DEPLOYDatabase

Logistics robots

151 verified models across 5 form factors.

Logistics robots move goods through the supply chain: warehouse AMRs picking and hauling totes, autonomous trucks running freight lanes, sidewalk bots handling last-metre delivery, and autonomous forklifts. This is the industry view across those form factors. DEPLOY tracks each by verified deployment, not vendor claim, and cross-links the dedicated form-factor pages below.

Warehouse & Logistics Robotics75 · view category →

Trucks35 · view category →

Sidewalk delivery20 · view category →

Drones15 · view category →

Forklifts6

Frequently asked questions

What is a logistics robot?
A logistics robot is an autonomous machine that moves goods through the supply chain. DEPLOY groups four form factors under it: warehouse autonomous mobile robots (AMRs), autonomous trucks, sidewalk delivery robots, and autonomous forklifts.
What is the difference between warehouse robots and logistics robots?
Warehouse robots are the largest slice of logistics robots: the AMRs and autonomous forklifts working inside a warehouse. Logistics robots is the wider industry view that also covers autonomous trucks on freight lanes and sidewalk delivery robots at the kerb.
How are robots used in logistics?
In logistics, robots pick and transport goods inside warehouses, move trailers and containers in yards, run long-haul freight as autonomous trucks, and handle last-mile delivery by sidewalk robot or drone.
Who makes the robots in Amazon warehouses?
Amazon runs its own warehouse robots through Amazon Robotics, the former Kiva Systems, alongside a growing set of independent AMR makers that DEPLOY also tracks.
Are delivery drones logistics robots?
Yes. Delivery drones are the aerial slice of logistics; DEPLOY tracks them on the dedicated delivery-drones page and counts them in the logistics view.

Related: Warehouse robotics (AMRs) · Autonomous trucks · Sidewalk delivery · Where they deploy · All categories