Toyota has hired seven humanoid robots from Agility Robotics for use at one of its manufacturing facilities in Canada, marking another step in the automotive industry’s push toward advanced factory automation.
The robots, known as Digit, will be tasked with unloading totes filled with auto parts from an automated warehouse tugger. The deployment places humanoid machines directly into structured industrial workflows rather than experimental lab environments, signaling growing confidence in their real-world reliability.
Unlike traditional robotic arms fixed to assembly lines, Agility’s humanoid robots are designed to navigate human-centered spaces such as warehouses and factory floors. Their bipedal form allows them to operate in facilities originally built for people, reducing the need for costly infrastructure redesign.

For Toyota, the move reflects a broader strategy of integrating next-generation automation to improve efficiency, reduce repetitive strain tasks for workers, and address ongoing labor shortages in manufacturing. By assigning robots to tote unloading, a physically repetitive and time-sensitive task, the company can reallocate human workers to higher-value activities.
The partnership also highlights how robotics firms are shifting from pilot demonstrations to commercial contracts. Agility Robotics has positioned Digit as a general-purpose warehouse and logistics assistant, capable of lifting, carrying, and sorting packages in environments already optimized for human movement.
Industry analysts view such deployments as a test case for humanoid robotics in mainstream manufacturing. While industrial automation has long relied on specialized machinery, humanoid robots promise flexibility across multiple roles, potentially reshaping labor dynamics in factories over the next decade.

Toyota’s adoption of seven units suggests cautious scaling rather than full automation, a phased approach that allows performance validation before broader rollout. If successful, similar deployments could expand across other production sites.
The move underscores a growing convergence between AI-driven robotics and traditional manufacturing, as automakers seek productivity gains while maintaining operational resilience.
Toyota profit slides 43% after finance chief is tapped as new CEO