Humanoid Robots Will Stall at Pilot Scale, While Polyfunctional Robots Win the Warehouse
“The promise of humanoid robots is compelling, but the reality is that the technology remains immature and far from meeting expectations for versatility and cost-effectiveness,” said Abdil Tunca, Senior Principal Analyst in Gartner’s Supply Chain practice. “CSCOs must carefully evaluate readiness and avoid overcommitting resources to solutions that cannot yet deliver on their potential.”
Humanoid robots replicate human form and movement, incorporating heads with sensors and cameras, arms and grippers for manipulation, and legs for locomotion. While this form factor offers certain advantages, Gartner notes that alternative designs—such as polyfunctional robots equipped with wheels or sensors in unconventional placements—may provide superior performance and adaptability for supply chain operations.
Despite their potential, humanoid robots face significant barriers to supply chain, logistics and manufacturing adoption:
- Technological limitations: Current models lack the dexterity, intelligence, and adaptability required for complex, unstructured environments such as mixed SKU picking, trailer unloading or exception handling in high velocity warehouses.
- Integration complexity: Compatibility with existing systems and workflows remains a challenge.
- High costs: Substantial upfront investment and ongoing maintenance expenses must be weighed against uncertain returns. With the current technology and costs, humanoids cost multiple times more than task specific polyfunctional robots while delivering lower throughput and uptime.
- Energy constraints: Limited battery life restricts operational time for high-mobility tasks.
Polyfunctional Robots: Optimized for Flexibility
To navigate robotics investment decisions effectively, Gartner advises CSCOs to:
- Pursue pilot programs to validate feasibility before committing to full-scale deployment.
- Collaborate with emerging providers to influence product development and align solutions with operational needs.
- Implement continuous monitoring to track performance and guide iterative improvements.
- Foster a culture of innovation that supports experimentation and calculated risk-taking.
- Prioritize outcome driven automation that targets specific bottlenecks, rather than generalized “headcount reduction” strategies, which is also less risky from an investment standpoint.

