Elon Musk: Tesla will begin using humanoid robots next year

23 July 2024, 09:54

Elon Musk laughs
AI safety summit. Picture: PA

The Tesla boss said the company hopes to start selling them to other firms from 2026.

Tesla boss Elon Musk has said the car maker hopes to have “genuinely useful” humanoid robots deployed internally next year.

Posting to X, formerly Twitter and the platform he owns, Mr Musk said the firm then hoped to expand production and start offering the robots to other firms in 2026.

Tesla has been working on a humanoid robot, known as Optimus, to use in its factories and on production lines.

“Tesla will have genuinely useful humanoid robots in low production for Tesla internal use next year and, hopefully, high production for other companies in 2026,” Mr Musk said in his post.

A number of other firms, including US firm Boston Dynamics, are working a range of robots in different forms designed to aid humans in manual work.

When Tesla’s humanoid robot was first announced in 2021 during a company event, it did not appear on stage but a person wearing a white outfit and a black helmet walked robotically on before starting to dance.

Since then, Tesla has shown off updated versions of Optimus, including in a video at the end of last year in which the robot picked up, held and put down an egg without breaking it.

Mr Musk has previously sounded cautious over the design and use of humanoid robots.

Discussing the technology with then Prime Minister Rishi Sunak after the AI Safety Summit last year, Mr Musk stressed the need for an off-switch for humanoid versions that can chase you up the stairs.

“A humanoid robot can basically chase you anywhere,” the tech entrepreneur said during the discussion.

“It’s something we should be quite concerned about. If a robot can follow you anywhere, what if they get a software update one day, and they’re not so friendly any more?”

Mr Musk also said the UK “is in a strong position” on developing robots, praising Dyson in particular.

By Press Association

More Technology News

See more More Technology News

CES 2025 signage

CES ‘doesn’t have the same support’ from the UK as other nations, show boss says

The firm said it would begin a pilot of the new system with a L'Oreal brand in stores in Asia later in 2025. (L'Oreal)

New L’Oreal skin analysis tool can help predict aging and cosmetic issues

Samsung's Vision AI smart assistant, which are built into Samsung's TVs to act as a virtual assistant

Samsung unveils plans to turn TVs into AI assistants

Signage and staging at the CES show in Las Vegas

AI, car tech and ‘weird’ gadgets expected to dominate at CES trade show

Sir Nick Clegg

Clegg leaves Meta role as Republican promoted ahead of Trump presidency

A Polestar 4 electric car

Does the Polestar 4 offer a glimpse of the cars of the future?

The Duchess of Sussex

Meghan returns to Instagram with beach video

The app intervenes when smoking is detected (University of Bristol/PA)

Smartwatch technology could help people quit smoking, study finds

Elon Musk

Downing Street rejects Musk’s suggestion companies are turning away from UK

A person using their phone at a pedestrian crossing

Predicting the future in 1999: Tech predictions 25 years on

Manny Wallace, known as Big Manny on TikTok, smiling and standing inside a science lab

TikToker teaching science hopes short-form video will become part of curriculum

An information screen in the South Terminal at Gatwick Airport (PA)

How the CrowdStrike outage made IT supply chains the new big issue in tech

The Airbnb app icon

Airbnb activates ‘defences’ to stop unauthorised New Year parties

Artificial Intelligence futuristic light sign

Regulations needed to stop AI being used for ‘bad things’ – Geoffrey Hinton

Elon Musk

How Elon Musk’s influence has grown both online and offline in 2024

Hands holding the iPhone 16

How smartphones powered the AI boom in 2024