What is Agility Robotics and the Digit humanoid robot?
Agility Robotics is a US humanoid robotics company headquartered in Albany, Oregon, with humanoid R&D heritage tracing through the Cassie research platform that preceded Digit. The Digit humanoid is the company's commercial warehouse and logistics platform, deployed in pilots at GXO Logistics (the 100,000-tote scaled-throughput anchor), Amazon Spanx Tennessee, Schaeffler, and other industrial customers. Agility is privately held, with Amazon as a strategic investor and a manufacturing facility (RoboFab) in Salem, Oregon.
Single-customer depth: 100K-tote GXO anchor
Per registry source-of-truth, Agility Digit's GXO Flowery Branch deployment anchors the cohort's canonical scaled-throughput milestone: 100,000 totes moved in live fulfillment under a multi-year Robots-as-a-Service contract, verified by GXO as customer of record and confirmed across independent trade press. Per DEPLOY's framework on deployment status, this is the deepest single-customer humanoid throughput verification across the cohort.
Strategic posture: depth-with-one-customer vs cohort patterns
Three structurally distinct enterprise-humanoid strategies. Agility Digit (single-customer depth): 100K-tote anchor at GXO Flowery Branch under multi-year RaaS contract; depth-with-one-customer before multi-customer expansion. Apptronik Apollo (enterprise breadth): 3 Fortune-500 customer pilots locked before scaled throughput. Figure AI (enterprise depth + OEM acceptance): Figure 02 at BMW Spartanburg 30K X3 vehicles + Figure 03 at Catalyst Reno pilot. All three operate at verified enterprise-deployed tier with different strategic bets on what verification matters first.
Cassie research heritage distinguishes commercial trajectory
Co-founder Jonathan Hurst's research at Oregon State University's Dynamic Robotics Lab produced the Cassie bipedal research platform that preceded commercial Digit. The lineage from Cassie research to Digit commercial product is editorially substantive: Agility is one of the cohort manufacturers with the deepest pre-commercial humanoid R&D foundation, distinguishing it from companies founded specifically to ship commercial humanoid product without comparable research heritage. The narrower task envelope (warehouse logistics) reflects engineering depth in bipedal locomotion + manipulation suited to that specific deployment context.
Per-unit pricing + multi-customer scaled throughput cap-flagged
Per DEPLOY's cap-flag-as-trust-signal discipline: per-unit pricing not publicly disclosed; RaaS contract structures shift cost from capex to opex; industry-analyst estimates place enterprise humanoid pricing in $50,000-$250,000 range plus integration and ongoing service fees. Multi-customer breadth: Agility's deployment depth at GXO is verified at 100K-tote scale; analogous multi-customer scaled-throughput data has not been independently published at the same depth for Amazon Spanx or Schaeffler deployments.
What Agility has NOT yet shipped at framework depth
Geographic generalization: Agility's commercial deployments operate at US warehouse customers; international expansion at commercial-deployment depth is a forward question. Consumer pricing surface: not applicable; the product is enterprise-bound. Multi-customer 100K-tote-equivalent throughput anchor at non-GXO customers: pending publication at GXO's depth. Per DEPLOY's framework, absences are surfaced as editorial signal alongside the verified single-customer-depth strategic posture.
Agility Robotics: institutional facts
Agility Robotics is a US humanoid robotics company headquartered in Albany, Oregon. CEO Damion Shelton leads the company; co-founder Jonathan Hurst's research heritage at Oregon State University's Dynamic Robotics Lab produced the Cassie bipedal research platform that preceded the commercial Digit humanoid. The lineage from Cassie research to Digit commercial product is editorially substantive: Agility is one of the cohort manufacturers with the deepest pre-commercial humanoid R&D foundation, distinguishing it from companies founded specifically to ship commercial humanoid product without comparable research heritage.
The company operates a dedicated humanoid manufacturing facility, RoboFab, in Salem, Oregon. Agility is privately held; strategic investors include Amazon (which has both invested and is a deployment customer through Spanx Tennessee operations). For the broader investor-disambiguation context across the humanoid cohort, see best humanoid manufacturer to invest in.
Digit: warehouse-and-logistics humanoid
Digit is Agility's commercial humanoid product. The platform is roughly 5'9" tall, bipedal with manipulation arms (not fully human-equivalent dexterous hands; designed for tote and box handling specifically), and engineered specifically for warehouse-and-logistics deployment envelopes rather than general-purpose household tasks or factory-floor flexibility.
The deployment focus distinguishes Digit from peer humanoids:
- Apptronik Apollo operates manufacturing flexibility across Mercedes / GXO / Jabil pilots.
- Figure AI operates automotive assembly (Figure 02 at BMW Spartanburg) and logistics (Figure 03 at Catalyst Brands Reno).
- Agility Digit focuses specifically on warehouse tote movement and logistics-task envelopes.
The narrower task envelope is editorial: Agility's product hypothesis is that excelling at warehouse logistics at scale beats general-purpose humanoid capability that's mediocre across many tasks. The 100,000-tote throughput milestone at GXO Flowery Branch validates that hypothesis at single-customer commercial scale.
Verified commercial deployments
Per Agility's registry record and the signal coverage of the Catalyst Brands deployment context:
- GXO Logistics at Flowery Branch, Georgia: the canonical commercial humanoid throughput anchor. 100,000 totes moved in live fulfillment under a multi-year Robots-as-a-Service contract, verified by GXO as customer of record and confirmed across independent trade press.
- Amazon Spanx Tennessee operations: Amazon, both a strategic investor and a deployment customer, operates Digit units in warehouse operations.
- Schaeffler: industrial deployment partnership.
- Additional pilot relationships across logistics and manufacturing customers documented in the registry record.
The deployment depth at a single customer (GXO Flowery Branch with 100,000-tote throughput) distinguishes Digit's commercial trajectory: single-customer-depth verification rather than enterprise-breadth-with-pending-throughput (Apptronik's pattern) or automotive-OEM-acceptance-verification (Figure 02 at BMW). The framework reads these as three structurally distinct commercial humanoid strategies, all operating at the verified enterprise-deployed tier of DEPLOY's four-tier capability framework.
Where Digit fits in the cohort
Applying DEPLOY's verified-vs-claimed framework across humanoid makers:
- Five-tier availability: Digit sits at the enterprise-deployed tier. No consumer commerce surface; enterprise contracts only (typically via Robots-as-a-Service or multi-year service contracts; per-unit pricing not publicly disclosed; industry-analyst estimates in the $50,000-$250,000 range plus integration and ongoing service fees).
- Four-tier capability: verified enterprise-deployed (GXO Flowery Branch 100,000-tote throughput; Amazon Spanx; Schaeffler). The verified-deployment posture is multi-year operational data at single-customer depth.
- Investor disambiguation: privately held; Amazon as strategic investor and customer; investment access via venture-stage rather than public-equity channels. See best humanoid manufacturer to invest in.
- Geographic disambiguation: American (Albany, Oregon HQ + Salem RoboFab manufacturing). Part of the US enterprise-deployed humanoid cohort alongside Figure, Apptronik, and Boston Dynamics. See which humanoid robots are American vs Chinese.
What the framework cap-flags
Per DEPLOY's discipline:
- Per-unit pricing: not publicly disclosed. Robots-as-a-Service contract structures shift the cost from capex to opex, but per-deployment monthly figures are negotiated privately.
- Multi-customer breadth: Agility's deployment depth at GXO is verified; multi-customer scaled-throughput data analogous to GXO's 100,000-tote milestone has not been independently published for Amazon Spanx or Schaeffler deployments at the same depth.
- Geographic generalization: Agility's commercial deployments operate at US warehouse customers; international expansion at commercial-deployment depth is a forward question.
- Consumer pricing surface: not applicable; the product is enterprise-bound. See DEPLOY's consumer pricing infrastructure for Agility Digit as it rolls out per agent B's main-surface work.
Where to go for context
For canonical institutional depth on Agility Robotics (founding history, Cassie research lineage, Amazon investment, RoboFab manufacturing facility, deployment record), see Agility Robotics's registry record. For the GXO Flowery Branch deployment anchor specifically, see the 100,000-tote scaled-throughput signal.
For the broader humanoid cohort context including comparison with peer manufacturers, see the leading humanoid robot makers, can I buy a humanoid robot in 2026, and what can humanoid robots actually do today.
For the framework DEPLOY applies to capability claims across humanoid makers, see how DEPLOY verifies capability claims. For methodology canonical references applicable to Agility Digit: the 4-way autonomy-boundary taxonomy (enterprise-deployed tier; GXO Flowery Branch 100K totes verified scaled-throughput) + verified-vs-claimed at within-entity granularity.
Sources: Source: DEPLOY registry + per-platform deployment records. Single-customer depth vs enterprise breadth vs OEM acceptance verification per strategic posture differentiation.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Agility Robotics?
Agility Robotics is a US humanoid robotics company headquartered in Albany, Oregon, with deep humanoid R&D heritage tracing through the Cassie research platform that preceded Digit. CEO Damion Shelton leads the company; co-founder Jonathan Hurst's research at Oregon State University's Dynamic Robotics Lab produced the bipedal locomotion technology Digit commercializes. Agility operates a dedicated humanoid manufacturing facility (RoboFab) in Salem, Oregon. Privately held; Amazon is both strategic investor and deployment customer through Spanx Tennessee operations.
What is Digit and where is it deployed?
Digit is Agility's commercial humanoid product: roughly 5'9" bipedal with manipulation arms (not fully human-equivalent dexterous hands; designed for tote and box handling specifically), engineered for warehouse-and-logistics deployment envelopes. Per registry source-of-truth, verified deployments: GXO Logistics Flowery Branch, Georgia (100,000 totes moved under multi-year RaaS contract; cohort's canonical scaled-throughput anchor); Amazon Spanx Tennessee; Schaeffler industrial partnership; additional pilot relationships documented in registry.
How does Digit compare to Figure 03 and Apptronik Apollo?
Three structurally distinct enterprise-humanoid strategies. Agility Digit operates single-customer depth at GXO Flowery Branch (100K-tote RaaS anchor); warehouse logistics specialty. Apptronik Apollo operates enterprise breadth (3 Fortune-500 customers: Mercedes + GXO + Jabil) before scaled throughput. Figure 02 / 03 operates generational depth + OEM acceptance verification (Figure 02 at BMW Spartanburg 30K X3 vehicles + Figure 03 at Catalyst Reno pilot). All three operate at verified enterprise-deployed tier; the differentiation is which verification matters first.
How much does Agility Digit cost?
Per-unit pricing is not publicly disclosed. Digit deploys under Robots-as-a-Service (RaaS) contract structures that shift cost from capex to opex; per-deployment monthly figures are negotiated privately. Industry-analyst estimates place enterprise humanoid pricing in the $50,000-$250,000 range plus integration and ongoing service fees. Per DEPLOY's cap-flag-as-trust-signal discipline, the framework surfaces the absence of published per-unit pricing rather than estimating it.
Is Amazon investing in Agility Robotics?
Yes, in a dual capacity. Amazon is both a strategic investor in Agility Robotics and a deployment customer through Spanx Tennessee operations. The investor + customer overlap is structurally distinct from arms-length investor-only or customer-only relationships at peer humanoid makers. For broader investor-disambiguation context across the humanoid cohort, see best humanoid manufacturer to invest in. For comparable customer-investor structural overlap patterns, see Apptronik Apollo's Mercedes-Benz relationship and the parallel framing.
Can I buy an Agility Digit?
No, not as a consumer. Agility Digit operates at the enterprise-deployed tier with no consumer commerce surface. The deployment model is enterprise contracts (typically Robots-as-a-Service or multi-year service contracts) negotiated case-by-case with warehouse logistics customers. For consumer-purchase humanoid options, see 1X NEO at $20,000 outright or $499/month subscription (six-month minimum) and Unitree research platforms at $5,900-$16,000. Per DEPLOY's 5-tier availability framework, Digit sits at enterprise-deployed tier alongside Figure 03 and Apollo.
Agility Digit verified at single-customer depth at GXO Flowery Branch (100K-tote RaaS anchor) + Amazon Spanx Tennessee + Schaeffler. Cassie research heritage anchors engineering depth in bipedal locomotion + manipulation suited to warehouse logistics deployment. How DEPLOY verifies →
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