Robot Orders Hold Steady in Q1 2026 as Demand Broadens Across Non-Automotive Industries
May 13, 2026 | BUSINESS WIREEstimated reading time: 2 minutes
North American companies ordered 9,055 robots valued at $543 million in the first quarter of 2026, according to new data released by the Association for Advancing Automation (A3). Compared to the first quarter of 2025, this represents a 0.1% decrease in units ordered and a 6.4% decline in revenue1.
While unit orders were essentially flat, order revenue declined year over year, driven largely by a cyclical decline in Automotive OEM orders, which fell 35.1% in units and 48.2% in revenue compared to the same quarter last year. Given the size and timing of automotive programs, that decline had an outsized impact on the total market.
General Industry Segments Post Strong Growth
Outside of Automotive OEMs, demand across much of the robotics market remained healthy. Automotive component suppliers increased orders 28.1% in units and 15.5% in revenue compared to Q1 2025, reflecting the segment’s typical lag behind OEM ordering cycles.
Several non-automotive industries also posted strong year-over-year gains in robot orders, including:
- Life Sciences/Pharma/Biomed: +54.1% units, +70.2% revenue
- Semi & Electronics/Photonics: +31.7% units, +79.2% revenue
- Plastics & Rubber: +25.2% units, +32.6% revenue
- Food & Consumer Goods: +16.0% units, +16.3% revenue
- All Other Industries: +24.5% units, +29.2% revenue
These results point to continued diversification in automation demand as companies across industries invest in robotics to improve productivity, address workforce challenges, and strengthen operational resilience.
Collaborative Robots Show Strong Growth
Collaborative robots remained one of the strongest-performing categories in the quarter. Companies ordered 1,637 collaborative robots valued at $69.8 million in Q1 2026, representing a 55.6% increase in units and a 78.2% increase in revenue compared to Q1 2025. Collaborative robots accounted for 18.1% of all robot units ordered and 12.9% of total order revenue during the quarter.
Collaborative robot adoption was especially strong in life sciences/pharma/biomed, where they represented 60.7% of total robot orders in the sector, as well as semiconductors/electronics/photonics at 45.9% and all other industries at 29.0%.
“Collaborative robots are one example of how the robotics market continues to evolve,” said Alex Shikany, Executive Vice President at A3. “The broader takeaway from the first quarter is that automation demand is becoming more diverse in terms of industries, applications and deployment models. That is an important signal for the long-term health of the market, especially as companies continue to invest in productivity, flexibility, quality and competitiveness.”
Automation Demand Continues to Diversify
The Q1 data reinforces a broader trend that has emerged over the past several years: robotics adoption is expanding well beyond traditional automotive manufacturing. Industries including life sciences, electronics, food and consumer goods, and general manufacturing continue to increase investment in automation as they navigate labor shortages, supply chain pressures, quality requirements, and global competition.
More detailed market breakouts and graphs for Q1 2026 are available upon request for press and within the A3 Vault for member companies. For deeper insights, A3 members can subscribe to MI+, the Association’s premium market intelligence platform, featuring forecasts, dashboards, and in-depth reporting to support better decision-making.
Subscribe
Stay ahead of the technologies shaping the future of electronics with our latest newsletter, Advanced Electronics Packaging Digest. Get expert insights on advanced packaging, materials, and system-level innovation, delivered straight to your inbox.
Subscribe now to stay informed, competitive, and connected.
Suggested Items
China Makes AI-powered Robots Core of National Strategy
05/05/2026 | IFRChina has launched its 15th Five-Year Plan by placing robotics at the heart of its modern industrial system.
Siemens and Humanoid Bring Physical AI to Factory Floor with NVIDIA
04/16/2026 | SiemensSiemens and Humanoid announced a landmark milestone in the journey to bring physical AI from vision to industrial reality.
HYFIX Raises $15M to Build U.S.-Made Chips for Next-Gen Drones and Robots
04/15/2026 | PRNewswireHYFIX Spatial Intelligence, Inc., a U.S.-based semiconductor company, announced a $15 million seed round to build and manufacture a new class of American-made chips designed to power high-precision drones and autonomous robots.
China’s Humanoid Robot Output to Up 94% in 2026; Unitree and AgiBot to Hold Nearly 80% Share
04/09/2026 | TrendForceTrendForce’s latest in-depth report on humanoid robots reveals that the global industry is set to enter a critical phase of commercialization in the second half of 2026. In China, vendors are rapidly clarifying commercial use cases and scaling up production, which is expected to drive annual output growth up to 94% in 2026.
Robot Density Surges in Europe, Asia, and Americas
04/08/2026 | International Federation of RoboticsEconomies worldwide are prioritising the integration of factory robots, as automation becomes a critical tool for boosting productivity. In the global automation race, the Western European countries reached a record 267 robots per 10,000 employees in the manufacturing industry 2024 – ahead of North America with 204 units and Asia with 131 units.