Figure 03 starts logistics work at BMW’s 11,000-person Spartanburg plant
Original: Figure 03 starts a logistics workflow at BMW Spartanburg View original →
A factory workflow for Figure 03
The useful test for a humanoid robot is not one impressive motion. It is whether the robot can enter a real operating facility. On June 30, 2026, Figure said on X that Figure 03 had started performing a logistics workflow at BMW Group Plant Spartanburg. The tweet tied the robot to a named production site and a specific class of work:
“Figure 03 humanoid robot has started performing a logistics workflow at BMW Group Plant Spartanburg.”
Figure’s account regularly posts humanoid robot development updates, factory pilots, and hardware progress. This post is material because it describes a workflow, not just a manipulation clip. In a car plant, logistics work depends on timing, route predictability, safety, and coordination with human workers. A humanoid that moves carts or materials must walk, perceive, stop safely, follow task instructions, and recover from small failures without disrupting the line.
The concrete number comes from the site. BMW describes Plant Spartanburg as a 10-million-square-foot campus with more than 11,000 associates. That scale changes the meaning of a robotics pilot. A robot in this environment has to fit into production rhythms, shift planning, safety protocols, and logistics sequencing rather than simply complete a lab task.
The limits of the tweet are also important. Figure did not disclose the number of carts moved, distance covered, intervention count, failure rate, charging pattern, or how constrained the workflow was. Those are the metrics that would separate a promising field test from a scalable deployment.
The next thing to watch is whether Figure publishes throughput and reliability data from repeated runs. Factory buyers will want cost per handled unit, safety-stop frequency, uptime across shifts, and performance across multiple days. If Figure 03 can maintain those numbers with limited human supervision, humanoid robots move closer to being factory logistics tools rather than staged demonstrations. Source: Figure source tweet · BMW Spartanburg plant profile
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