China is deploying the first home cleaning humanoid robot butlers
At last, the Jetsons are happening. Everyone’s long-held dream of having a humanoid robot at home to do all the household chores is almost here. Chinese tech firm Giga AI has announced the (allegedly) first commercial robotic butler ever. The company claims the first 100 pilot units will be deployed at the end of this month in employees’ homes. Then they will start deployment in Wuhan, for free!, in the first half 2027. Called See Light S1, the robot is one of the many answers to China’s ongoing demographic crisis, which has been met by a Beijing directive that wants to put embodied AI wherever it is needed. Designed by GigaAI—a startup founded in 2025 and funded by Huawei’s investment arm—in collaboration with state-backed robotics research hubs Hubei Humanoid Robot Innovation Centre and the Hubei Humanoid Robotics Industry Alliance, the robot is a two-armed, wheeled machine that, according to the company, is the first general-purpose robot ever designed for the home. In demos, the S1 chops vegetables, fries eggs, loads a washing machine, hangs laundry, makes a bed, and opens curtains. [Image: GigaAI] To keep things safe, built-in sensors are supposed to freeze its movements the instant it contacts a child or a pet. The S1 runs on embodied artificial intelligence—a digital brain wired directly into a physical body, capable of reading its environment and deciding what to do next without step-by-step instructions. Talking to the local newspaper Changjiang Daily, GigaAI’s CEO Zhu Zheng says that the S1 will eventually cost about $15,000 when it debuts at stores in June 2027. But demos are all fun and laughter until the guy secretly controlling the bot takes his VR helmet off. Navigating a home is extremely hard for a robot. This isn’t a Roomba crawling around like a little turtle, bumping onto furniture in a 2D space. It’s a two-arm heavy machine that needs to navigate a very complex 3D environment that keeps changing. Guo Renjie—founder and CEO