DEPLOY

Buying guide

Coco Bot vs REV-1 in 2026

Comparing 2 humanoid robots across availability, pricing, capabilities, and verified deployments. Current as of 2026.

Attribute
ManufacturerCoco RoboticsRefraction AI
Form factorsidewalksidewalk
Maturitycommercialpilot
Availabilityinternal-onlyenterpriseinternal-onlyenterprise
PriceNot announcedNot announced
Capability claims
Brain
Verified deployments81Ann Arbor
Privacy practices
Sources on file157

Editorial summaries

Coco Bot

Coco's Coco Bot is a wheeled sidewalk delivery robot with an insulated cargo compartment for restaurant orders, operating at walking speeds on sidewalks within range of a partner restaurant. There is no consumer price: it is a B2B delivery service (restaurants pay for deliveries), not a robot sold to consumers. On the operator-supervision-to-autonomy spectrum it sits at the most operator-supervised end: the Coco Bot is teleoperated by remote pilots, not autonomous. From Coco Robotics, it is at commercial maturity.

REV-1

Refraction AI's REV-1 (Refraction AI, founded 2017 in Ann Arbor by University of Michigan professors) is a distinctive three-wheeled delivery vehicle sized between a sidewalk bot and a car: up to 15 mph with about a 280-pound payload, designed for winter and bicycle-courier-style operation, running primarily in the bike lane or road margin while able to use sidewalks where permitted, a regulatory regime between a sidewalk personal delivery device and a road autonomous vehicle. There is no consumer price: it runs a robots-as-a-service model where customers subscribe to dedicated, brand-customizable robots. Several verified-vs-claimed points matter. A reported wind-down or acquisition is refuted: Refraction is verified still operating through 2024 to 2026 (new CEO Luke Schneider, an Austin office, Chick-fil-A as a marquee client, an active 2026 profile); the 'Osage Venture Partners exited' label is a venture-portfolio markdown, not a confirmed acquisition or shutdown, so it is not tagged discontinued. It is recorded at pilot maturity: a roughly 21-person company with a named client and multi-city presence but no independently verified scale figures. Any lifetime delivery count, fleet size, revenue, or live-market count is unverified, and the claim that the REV-1 was discontinued in favor of a 'REF-1' is a likely misread of source language describing a second generation of the same design.


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