In May 2025, Hugging Face announced two fully open-source humanoid robots: “HopeJR” and the desktop-sized “Reachy Mini.”
In May 2025, Hugging Face announced two fully open-source humanoid robots: “HopeJR” and the desktop-sized “Reachy Mini.” HopeJR is a full-body, 66-degree-of-freedom bipedal humanoid developed with The Robot Studio, capable of walking and manipulating objects, priced at around $3,000. Reachy Mini is a tabletop robot costing $250–300, supporting head movement, voice interaction, and AI app execution, intended for educational, research, and AI interaction testing purposes. Both models are completely open-source in hardware and software, allowing anyone to modify or reuse them. Hugging Face, after acquiring Pollen Robotics in April 2025, promotes the “LeRobot” initiative, aiming to merge AI and robotics. Initial shipments are scheduled for late 2025, with a waitlist already available. Compared to expensive rivals like Tesla’s Optimus or the Unitree G1, these new robots drastically reduce costs, making advanced robotics accessible to a broad audience—from educators and researchers to hobbyists. The open ecosystem encourages global developer participation, enabling applications in fields like healthcare, education, automation, and the creative arts, and is expected to drive community-driven innovation. By embodying advanced AI in physical robots, Hugging Face is ushering in an era where anyone can experience, improve, and co-create with state-of-the-art humanoid technology.
Main Sources
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TechCrunch (May 29, 2025) — Announcement and details about HopeJR and Reachy Mini.
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Remi Cadene’s post on X (Twitter) — Overview and pricing.
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Wired (April 2025) — On Hugging Face’s acquisition of Pollen Robotics and the LeRobot initiative.
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[LinkedIn, Indian Express, Heise Online, and AI News] — Additional reports on robot specifications and open-source policy.
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