Home robotics
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Home robotics covers robotic devices designed for domestic environments — cleaning, lawn mowing, companionship, and household assistance — bringing automation into unstructured, people-filled spaces where no two rooms are the same.
Your living room is, from a robot's perspective, a nightmare. The furniture moves. Toys appear on the floor without warning. A cat sits exactly where the robot needs to go. Children run through unpredictably. Cables snake across the carpet. Yet despite all of this, a small disc-shaped robot navigates it perfectly well every day, mapping the space, avoiding t
Your living room is, from a robot's perspective, a nightmare. The furniture moves. Toys appear on the floor without warning. A cat sits exactly where the robot needs to go. Children run through unpredictably. Cables snake across the carpet. Yet despite all of this, a small disc-shaped robot navigates it perfectly well every day, mapping the space, avoiding the cat, and returning itself to charge when it is done. That humble vacuum robot is one of the most commercially successful robots ever built — and it cracked a problem that stumped engineers for decades.
Home robotics is the design of robotic systems for domestic use by non-expert users. Unlike factory robots, which operate in controlled environments, home robots must handle a space that is constantly changing and was designed entirely around human bodies and human habits, not machines. The bar for reliability is also different: a factory robot that fails shuts down a production line; a home robot that fails is an inconvenience, but it cannot be tolerated if it happens every other day.
The Roomba effect
iRobot launched the Roomba in 2002. It was not the first robotic vacuum — Electrolux's Trilobite predated it — but it was the first to achieve mass-market penetration. By 2022, iRobot had sold over 40 million Roombas. The key insight was that a robot does not have to clean perfectly; it has to clean adequately and consistently. A Roomba that covers a floor in a systematic pattern every day keeps a room cleaner than a human who vacuums thoroughly once a week. Modern Roombas use onboard cameras and lidar to create a map of the home, learn room names, avoid obstacles intelligently (including pet waste — a feature added after widespread complaints), and integrate with smart-home systems.
Beyond vacuuming
The home robotics landscape has expanded significantly. Robotic lawn mowers, led by Husqvarna's Automower range, operate on similar principles to vacuum robots — systematic coverage within a defined boundary — and have found a substantial market in Europe. Robot mops, window-cleaning robots, and pool-cleaning robots address other specific chores. At the more ambitious end, companies including Amazon (with its Astro home robot) and 1X Technologies are developing mobile home robots that can carry objects, check on elderly relatives, and act as a roving smart-home hub.
Why general-purpose home robots are still hard
A vacuum robot succeeds because it has exactly one task and a flat floor. The moment a robot needs to pick up objects, climb stairs, or work in a kitchen, complexity explodes. Grasping an arbitrary household object — a mug, a sock, a piece of fruit — requires manipulation capabilities that are still at the frontier of robotics research. The cost of a robot that could genuinely help with most household tasks remains far above what most families could afford. Most researchers believe that capable general-purpose home robots are a realistic prospect within ten to twenty years, but the timeline is genuinely uncertain.
The Roomba changed what we expect from robots in everyday life — but the robot that folds your laundry is still waiting to be invented.
Ask R2 Co-pilot anything you didn't understand about Home robotics. It'll explain it plainly.
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Last updated · 2026-05-19
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