Pudu Robotics Opens U.S. Headquarters in Dallas as Commercial Deployment Accelerates

Pudu Robotics is deepening its push into the U.S. market, opening a new regional headquarters in the Dallas area as part of a broader strategy to scale commercial robotics deployment across the Americas.

The new facility, located in Richardson, Texas, combines office space, a product showroom, and on-site warehousing—signaling a shift from market entry to operational expansion. The move reflects a company transitioning from early adoption to what it describes as “large-scale commercialization.”

From Presence to Infrastructure

Since entering the U.S. in 2018, Pudu Robotics has steadily expanded its footprint. Today, nearly 15,000 of its robots are deployed across the Americas, with regional revenue growing 285% year over year.

The new Dallas headquarters is designed to support that growth. Positioned as a central hub, the location offers logistical advantages for coordinating operations across North and South America, while enabling faster deployment, service, and support.

As part of this restructuring, the company has also shifted its Santa Clara office into a logistics support role and implemented a dual-warehouse system on both U.S. coasts—an indication that backend infrastructure is becoming as critical as the robots themselves.

A Portfolio Built for Deployment

Pudu’s growth is being driven by a diversified portfolio of commercial service robots targeting real-world use cases across multiple industries.

Its lineup spans service delivery, commercial cleaning, industrial logistics, and embodied AI systems designed for more adaptive, human-centered environments. These systems are already in use across sectors including food service, healthcare, logistics, and retail, with customers ranging from major enterprises to public-facing institutions.

Scaling Through Localization

A key theme in Pudu’s expansion is localization—not just selling robots into a market, but building the infrastructure to support them. That includes regional warehousing, local sales and service teams, and partnerships with distributors and enterprise customers.

The company reports strong growth in its partner network, alongside adoption by organizations such as Walmart, Accenture, NASA, and Honeywell.

This approach reflects a broader shift in robotics: success is increasingly tied not just to product capability, but to the ability to integrate into local markets and operational environments.

The Next Phase of Commercial Robotics

Globally, Pudu has shipped more than 120,000 units across over 80 countries, positioning itself as a leading player in commercial service robotics.

But the company’s latest move highlights a deeper transition underway in the industry.

The challenge is no longer just building robots—it’s building the systems that allow them to scale: logistics networks, service infrastructure, and customer support ecosystems.

The Dallas headquarters is less about geography and more about capability—a signal that robotics companies are increasingly investing in the operational backbone required for sustained deployment.

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