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Amazon Acquires Fauna Robotics to Build

Amazon has confirmed the acquisition of Fauna Robotics, a New York-based startup whose humanoid robot

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ObjectWire Technology Desk
March 24, 2026📖 3 min read

Amazon has officially expanded its robotics empire into the consumer humanoid space, confirming on Tuesday, March 24, 2026, its acquisition of the New York-based startup Fauna Robotics. The deal closed just under two months after Fauna debuted its flagship robot, “Sprout” — a humanoid designed not for warehouse efficiency but for social environments like homes and schools.

While Amazon already operates over 1 million industrial robots across its global fulfillment network, the Fauna acquisition marks the company’s first serious push into consumer humanoid robotics — a market long anticipated but not yet dominated by any single player.

  • Acquired: Fauna Robotics — New York City-based startup, founded ~2022
  • Product: Sprout — a consumer humanoid robot described as “safe, approachable, and fun”
  • Target environments: Homes and schools — social settings, not warehouses
  • Deal timing: Closed ~2 months after Sprout’s public debut
  • Amazon’s existing fleet: 1 million+ industrial warehouse robots
  • Strategic shift: Consumer-facing humanoid — a new category for Amazon’s hardware division

Meet Sprout: Designed to Be Liked

What distinguishes Fauna Robotics from Amazon’s existing robotics portfolio is intent. Amazon’s warehouse robots — Proteus, Sequoia, Digit (developed with Agility Robotics) — are built for throughput, designed to move packages faster and reduce labor costs. They are optimised for efficiency in controlled industrial environments where human interaction is minimal and predictable.

Sprout is built for the opposite: unpredictable, emotionally complex social environments where the priority is not throughput but trust. Fauna’s design philosophy, as articulated at the time of Sprout’s debut, centers on creating a robot that people — including children — want to be around. That means softer physical design, expressive facial features, voice interaction tuned for natural conversation, and behavioral programming that prioritises de-escalation and approachability over task completion speed.

Why Amazon Moved This Fast

The acquisition’s speed is notable: Fauna debuted Sprout less than two months ago, and Amazon already closed the deal. That velocity reflects competitive urgency. The consumer humanoid race is accelerating rapidly — with Figure AI, 1X Technologies, Boston Dynamics, and most prominently Tesla (through its Optimus program) all competing to establish a foothold in home and commercial humanoid deployment.

Amazon has unique distribution leverage that none of its humanoid competitors can match. The ability to sell, ship, and support a consumer robot through Amazon.com, bundle it with Alexa and Prime ecosystem integrations, and back it with Amazon’s device hardware and software infrastructure represents a go-to-market advantage that a startup like Fauna could not have replicated independently.

Fauna’s founders and engineering team are expected to join Amazon devices, with Sprout’s development continuing under the company’s hardware division — the same group responsible for Echo, Ring, and Amazon’s prior home robotics effort, Astro.

The Astro Question

Amazon’s first consumer robot, Astro, launched in limited preview in 2021 and never achieved mass commercial availability. A wheeled home companion rather than a true humanoid, Astro was quietly scaled back amid mixed reviews and challenges around real-world utility. The Fauna acquisition suggests Amazon has drawn lessons from that experience: a purpose-built humanoid designed with social trust at its core represents a more defensible consumer proposition than a surveillance-adjacent home rover.

Whether Sprout can succeed where Astro stumbled will depend on execution — and on how quickly Amazon can bring the product to market at a price point accessible to households rather than early-adopter enthusiasts. The consumer humanoid market does not yet exist at scale. With this acquisition, Amazon is betting it will.

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ObjectWire Technology Desk

Tech & Robotics

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