
Tesla CEO Elon Musk has once again laid out an ambitious timeline for the company’s long-awaited humanoid robot, Optimus. Speaking at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Musk said Tesla plans to begin selling Optimus robots to the public by the end of 2027, assuming the machines reach the levels of reliability, safety, and functionality the company is targeting.
The comments follow a series of years-long development milestones. Optimus, which was originally unveiled as the Tesla Bot in 2021, has undergone multiple prototype iterations and has already been pressed into service handling simple tasks in Tesla factories. According to Musk, those internal deployments will expand in complexity later this year, helping prepare the robotics platform for broader use.
Ambition Meets Reality in Robotics
Musk’s timeline is bold by any industry standard. Humanoid robotics has long struggled with major challenges across hardware design, artificial intelligence, and large-scale manufacturing. Speaking at Davos, Musk stressed that Optimus won’t go on sale simply to meet a deadline. Instead, he said consumer availability will depend on the robots proving themselves reliable and safe, adding that sales would only begin once reliability and functionality are “very high.”

Tesla’s long-term vision for Optimus goes far beyond factory work. Musk has described a future where humanoid robots handle everyday tasks such as household chores and elder care, eventually becoming as common and useful as personal computers or smartphones. He has even suggested that one day there could be “more robots than people,” underscoring how central he believes robotics will be to everyday life.

That optimism comes with real skepticism, though. The last public demonstrations of Optimus revealed that the robots were being remotely piloted by human operators, not acting autonomously. Combined with Musk’s history of aggressive timelines, many experts remain cautious, noting that true general-purpose humanoid robots are still an unsolved problem. For now, Musk says commercial deployments could begin in 2026, with public sales following in 2027, but only if Tesla is confident the robots meet strict standards for reliability, safety, and functionality. Whether that’s a realistic caution or a built-in hedge against delays remains to be seen.





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