Close Menu

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Lizzo Shuts Down Taylor Swift Feud Again

    May 24, 2026

    Beer-chugging Travis Kelce and his ‘girlfriend’ Taylor Swift fail to inspire Cavaliers as Knicks win 10th straight

    May 24, 2026

    Sheinbaum’s Fracking Plan and Environmental Activism

    May 24, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Select Language
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    NEWS ON CLICK
    Subscribe
    Sunday, May 24
    • Home
      • United States
      • Canada
      • Spain
      • Mexico
    • Top Countries
      • Canada
      • Mexico
      • Spain
      • United States
    • Politics
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Fashion
    • Health
    • Science
    • Sports
    • Travel
    NEWS ON CLICK
    Home»Business & Economy»US Business & Economy»China is deploying the first home cleaning humanoid robot butlers
    US Business & Economy

    China is deploying the first home cleaning humanoid robot butlers

    News DeskBy News DeskMay 24, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest Copy Link LinkedIn Tumblr Email VKontakte Telegram
    China is deploying the first home cleaning humanoid robot butlers
    Share
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest Email Copy Link

    At last, the Jetsons are happening. Everyone’s long-held dream of having a humanoid robot at home to do all the household chores is almost here. Chinese tech firm GigaAI has announced the (allegedly) first commercial robotic butler ever. The company claims the first 100 pilot units will be deployed at the end of this month in employees’ homes. Then they will start deployment in Wuhan, for free!, in the first half 2027.

    Called SeeLight S1, the robot is one of the many answers to China’s ongoing demographic crisis, which has been met by a Beijing directive that wants to put embodied AI wherever it is needed. Designed by GigaAI—a startup founded in 2025 and funded by Huawei’s investment arm—in collaboration with state-backed robotics research hubs Hubei Humanoid Robot Innovation Centre and the Hubei Humanoid Robotics Industry Alliance, the robot is a two-armed, wheeled machine that, according to the company, is the first general-purpose robot ever designed for the home. In demos, the S1 chops vegetables, fries eggs, loads a washing machine, hangs laundry, makes a bed, and opens curtains.

    [Image: GigaAI]

    To keep things safe, built-in sensors are supposed to freeze its movements the instant it contacts a child or a pet. The S1 runs on embodied artificial intelligence—a digital brain wired directly into a physical body, capable of reading its environment and deciding what to do next without step-by-step instructions. Talking to the local newspaper Changjiang Daily, GigaAI’s CEO Zhu Zheng says that the S1 will eventually cost about $15,000 when it debuts at stores in June 2027.

    But demos are all fun and laughter until the guy secretly controlling the bot takes his VR helmet off. Navigating a home is extremely hard for a robot. This isn’t a Roomba crawling around like a little turtle, bumping onto furniture in a 2D space. It’s a two-arm heavy machine that needs to navigate a very complex 3D environment that keeps changing. Guo Renjie—founder and CEO of robotics design company Zeroth—says that “home environments are non-standardized, where a robot faces an environment that changes every day.”

    I spoke with Mark Rolston, founder and Chief Creative Officer of argodesign and formerly Chief Creative Officer at frogdesign, about humanoid robot design and the challenges they face in the real world. Rolston, who designed the robot Apolo for Apptronik—an Austin-based robotics company that specializes in developing general-purpose humanoid robots designed to work safely alongside humans—believes that it’s going to be very hard to see humanoids doing household chores anytime soon. “Sure, a humanoid may actually enter some homes in 2026. But come on. It’s not gonna do anything. There is no way. It’s not much more than a rich person’s ‘look what I got!’ It won’t get anything done,” he says.

    While Rolston believes 2026 will be a “watershed moment” for robotics, there’s a lot to be done before getting to the homes. “It’s not going to be seeing C3PO through the streets or having robot baristas at Starbucks,” he tells me. First they will have to come to factories—which is already happening in China on a large scale. And then there’s the grocery store test: “The grocery store is a perfect collision of an uninvited machine to a very human moment, people sort of walking along the aisles, and grocery stores need a lot of query management, constant stocking.”

    [Image: Wuhan.gov.cn]

    The new gold rush

    The Chinese government, the country’s private corporations and university research labs think otherwise. They are already leaving American robotics far behind and they are doubling down on their investment and research.

    Getting a robot to survive the chaos of a real home requires something factories have in abundance and kitchens do not: clean, structured data. According to the South China Morning Post, Shenzhen-based OneRobotics just locked down a large contract to collect real world data needed for these robots to understand the world around it. The company is deploying its OneRo H1 robots across actual homes, elder care facilities, and retail spaces to record high-frequency tasks like tidying kitchens and bathrooms.

    The company says the project is “highly consistent with [the company]’s core strategy of focusing on embodied intelligence at home” and that the ultimate mission is to “bring AI robots into every household.” Meanwhile, other Chinese firms are pushing their humanoids into physical sports arenas—live, unpredictable environments—to stress-test their software and gather the kind of real-world data you simply cannot fake in a lab. 

    This is not a purely Chinese race. The global household robot market—which now is mainly robo vacuums like the Roomba, pool cleaning bots, and autonomous lawnmowers—was worth $41 billion last year and is on track to grow 20% annually through 2027. U.S. companies are testing the waters too: On May 14, 2026, San Francisco startup Gatsby sent an autonomous humanoid robot to clean a customer’s home, calling it “a milestone in consumer robotics.” But Gatsby is not selling robots. It wants to run an on-demand service model, like Uber for housecleaning—customers book through an iOS app and pay a flat $150 per session, no matter the apartment size. The machine handles wiping and floors on its own… but a human remotely takes over for the trickier jobs. That’s not what the Chinese have in mind, at all. They truly want smart robots as dexterous as humans, working on their own.

    [Image: GigaAI]

    Don’t throw out your mop yet

    None of this means your robot housekeeper is showing up next Tuesday. Like Rolston and Renjie, Wang Xingxing, founder and CEO of Unitree Robotics, acknowledges there is “significant potential” for home use but says it remains “challenging” right now. 

    Then there is the question of what happens when a full-sized machine shares your hallway. Humanoids pose real physical risks—they are capable of causing injuries as simple as falling over onto a person’s foot. For this reason, the robotics industry will limit early humanoid deployments to strictly regulated commercial environments like warehouses to perfect safety standards before entering homes—a position Jonathan Hurst, Chief Robot Officer at Agility Robotics, has laid out publicly.

    When these machines do eventually reach living rooms, they will need to handle something subtler than dish-washing: Human comfort. Rolston argues that the design priority should be basic social acknowledgment. A robot that can glance at you as it passes, signaling “I see you and I’ll move,” goes a lot further than one that looks like a person.

    We will see if GigaAI hits its timeline or pulls off an Elon Musk-style overdue underdelivery. But the destination is clear. The shift from machines that repeat to machines that think-and-act is already underway, and the money chasing it is staggering. Morgan Stanley projects the humanoid robot market will hit $5 trillion by 2050. The robot that chops your vegetables, folds your shirts, and makes your bed is coming. Whether it arrives in 2027 or 2028, one thing is clear: It’s happening and, like everything else with AI, it will probably get here faster than what we imagine.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email Telegram Copy Link
    News Desk
    • Website

    News Desk is the dedicated editorial force behind News On Click. Comprised of experienced journalists, writers, and editors, our team is united by a shared passion for delivering high-quality, credible news to a global audience.

    Related Posts

    US Business & Economy

    Why AI will create more engineers, not fewer

    May 24, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    Why men’s and women’s clothes have buttons and zippers on different sides

    May 24, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    Bosses take remote less work seriously when it’s geared toward parents, study shows

    May 24, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    AI is already killing the executive assistant job

    May 24, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    AI may be eating jobs, but it poses an even bigger threat

    May 24, 2026
    US Business & Economy

    The case for the occasional white lie at work

    May 24, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Don't Miss

    Lizzo Shuts Down Taylor Swift Feud Again

    News DeskMay 24, 20260

    Lizzo has tried all she can to shake the feud rumors, and now she is…

    Beer-chugging Travis Kelce and his ‘girlfriend’ Taylor Swift fail to inspire Cavaliers as Knicks win 10th straight

    May 24, 2026

    Sheinbaum’s Fracking Plan and Environmental Activism

    May 24, 2026

    Why AI will create more engineers, not fewer

    May 24, 2026
    Tech news by Newsonclick.com
    Top Posts

    ‘Today’ Fans Call Out Jenna & Sheinelle’s Strained Relationship

    April 24, 2026

    Yung Miami Takes SpendDat Music Video Premiere To Twitch This Thursday Night

    April 24, 2026

    The New Wave in Seafood

    April 24, 2026

    ANALYSIS: The cost of the Winnipeg Jets not making the Stanley Cup playoffs – Winnipeg

    April 24, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

    Editors Picks

    Lizzo Shuts Down Taylor Swift Feud Again

    May 24, 2026

    Beer-chugging Travis Kelce and his ‘girlfriend’ Taylor Swift fail to inspire Cavaliers as Knicks win 10th straight

    May 24, 2026

    Sheinbaum’s Fracking Plan and Environmental Activism

    May 24, 2026

    Why AI will create more engineers, not fewer

    May 24, 2026
    About Us

    NewsOnClick.com is your reliable source for timely and accurate news. We are committed to delivering unbiased reporting across politics, sports, entertainment, technology, and more. Our mission is to keep you informed with credible, fact-checked content you can trust.

    We're social. Connect with us:

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube
    Latest Posts

    Lizzo Shuts Down Taylor Swift Feud Again

    May 24, 2026

    Beer-chugging Travis Kelce and his ‘girlfriend’ Taylor Swift fail to inspire Cavaliers as Knicks win 10th straight

    May 24, 2026

    Sheinbaum’s Fracking Plan and Environmental Activism

    May 24, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • About Us
    • Editorial Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    © 2026 Newsonclick.com || Designed & Powered by ❤️ Trustmomentum.com.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.