DEPLOY

Buying guide

Didi Robotaxi vs Nuro R2 in 2026

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

Attribute
ManufacturerDidi Autonomous DrivingNuro
Form factoravav
Maturitypilotresearch
Availabilityinternal-onlyenterpriseinternal-onlyenterprise
PriceNot announcedNot announced
Capability claims
Brain
Verified deployments1Didi Autonomous Driving1Nuro
Privacy practices7biometric-storage, third-party-sharing, data-retention, capture-indicator, location-tracking, data-deletion-control, data-sale
Sources on file109

Editorial summaries

Didi Robotaxi

Didi Autonomous Driving, the autonomous-vehicle subsidiary of Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Chuxing, is a distinct Level-4 robotaxi-stack developer (not a ride-hailing aggregator), integrating its own stack into Didi's network in a captive structure paralleling the Waymo Driver. There is no consumer price: it is a robotaxi service, not sold to consumers. It launched a fully-driverless robotaxi service in Guangzhou's demonstration zone in December 2025 and runs a GAC-Aion joint venture (Guangzhou Andi Technology) with an R2 production model. Several verified-vs-claimed cap-flags apply: the paid-versus-free status of the December 2025 Guangzhou service is not explicitly confirmed in sources and should not be asserted as paid commercial; the reported 3,000-plus vehicles, eleven cities, and 80-million-plus cumulative kilometers are company-reported test-fleet figures, not commercial-revenue numbers. On verification posture, Didi Autonomous Driving is a private subsidiary of Didi Chuxing (which delisted from the NYSE in 2021), so its robotaxi metrics carry a weaker private-company, Chinese-market-disclosure verification posture than the NASDAQ-listed Pony.ai and WeRide. The registry records it at early, zone-limited driverless commercial maturity.

Nuro R2

Nuro's R2 is a second-generation autonomous road vehicle and the delivery-AV anchor of DEPLOY's autonomous-vehicle cluster: a low-speed automotive vehicle that is goods-only, with no passenger compartment, operating under a road-vehicle regulatory regime (not the sidewalk personal-delivery-device regime). There is no consumer price: it is an autonomous delivery service/program, not a vehicle sold to consumers, and Nuro pivoted from first-party delivery to licensing its autonomy stack (the Nuro Driver). The verified-vs-claimed nuance: the R2's current operations in Houston, Mountain View, and Scottsdale are Nuro's own R&D fleet validating the Nuro Driver, not customer deployments, so the model is recorded at research maturity to reflect this post-pivot state. (The current generation is the BYD-built R3, a redesigned cargo compartment and refined sensor stack on the same goods-only, road-vehicle design.) Nuro is distinct from the passenger robotaxis (Waymo, Zoox, the Chinese operators): it carries goods, not people.


Machine-readable: this page as markdown.

← Back to all consumer robots