Symbotic anchors DEPLOY's AMR category: warehouse automation is enterprise infrastructure, not a consumer product. The verified-vs-claimed framework applies the same way to a B2B system as to a humanoid: verified what is deployed, claimed what is projected.
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The Walmart relationship is the whole story: anchor customer, a ~$520M investment, and the January 2025 acquisition of Walmart's robotics business. It is Symbotic's growth engine and, because so much revenue concentrates in one customer, its central risk.
Price
No reviewed price is on record. We do not treat unverified analyst estimates as pricing data. Symbotic does not publish a consumer or list price. It sells custom AI-orchestrated warehouse-automation systems to enterprises under negotiated B2B contracts, so there is no per-unit price to show. DEPLOY records zero price points rather than inventing one; the value of a deployment is set by contract scope, not a sticker.
Availability
Internal use only
Symbotic systems are enterprise B2B infrastructure, not a consumer product. They are commercially deployed at customer distribution centers (Walmart is the anchor customer), but you cannot buy one as a consumer or as a standalone unit.
Real-world status
DEPLOY classifies Symbotic's maturity as commercial: its AI-orchestrated warehouse systems operate at scale, with Walmart as the anchor customer and, per Symbotic's filings, roughly 42 distribution-center deployments and a backlog around $22.7B. The registry has no structured deployment records yet; deployment counts are verified via 10-K and earnings disclosures, while longer-term deployment economics (backlog conversion, margins) remain claimed, not verified.
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Symbotic completed its acquisition of Walmart's Advanced Systems and Robotics business (about $200M) in January 2025, and per its filings operates roughly 42 distribution-center deployments.
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There is no consumer price. Symbotic sells custom B2B systems under negotiated contracts, so DEPLOY records zero price points rather than inventing a per-unit figure.
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The ~$22.7B backlog is a contracted forward figure, not realized revenue. DEPLOY treats the deployment counts as verified but the longer-term deployment economics (backlog conversion, margins) as claimed.
Not as a consumer⊘absence. Symbotic sells AI-orchestrated warehouse-automation systems to enterprises under custom B2B contracts; there is no consumer price or standalone product.
How much does a Symbotic system cost?
There is no published consumer or list price⊘absence. Deployments are custom enterprise contracts sized to a customer's distribution centers, so the cost is set by contract scope, not a per-unit sticker.
Who uses Symbotic?
Walmart is the anchor customer, with roughly 42 distribution-center deployments per Symbotic's filings🟢verified. Symbotic also acquired Walmart's robotics business in January 2025.
What is the Walmart and Symbotic relationship?
Walmart is the anchor customer and a ~$520M investor, and in January 2025 Symbotic acquired Walmart's Advanced Systems and Robotics business (~$200M)🟢verified. That relationship drives growth and concentrates revenue risk in one customer.
Is Symbotic a humanoid robot company?
No🟢verified. Symbotic builds warehouse-automation systems (SymBot AMRs plus vision-guided arms and storage structure), not humanoid robots.
What is an AMR?
An autonomous mobile robot: a robot that navigates a facility on its own. Symbotic's SymBots are warehouse AMRs🟢verified orchestrated by its system software.
Pricing and availability are tagged verified or claimed against primary sources. Manufacturer targets are reported as targets, not prices you can pay today.