Agility Robotics Rebrands As Agility To Broaden Humanoid Automation Push

Agility Robotics Rebrands As Agility To Broaden Humanoid Automation Push
Source: Agility
  • The robotics company Agility Robotics announced it will operate under the shortened name Agility as part of a broader brand shift.
  • The update accompanies plans to expand humanoid robot deployments into additional industries, services, and operational environments.

Agility Robotics has rebranded, now operating under the name Agility. The company says that the new name represents a shift the company says reflects how its humanoid robotics business has grown beyond its original scope. The change comes as the company prepares to expand deployments and partnerships across additional industries.

“With our rebrand to Agility, we’re signaling our readiness to scale beyond our current deployments and our ability to lead the adoption of humanoids across many new industries,” says Daniel Diez, Chief Business Officer at Agility, in a press release. “As we expand into new partnerships and enable new use cases, it is critical that our brand matches the maturity of our technology and our commercial momentum. Agility represents flexibility, durability, and forward motion – qualities our customers need as they integrate humanoids into real operations.”

Alongside the name change, the company rolled out a new visual and verbal identity influenced by the systems it develops. The updated logo reflects movement and reliability. The brand presentation centers on humanoids operating with people in real workplaces, reinforcing a focus on practical deployment.

Agility develops humanoid robots built to handle difficult and repetitive work. Its robot Digit operates alongside human teams in warehouses, manufacturing facilities, and distribution centers. The company says it remains on track to deliver a cooperatively safe humanoid in 2026.


🌀 Tom’s Take:

Dropping “Robotics” and going with just Agility feels like a signal that the company sees itself as bigger than a single robot. The shift also hints at how humanoid robot companies are starting to frame themselves less around the machines they build and more around the role those systems will play in everyday work.


Source: Business Wire / Agility