Autonomous vehicles fuel $2.7B funding boom in June 2024

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By | July 29, 2024

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Forty-eight companies that make robots or relevant enabling technologies raised a total of $2.7 billion in June 2024. At press time, this was the highest monthly funding total of 2024. It exceeded May’s total by more than $500 million and was more than double the 12-month trailing investments average of $1.3 billion. Robotics investments for the first six months of 2024 totaled about $8.4 billion.

The largest investments were, once again, raised by developers of autonomous driving technologies. San Francisco-based Cruise raised $850 million from owner GM as it restarts its on-road operations. Aptiv raised $816 million, Waabi $200 million, 42dot $185 million and Tier IV $54 million. It should be noted that these five companies raised more than $2.1 billion alone in June.

June 2024 Robotics Investments

CompanyAmounRoundCountryTechnology
42dot$184,707,511OtherKoreaAutonomous driving
Aegeus TechnologiesEstimateOtherIndiaOutdoor mobile robots
Aptiv$816,127,550OtherIrelandAutonomous driving
Arbe$29,482,238OtherIsraelSoftware
AstribotEstimateSeries AChinaHumanoids / bipeds
AvidbotsEstimateSeries DCanadaIndoor mobile robots
Beijing Xianwei Medical Technology (Xianwei Medical)EstimateSeedChinaSurgical robots
BOTINKIT$13,760,268Series AChinaRobotic kitchen
Botsync$5,200,000Series ASingaporeIndoor mobile robots
Bright Machines$126,000,000Series CUSARobot arms
CheelcareEstimateGrantCanadaConsumer robots
Cruise$850,000,000OtherUSAAutonomous driving
DeepForest Technologies$1,266,926Series AJapanDrones
deepsafetyEstimateSeedGermanySensors
Delivers AIEstimateSeedTurkeyOutdoor mobile robots
Drone Harmony AG$2,244,668OtherSwitzerlandSoftware
Esper Bionics$5,000,000OtherUSAProsthetics
Euler RoboticsEstimateSeedKoreaRobot arms
Formic Technologies$27,400,000Series AUSARobot arms
Galaxy Bot$96,406,781SeedChinaHumanoids / bipeds
GatikEstimateOtherUSAAutonomous driving
GrayMatter Robotics$45,000,000Series BUSARobot arms
HummingdroneEstimateOtherTurkeyDrones
InOrbit$150,000GrantUSASoftware
IVY TECH$335,817GrantUKOutdoor mobile robots
Jingshi TechnologyEstimateOtherChinaHumanoids / bipeds
Kinetic Automation$21,000,000Series BUSARobot arms
LoopX$183,039GrantCanadaIndoor mobile robots
Luffy AIEstimateOtherUKSoftware & sensors
Man-Machine Synergy Effectors$949,608OtherJapanExoskeletons
MORFOEstimateSeedFranceDrones
MUSE$3,627,985SeedJapanIndoor mobile robots
Polaris3D (Ereon)$10,934,618Series BKoreaIndoor mobile robots
Puncture RoboticEstimateSeries BChinaSurgical robots
Rhoman AerospaceEstimateOtherUSASoftware
Robo AreteEstimateOtherKoreaRobot arms
robolaunch$1,500,000SeedTurkeyIndoor mobile robots
Ronovo Surgical$41,349,082Series BChinaSurgical robots
SealienEstimateSeedChinaUnderwater drones
Skye Air Mobility$4,002,183Series AIndiaDrones
Skysys$13,903,564Series BChinaDrones
Swaayatt Robots$4,000,000SeedIndiaSoftware & sensors
Tier IV$53,948,729Series BJapanAutonomous driving
trexo roboticsEstimateGrantCanadaRehabilitation robots
Vecna Robotics$40,000,000Series CUSAIndoor mobile robots
VersaTile Automation$10,119,204SeedUKIndoor mobile robots
Waabi$200,000,000Series BCanadaAutonomous driving
YouibotEstimateSeries CChinaIndoor mobile robots

Robotics technologies for manufacturing operations also attracted substantial investment. Bright Machines attracted $126 million Series C funding. GrayMatter Robotics, a provider of an AI-powered solution that enables robots to self-program, raised $45 million in Series B funding. And Formic Technologies, a developer of turnkey robotic solutions as a service, raised $27.4 million in Series A funding.

Companies based in the U.S. and China received the majority of the funding rounds in June with 10 each. Once again, firms based in the U.S. attracted the most funding at approximately $1.1B, while Aptiv’s $816 million round was enough to boost Ireland into 2nd place. Five companies in Canada secured a total of $225.6 million, while four companies in both Korea and Japan received $198 million and $59.8 million in funding, respectively.

a bar chart showing robotics investments from past 12 months

Global robotics investments for previous 12 months. | Credit: The Robot Report

Editor’s Note
What defines robotics investments? The answer to this question is central in any attempt to quantify them with some degree of rigor. To make investment analyses consistent, repeatable, and valuable, it is critical to wring out as much subjectivity as possible during the evaluation process. This begins with a definition of terms and a description of assumptions.

Investments
Robotics investments should come from venture capital firms, corporate investment groups, angel investors, and other sources. Friends-and-family investments, government/non-governmental agency grants, and crowdsourced funding are excluded.


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Robotics Companies
Robotics companies must generate or expect to generate revenue from the production of robotics products (that sense, analyze, and act in the physical world), hardware or software subsystems and enabling technologies for robots, or services supporting robotics devices. For this analysis, autonomous vehicles (including technologies that support autonomous driving) and drones are considered robots, while 3D printers, CNC systems, and various types of “hard” automation are not.

Companies that are “robotic” in name only, or use the term “robot” to describe products and services that do not enable or support devices acting in the physical world, are excluded. For example, this includes “software robots” and robotic process automation. Many firms have multiple locations in different countries. Company locations given in the analysis are based on the publicly listed headquarters in legal documents, press releases, etc.

Verification
Funding information is collected from several public and private sources. These include press releases from corporations and investment groups, corporate briefings, market research firms, and association and industry publications. In addition, information comes from sessions at conferences and seminars, as well as during private interviews with industry representatives, investors, and others. Unverifiable investments are excluded and estimates are made where investment amounts are not provided or are unclear.

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