Unitree G1

Unitree G1

The Unitree G1 is a compact humanoid robot designed for domestic use, research, and high-impact demonstration environments. At 130 centimeters tall and 35 kilograms, it’s one of the most affordable humanoids on the market at roughly $13,500 — about half the price of many comparable platforms.

Specifications

Attribute Value
Height 130 cm
Weight 35 kg (77 lbs)
Price ~$13,500 USD
Joint Torque Up to 120 Nm
Degrees of Freedom Not publicly specified (estimated: 20-23)
Control Method Teleoperated via wearable rigs / mixed reality
Target Market Research, domestic, entertainment

Autonomy Stack

The G1 does not currently operate autonomously in combat or unstructured environments. Unitree uses teleoperation — human operators wearing control rigs or using mixed-reality devices like Apple Vision Pro — to direct the robot’s movements. The platform handles low-level balance and motor control internally, but high-level decision making remains human-directed.

This places the G1 in the “Teleoperated” classification. Unitree has stated that full autonomy is the ultimate goal, and the company is investing in software development to enable independent operation in homes and industrial settings.

Combat Record

The G1’s highest-profile combat appearance was at CES 2026 in Las Vegas, where two units participated in a UFB (Ultimate Fighting Robot) boxing demonstration. Wearing gloves and headgear, the robots traded punches and kicks while occasionally stumbling — a spectacle that drew significant crowd attention and media coverage.

The bout was officiated by a human referee and controlled by human pilots, not autonomous algorithms. The demonstration proved the hardware’s durability under repeated impacts but did not test autonomous decision making in combat scenarios.

Notable Capabilities

Despite its domestic design focus, the G1 has demonstrated capabilities relevant to combat and high-impact environments:

  • Torque output: 120 Nm joint torque enables forceful limb movement and recovery from destabilization
  • Compact frame: Small size makes it agile and harder to target in close-quarters scenarios
  • Affordability: Low price point enables swarm deployment and frequent replacement
  • Software ecosystem: Unitree provides motion generation tools and SDK access for researchers

Limitations

  • No onboard autonomous combat decision making
  • Limited manipulation dexterity compared to larger humanoids
  • Domestic-use actuators may degrade faster under sustained combat loading
  • Requires continuous teleoperation for complex tasks

Development Status

Unitree is actively shipping G1 units to research institutions and early adopters. The company uses revenue and data from these deployments to fund software development toward greater autonomy. The G1 serves as a testbed for control algorithms that may eventually transfer to Unitree’s larger H2 platform.

Related Robots

  • Unitree H2 — Larger, more powerful successor with 31 DOF and 360 Nm torque

Last updated: May 2026
Autonomy classification: Teleoperated
Primary league affiliation: UFB (demonstration events)