Locus anchors the RaaS / multi-customer end of DEPLOY's warehouse-AMR business-model spectrum: a subscription model serving 150+ customers, the contrast to Amazon's captive-internal fleet and the wound-down Zebra/Fetch line.
✔
It is at genuine commercial scale: 350+ sites in 20 countries, 6 billion-plus cumulative picks by October 2025, with DHL Supply Chain a marquee customer, and a 2026 push (Locus Array) toward mobile manipulation.
Price
No reviewed price is on record. We do not treat unverified analyst estimates as pricing data. There is no consumer price. The LocusBot is a B2B warehouse-automation Robots-as-a-Service subscription, not a robot sold to consumers, so DEPLOY records zero price points.
Availability
Internal use only
This is a B2B Robots-as-a-Service subscription, not a consumer product. From Locus Robotics (Wilmington, Massachusetts), the LocusBot operates across 150-plus customers and 350-plus sites in 20 countries via the LocusONE platform.
Real-world status
Locus Robotics' LocusBot is a collaborative goods-to-person picking AMR that works alongside human pickers, delivered on a Robots-as-a-Service subscription via the LocusONE platform. It anchors the RaaS / multi-customer end of DEPLOY's warehouse-AMR business-model spectrum. It is at commercial maturity, operating across 150-plus customers and 350-plus sites in 20 countries, having surpassed 6 billion cumulative picks by October 2025 (DHL Supply Chain a marquee customer), and it raised a $117 million Series F at a roughly $2 billion valuation in 2022. In April 2026 it launched Locus Array, a mobile-manipulation system extending from collaborative picking toward fully autonomous fulfillment. The pick-count and fleet figures are company-reported, and the ~$2 billion valuation is a November-2022 point-in-time datapoint.
⚠
Verified-vs-claimed: the pick-count and fleet figures are company-reported, and the ~$2 billion valuation is a November-2022 point-in-time datapoint (no newer round surfaced). The bots are collaborative (work alongside human pickers), not a fully autonomous lights-out system.
⊘
There is no consumer price. The LocusBot is a B2B Robots-as-a-Service subscription, not a robot sold to consumers, so DEPLOY records zero price points.
Warehouse-AMR business models: Locus vs Amazon vs Geek+
Locus LocusBot
Amazon Robotics
Geek+ AMR
Business model
RaaS (multi-customer)
🟢verified
Captive (internal only)
🟢verified
Sale + RaaS
🟢verified
Scale
150+ customers
🟡stated
1M+ robots (internal)
🟢verified
800+ clients
🟢verified
Verification
Private
🟢verified
Amazon-internal
🟢verified
HKEX: 2590
🟢verified
Pricing
No consumer price
⊘absence
No consumer price
⊘absence
No consumer price
⊘absence
Sources: DEPLOY registry, Locus Robotics, The Robot Report
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I buy a LocusBot?
No⊘absence. The LocusBot is a B2B Robots-as-a-Service subscription for warehouses, not a robot sold to consumers; there is no consumer price.
How is the LocusBot sold?
On a Robots-as-a-Service subscription🟢verified via the LocusONE platform: customers subscribe rather than buy, with the bots working collaboratively alongside human pickers.
How big is Locus Robotics' deployment?
150+ customers, 350+ sites in 20 countries, with 6 billion-plus cumulative picks by October 2025🟡stated (company-reported); DHL Supply Chain is a marquee customer.
Pricing and availability are tagged verified or claimed against primary sources. Manufacturer targets are reported as targets, not prices you can pay today.