Humanoid robots are moving from prototype validation toward early commercial deployment, with automotive manufacturing and logistics expected to form the core demand base over the next decade, according to a report from IDTechEx.More specifically, the humanoid robot market across automotive, logistics, and home-use applications is forecast to grow rapidly over the coming years, reaching approximately $25 billion by the early 2030s before moderating as the market matures toward 2036. Annual shipments are projected to approach 1.8 million units by 2036, driven primarily by automotive manufacturing, with logistics following, and home-use remaining a longer-term opportunity with limited penetration within the forecast period.Those sectors will be the first scalable deployment markets for humanoid robots, because compared with open or highly unstructured environments, industrial settings such as automotive manufacturing offer more standardized workflows, clearer task boundaries, and stronger labor-cost pressure.According to IDTechEx, that growth will be supported by the accelerating push toward Industry 5.0, rapid progress in embodied AI, continuous improvements in materials and component supply chains, and sustained strategic backing from investors and OEMs.And as the market expands, the average selling price of humanoid robots is expected to fall from approximately $114,700 in 2024 to around $37,000 by 2030, with further reductions expected into the mid-2030s.But even as robot costs fall quickly, the payback period for that investment will remain highly scenario-dependent under different deployment efficiency scenarios, the report said. As capital costs decline, the cost per productive hour falls accordingly, but while cost reduction is a necessary condition for adoption, that…