, 61 degrees of freedom (27 in the face alone), capable of micro-expressions and gestural nuance no other robot can match. It went viral at CES 2022. The third generation debuted in 2025. Engineered Arts rents Ameca directly and through partners on a quote-only basis.

Estimated cost based on published case studies and industry sources: $5,000 to $15,000+ per day, depending on duration, location, and technical requirements. Like Sophia, Ameca does not walk — it operates from a stationary base. For events where facial expressiveness and real-time conversation are the activation, it is effective. For events that need a robot walking a floor, neither qualifies. For a practical comparison, read what humanoid robots actually do at events.

Sophia Hanson Robotics humanoid robot with expressive face and articulated hands at corporate stage event
Ameca humanoid robot by Engineered Arts looking upward with expressive face displaying articulated head movement at CES 2022

Enterprise-Only: Figure 02, Digit, and Fourier GR-3

Three robots on this list are commercially deployed — but exclusively in industrial and enterprise contexts. None has a public rental program. None is accessible for events.

Figure 02 (Figure AI) — BMW Deployment, No Public Access

Maker: Figure AI, Sunnyvale CA | Rental status: Not available — B2B industrial only

Figure 02 is deployed at BMW’s Spartanburg, South Carolina facility for automotive assembly tasks. Figure AI has raised over $675 million from Microsoft, OpenAI, Amazon, and NVIDIA and is entirely focused on industrial B2B partnerships. Specs: 168 cm, 70 kg, 35 DOF, 5-hour battery, 25 kg payload. No public pricing, no rental program, no event bookings of any kind.

Agility Robotics Digit — Warehouse Only

Maker: Agility Robotics (backed by Amazon) | Rental status: Not available — logistics B2B only

Digit is a genuine commercial success in warehouse automation — it has moved over 100,000 totes at GXO’s Flowery Branch, Georgia facility, as documented by IEEE Spectrum. It stands 175 cm, weighs 65 kg, and is sold through Robot-as-a-Service contracts to logistics companies. It is purpose-built for repetitive warehouse tasks with predictable environments — not audience interaction, event floors, or brand activations.

Fourier GR-3 — No US Rental Channel

Maker: Fourier Intelligence, China | Rental status: No US access

Fourier unveiled the GR-3 at CES 2026: 165 cm, 71 kg, 55 degrees of freedom, 12-DOF dexterous hands with tactile sensors. The hardware is genuinely sophisticated. Commercial access for US customers is not. The GR-3 is sold through enterprise channels only. There is no US distribution network and no rental program. Fourier is a research and care-robotics company, not an event rental supplier.

Figure 02 humanoid robot by Figure AI deployed at BMW automotive manufacturing facility
Agility Robotics Digit bipedal humanoid robot in warehouse logistics demonstrating autonomous movement and package handling
Fourier Intelligence GR-3 humanoid robot with 55 degrees of freedom and dexterous hands at CES 2026 technology showcase

Not Available: Tesla Optimus, Atlas, and 1X Neo

The three most-covered humanoid robots in mainstream tech media. None of them can be rented. They are either factory-deployed or not yet shipping as commercial products.

Tesla Optimus — In Factories, Full Stop

Maker: Tesla, USA | Rental status: Not available — internal factory use only

As of April 2026, every Optimus unit is deployed at Tesla’s Fremont and Giga Texas facilities. No pre-order, no waitlist, no public sales channel, no rental program. Gen 2 specs: 173 cm, 57 kg, 22-DOF hands with force-feedback sensors. External B2B sales are targeted for late 2026 at industrial scale only — not event rental, not commercial activations, not any public program.

Boston Dynamics Atlas — Committed to Partners, Not for Rent

Maker: Boston Dynamics (Hyundai subsidiary), USA | Rental status: Not available — all units committed

Boston Dynamics unveiled a production-ready electric Atlas at CES 2026: 56 fully rotational joints, 89 kg, capable of lifting 50 kg across a wide operating temperature range. The hardware is the most capable on this list. The access is not. All 2026 units are committed to research institutions and industrial partners. There is no consumer sales channel and no rental program. Atlas is not an event product.

1X Neo — Pre-Order Only, Late 2026

Maker: 1X Technologies, Norway/USA | Rental status: Not available — pre-order only

1X Neo is a consumer-facing walking humanoid with US and Canada deliveries targeted for Q3-Q4 2026. 1X is positioning Neo for household use — chores, home assistance — not brand activations or trade show floors. No event rental program exists. 1X’s older wheeled platform has had some B2B commercial use, but Neo is not a rental product. To understand how robots are evaluated for real event suitability, see what humanoid robots still cannot do in 2026.

Tesla Optimus humanoid robot standing in facility demonstrating bipedal walking and manipulation
Boston Dynamics electric Atlas humanoid robot standing upright demonstrating full-body range of motion with 56 joints
1X Technologies Neo humanoid robot full body showing bipedal design and proportional form factor for household automation

Discontinued and Defunct: Pepper and Meka M1

Two robots still appear in rental searches. Both are traps. Neither should be booked under any circumstances.

SoftBank Pepper — Discontinued, IP Sold

Maker: SoftBank Robotics (originally Aldebaran), Japan/France | Rental status: Effectively dead

Pepper was the world’s first social robot deployed at commercial scale — retail stores, hospitals, hotels. SoftBank stopped production in June 2021. In July 2025, Aldebaran (the French entity behind Pepper) declared bankruptcy, and Pepper’s IP was acquired by Maxvision Technology Corp. in Shenzhen. No confirmed new production as of April 2026. Some used Pepper units appear on secondary rental markets — these are unserviced hardware running outdated software with no support chain. Do not book them.

Meka M1 — Has Not Existed Since 2013

Maker: Meka Robotics (acquired by Google 2013) | Rental status: Defunct — company does not exist

Meka Robotics was an MIT CSAIL spin-off building the M1 Mobile Manipulator — a research-grade upper-body humanoid on a wheeled base, sold exclusively to universities at research pricing. Google acquired Meka in December 2013 as part of Andy Rubin’s robotics initiative. The project was absorbed and eventually closed. No Meka M1 has been commercially available since 2013. It appears in search results because it was well-documented by IEEE Spectrum during its active research period — do not let that documentation mislead you. The company does not exist. The product cannot be booked.

If you have been quoted a price for a Pepper or Meka M1, ask the vendor for a current service agreement, spare parts inventory, and software support contact. In every known case, none of these exist.

SoftBank Pepper social robot with white body and chest tablet display in retail or hospitality setting
Meka Robotics M1 mobile manipulator research humanoid robot upper body with articulated arms developed for MIT CSAIL labs

The Honest Summary: What You Can Actually Rent in 2026

Of 12 researched robots, three have any form of event rental availability in 2026. Only one is accessible to most event budgets:

Robot Can You Rent It? Starting Cost Walks?
Unitree G1 (via ZMProbots)YESfrom $299/dayYes — 41 DOF
AgiBot X2YES~€899/dayYes
Sophia (Hanson Robotics)YES (via agencies)$100k–$125,000+ per eventNo — wheeled base
Ameca (Engineered Arts)Quote only$5,000–$15,000+/dayNo — stationary
Tesla OptimusNOFactory onlyYes (factory)
Boston Dynamics AtlasNONot for rentYes
Figure 02NOEnterprise onlyYes
Agility DigitNOWarehouse B2BYes
SoftBank PepperDISCONTINUEDSecondary market onlyNo — wheeled
1X NeoNOT YETPre-order; late 2026Yes
Fourier GR-3NO US ACCESSEnterprise onlyYes
Meka M1DEFUNCTDoes not existNo — wheeled

The price gap between option one and option two is significant. Between option two and option three, it is enormous. The Unitree G1 via ZMProbots is not just the most accessible — it is the only humanoid event rental in the US that does not require an enterprise budget or a procurement team. We also tracked every other company claiming to offer humanoid robot rentals — the full review of every humanoid robot rental company covers the complete picture.

Unitree G1 humanoid robot walking outdoors demonstrating full 41-DOF autonomous mobility for event rental

People Also Ask

Can you rent a Tesla Optimus humanoid robot for an event?

No. As of April 2026, all Optimus units are deployed at Tesla factories. No rental program exists. External B2B sales are targeted for late 2026 at industrial scale only — not event rental or commercial activations.

How much does it cost to hire Sophia the robot?

In-person US event appearances run $100k to $125,000 and up, based on published rates from Gotham Artists and Celebrity Talent International. Travel, equipment, and technician costs are additional. Sophia does not walk — she operates from a wheeled or stationary base.

What happened to SoftBank Pepper?

SoftBank stopped production in June 2021. In July 2025, the IP was acquired by Maxvision Technology Corp. in Shenzhen after Aldebaran declared bankruptcy. No new production has been confirmed. Units appearing on rental sites are unserviced secondary-market hardware with no support.

Is Boston Dynamics Atlas available to rent for events?

No. Atlas is sold as an enterprise platform to research institutions and industrial partners. All 2026 units are committed to partners. There is no rental program, no consumer sales channel, and no event activation pathway.

Which humanoid robot can actually be booked for a corporate event today?

The Unitree G1 via ZMProbots is the only walking humanoid available for direct booking without an enterprise contract. AgiBot X2 is available in 17 markets but at significantly higher cost and with required on-site AgiBot technical support.

Is Figure 02 available for brand events?

No. Figure 02 is deployed exclusively at BMW’s Spartanburg facility. Figure AI has no public rental program and no event booking pathway. All commercial activity is enterprise B2B industrial manufacturing.

What is the cheapest humanoid robot to rent in 2026?

The Unitree G1 via ZMProbots, available as a Self-Service Rental from $299/day or as a Full-Service Event with operator dispatch — request a quote for full-service pricing. No other walking humanoid has a lower publicly available rate in 2026.

The Bottom Line

Of 12 humanoid robots that appear in rental searches, three have any form of availability. One is genuinely accessible. The Unitree G1 — deployed at Pfizer Boston, CES Las Vegas, and events across the US, Canada, UK, and Europe — is the only walking humanoid you can reserve today without a procurement team, an enterprise contract, or a six-figure budget.

Optimus is in a factory. Atlas is committed to research partners. Figure 02 is at BMW. Sophia costs as much as a mid-sized marketing campaign. Pepper does not exist as a serviceable product. Meka M1 has not existed since 2013. The G1 is what the humanoid robot rental market actually looks like in 2026 — and the gap between what is searchable and what is bookable is enormous.

Ready to rent the only humanoid robot that is actually available? Humanoid robot rental starts here.

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