Welcome, AKINCI-5!

AKINCI-5 is a humanoid robot developed by AKINROBOTICS for industrial environments such as logistics, manufacturing, and mining. Standing 150 centimeters tall and weighing 50 kilograms, it combines a human shaped body with 28 total degrees of freedom, 12 of them in the hands, giving it a flexible foundation for whole body movement and object interaction. The robot is designed around AI supported walking and dynamic balance, with a top speed of 4 kilometers per hour and a payload strength listed at 20 kilograms. Its body uses aluminum alloy and composite materials, and it connects through Ethernet and Wi Fi for deployment in networked facilities. Safe human interaction is part of the design, and the platform is built with in house motors that reflect AKINROBOTICS’ long running development work. With a total skill score of 2, plus navigation and manipulation ratings of 1 out of 5 each, it sits in an early stage class, emphasizing foundational mobility and handling rather than advanced, fully mature humanoid performance.

This robot is best understood through the specific tasks it already targets. Obstacle avoidance supports operation in busy industrial spaces where people, pallets, and equipment can interrupt a path, making basic autonomous movement more practical on real floors. Sorting goods is the clearest applied use case, aligning with warehouse and factory workflows that require repeated identification, positioning, and transfer of items. Its early navigation rating and early manipulation rating indicate that these tasks are being approached at a foundational level, with value centered on structured environments and controlled demonstrations rather than broad general purpose autonomy. Even so, the combination of bipedal mobility, balanced movement, and item sorting points to a platform aimed at material flow, inspection routes, and simple handling work inside connected industrial facilities.

Availability is currently at the prototype stage, and the robot is being used for testing and demonstration as AKINROBOTICS moves beyond one off prototypes toward repeatable production. That transition matters. The company presents this machine as the first humanoid to come from Turkey’s first dedicated humanoid robot factory, giving it significance beyond a single product launch. It signals an effort to establish domestic humanoid manufacturing capability and to place Turkey within the fast growing global competition around industrial robotics. If the platform progresses from demonstrations into regular deployment, it could become an important regional reference point for companies evaluating humanoids for logistics and manufacturing. In that sense, its present role is both technical and symbolic, a proof of industrial intent as much as a working robot.

 

Similar Posts

New! 2026 Humanoid
Robot Market Report

198 pages of exclusive insight from global robotics experts — uncover funding trends, technology challenges, leading manufacturers, supply chain shifts, and surveys and forecasts on future humanoid applications.

Aaron Saunders
Featuring insights from Aaron Saunders, Former CTO of Boston Dynamics,
now Google DeepMind
Get the Report