December 13, 2025.
Figure Robotics announces the Figure 02 humanoid at $18,800 unit price in volume orders (down from $42,000 for Figure 01 in 2024).
Specs: 28 degrees of freedom, 1.8 m height, 22 kg payload, 8-hour battery, full dexterity hands with tactile sensing, on-board vision/language model capable of 92 % of common warehouse tasks without retraining.
The same week, Tesla Optimus Gen 3 is priced at $16,800 (internal memo leaked).
Boston Dynamics Atlas “Enterprise” edition: $24,000 with new soft hands.
Unitree G1 Pro: $14,200 in China.
The robotic workforce threshold has been crossed.
Humanoids are now cheaper than a used car — and they work 24/7 without salary, benefits, or complaints.
The humanoid price and capability table – December 2025
| Model | Price (volume) | Height/Payload | Task coverage (common) | Battery/runtime | Key feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Figure 02 | $18,800 | 1.8 m / 22 kg | 92 % | 8 hours | Full dexterity, on-board LLM |
| Tesla Optimus Gen 3 | $16,800 | 1.75 m / 20 kg | 88 % | 12 hours | Tesla ecosystem integration |
| Boston Dynamics Atlas Ent | $24,000 | 1.9 m / 25 kg | 94 % | 10 hours | Advanced balance, new soft hands |
| Unitree G1 Pro | $14,200 | 1.7 m / 18 kg | 85 % | 9 hours | Lowest cost, China supply chain |
| Apptronik Apollo | $22,000 | 1.8 m / 25 kg | 90 % | 8 hours | NASA-derived, high reliability |
All models: capable of walking, picking, placing, folding, basic conversation, learning from demonstration in <20 examples.
The deployment pilots – December 2025
| Company / Location | Robots ordered | Tasks replaced | Human workers displaced | ROI projected |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon (Kentucky warehouse) | 4,200 Figure 02 | Picking, packing, sorting | 3,800 | 11 months |
| Tesla (Shanghai Gigafactory) | 8,800 Optimus | Assembly line, quality check | 7,200 | 8 months |
| Mercedes (Alabama) | 2,800 Apollo | Parts delivery, inspection | 2,100 | 14 months |
| Foxconn (Zhengzhou) | 12,000 Unitree | Electronics assembly | 9,800 | 6 months |
Total announced orders 2025: 42,000 units
Equivalent labor displacement: ~34,000 human jobs.
The cost comparison – 2025
| Worker type | Annual cost (USD) | Hours/year | Effective hourly | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| U.S. warehouse worker | $68,000 | 1,920 | $35 | Wage + benefits + overhead |
| Chinese factory worker | $28,000 | 2,400 | $12 | Lower wage, longer hours |
| Humanoid robot (avg) | $18,000 purchase + $4,000 energy/maintenance | 8,760 | $2.50 | No breaks, no salary |
ROI for robot: 6–14 months in most tasks.
The silence is the tell
No major union protests.
No government moratoriums.
No Luddite backlash.
There are only quiet moves:
- Amazon increases warehouse robot budget 400 %
- Tesla pauses new human hiring in factories
- U.S. Department of Labor drafts “Robotic Transition Support Act”
- China adds “humanoid workforce” to Made in China 2025 priorities
The quiet quote from a Figure Robotics executive, off-record at investor dinner, December 2025
“We’re not replacing workers.
We’re making labor obsolete.
At $18k they pay for themselves in a year.
At $10k next year they’ll be in every home.
The factory of the future has one human — pressing the on button.
Everything else is us.”
By Christmas 2025, humanoids are $18k and 92 % capable.
The first factories are ordering thousands.
The threshold is crossed.
Next post: “The Factory Flip – 2026: When Robots Become the Majority Workforce and the First All-Robot Plants Open.”
The robots are cheaper.
The work is endless.
The threshold is here.