Automakers are racing to build the first car factory where robots, not humans, handle every task.
The vision of a fully automated factory is no longer science fiction, but a concrete goal for the next decade, with major manufacturers treating it as the next competitive frontier.

It is clear that the world’s first robot-built car factory is not a distant dream, but an industrial race that is already underway.
But for a robot to function alone in a factory, it must handle tasks that humans have long faced, and this is where humanoid robots are starting to matter.

Automakers are now talking about a first fully automated car factory that could open in China or the US by 2030. A factory that can operate with minimal human presence promises to lower labor costs, reduce defects, and potentially bring new models to market up to 50% faster.

