Weave Robotics prices Isaac 1 home humanoid at $7,999, with deliveries planned for fall

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The wheeled robot targets laundry, room tidying, and household resets rather than broad general-purpose work.
Weave Robotics has introduced Isaac 1, a wheeled home humanoid robot priced at $7,999, with deliveries planned to begin this fall. The San Francisco startup also plans to offer the robot for $449 per month.
Isaac 1 is designed for domestic chores including finding and picking up dirty clothes, folding laundry, making beds, and putting away toys, shoes, blankets, and pillows. The product is a mobile successor to Isaac 0, Weave’s stationary bimanual laundry-folding system, which the company has previously deployed with several customers in the San Francisco area.
The new system uses a wheeled base rather than legs, two arms, and two-finger parallel grippers. Weave said the robot can autonomously navigate between rooms, perform assigned work, and return to its charger. Users can schedule tasks and remotely access the robot through a companion app.
Its height-adjustable body ranges from 3 feet, or 0.9 meters, to 5 feet 9 inches, or 1.7 meters. That range is intended to let Isaac 1 retrieve objects from the floor, work at counter height, and place items on higher shelves. Weave lists an eight-hour battery runtime and a two-hour recharge time.
The company has given Isaac 1 a deliberately soft consumer-facing design, including a fabric-wrapped body and cartoon-like face. It also said shutters over the head-mounted cameras indicate when the robot is operating, while a privacy screen on the charging station obscures the robot when it is docked.
The hardware direction is more specific than the broad “household humanoid” label might suggest. A wheeled base, parallel grippers, adjustable torso, and all-day claimed runtime are a practical fit for structured indoor handling work, particularly laundry and room-reset tasks. Those choices avoid the complexity of bipedal locomotion, but they also mean the robot will depend on home layouts that accommodate a mobile base.
Isaac 0’s deployment provides some evidence that Weave has operated a laundry-focused system outside its lab. The company said the stationary robot can be installed using a standard wall outlet and can fold a laundry load in 30 to 90 minutes. Isaac 1, however, is at the announced consumer-product stage, with home deliveries still pending.
Important details remain unverified. Weave has described Isaac 1 as its first mobile humanoid product, while Isaac 0 was its first-generation system and a stationary manipulator. It is not yet clear whether the company considers Isaac 1 its first mobile humanoid robot in an absolute sense or its first mobile commercial product. No independent performance testing, household reliability data, manipulation success rates, payload figures, or details on the monthly plan’s terms have been disclosed.
- Weave Robotics launches Isaac, its first mobile humanoid robot - The Robot Reporttherobotreport.com / Trade / Published JUL 17, 2026 / Accessed JUL 17, 2026