(Jan 23): Tesla Inc will probably sell its Optimus robots to the public by the end of next year, according to chief executive officer Elon Musk, who’s said the carmaker’s fortunes will be increasingly dependent on humanoid machines.
The company is already using some of the robots to do simple tasks in its factory, Musk said on Thursday at the World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos, Switzerland. He predicted Optimus would be “doing more complex tasks” by the end of 2026.
Sales to the public will begin when Tesla is “confident that it’s very high reliability, very high safety, and the range of functionality is also very high”, Musk said.
The comments offer a more concrete timeline for the future business line, which Musk sees as a key focus for Tesla going forward, alongside artificial intelligence and autonomous vehicles. The automaker’s core business of selling cars has suffered from a stale product line-up and the loss of electric vehicle incentives in the US, leading to two consecutive years of declining deliveries.
While Musk regularly talks up the potential of Optimus, he’s been relatively vague about production timelines and targets. During a January 2025 earnings call, he said his “very rough guess” was that Tesla would start delivering Optimus robots to other companies in the second half of 2026.
Earlier this week, Musk cautioned that initial production of Optimus and Tesla’s newest vehicle, the Cybercab, will be “agonisingly slow”.
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Musk’s appearance in Davos came as a surprise after the world’s richest man was confirmed as a last-minute addition to Thursday’s schedule. He had previously criticised the forum, calling the annual gathering of the world’s elite “boring” and slammed the WEF as a body that’s “increasingly becoming an unelected world government that the people never asked for and don’t want”.
“How is the WEF/Davos even a thing? Are they trying to be the boss of Earth!?” he posted on social media in 2022.
Musk touched on a variety of topics in his conversation with BlackRock CEO Larry Fink, including data centres in space, robotaxis and power generation bottlenecks.
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