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Silicon Valley Robotics Center · Annual Report Series
The 2026 Annual Report
Canada

State of
Robotics
2026

Research-driven, talent-rich, capital-light

Hardware, data, and foundation models — how Canada's deep AI research base, government programs, and niche robotics companies are positioning the country in a US-dominated North American market.

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PublishedMarch 2026
EditionCanada
AuthorSVRC Research
Executive Summary · Canada

Research firepower meets commercial scale-up

Canada punches above its weight in AI research — Toronto, Montreal, and Edmonton host world-class academic AI programs — but translates this advantage into commercial robotics at a fraction of the rate US peers do. The country's $1.38B market is small but growing faster than the US, with specialized champions in each niche.

The Canadian robotics market reached $1.38B in 2026, up 13% year-over-year. Unlike the US, Canada's robotics ecosystem is characterized by category specialists rather than platform players: Kinova (assistive and lightweight arms), Clearpath / OTTO Motors (autonomous mobile robots, acquired by Rockwell Automation 2023), Sanctuary AI (humanoids), Robotiq (grippers and cobot tooling), Avidbots (cleaning robots), and Attabotics (high-density warehouse storage — declared insolvency 2024, restructured).

Three forces define Canada's position. First, AI research density: the Vector Institute (Toronto), Mila (Montreal), and Amii (Edmonton) form the Pan-Canadian AI Strategy's $443M spine, with robotics-adjacent foundation model research. Second, specialized commercial depth: Kinova leads globally in sub-7kg assistive arms; Sanctuary AI's Phoenix is the only Canadian humanoid on the global stage; MDA's heritage in space robotics (Canadarm lineage) underpins emerging orbital and defense programs. Third, structural capital constraint: Canadian robotics VC at ~$180M annually is 1/30th of US flows — most Canadian robotics scale-ups eventually raise from US investors or relocate HQs.

Market Size
$1.38B
Canadian robotics market in 2026, up 13% YoY.
Pan-Canadian AI Strategy
$443M
Federal commitment to AI research (Vector, Mila, Amii).
Kinova Production
~5K/yr
Units shipped annually — global leader in lightweight assistive arms.
Sanctuary AI Funding
$136M+
Raised to date for Phoenix humanoid development.
Robotics VC 2025
~$180M
Canadian robotics venture capital — 1/30th of US deployment.
Clearpath Exit
2023
Acquired by Rockwell Automation — Canada's largest robotics exit.
The Talent Pipeline Advantage

Canada produces world-class AI and robotics researchers at a rate disproportionate to its population — Geoffrey Hinton (Toronto), Yoshua Bengio (Mila), Rich Sutton (Amii). The country's challenge is talent retention: much of this output flows to US firms (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google, Meta) and US universities. Robotics scale-ups face the same pressure, with Kinova and Sanctuary AI operating against a constant recruiting gravity pulling engineers south.

Chapter 01

The Canada Market

AI research leadership and specialized robotics with outsized academic influence relative to capital deployed.

Market size and trajectory

The Canada robotics market reached $1.38B in 2026, growing +13% year-over-year. This trajectory reflects the confluence of labor-market dynamics, policy incentives, and foundation-model-enabled deployment velocity discussed throughout this report.

Exhibit 1.1 — Canada Robotics Market Size, 2021–2026
USD billions · total addressable robotics spend (hardware + software + services)
$0.86B2021$0.97B2022$1.08B2023$1.18B2024$1.26B2025$1.38B2026
Source: SVRC Research, IFR, Statista, country associations · Estimates for 2026

Shipment landscape

Unit shipments tell a more revealing story than market dollars. Below, SVRC's view of the 2025 competitive landscape for humanoid and leading-category robotics in Canada, shown alongside relevant global comparisons where instructive.

Exhibit 1.2 — 2025 Shipment Comparison
Units shipped or deployed in 2025 · leading category players
Kinova (arms)5,000OTTO Motors (AMR)1,400Avidbots (cleaning)680Sanctuary AI (humanoid)35MDA (space/defense)12
Source: SVRC Research, company disclosures, Omdia, Counterpoint
Chapter 02

National Champions

Every robotics market has its flagship firms — the companies whose trajectory shapes the country's narrative and around which an ecosystem of suppliers, talent, and capital clusters.

Kinova Robotics
Boisbriand, QC
Founded 2006. Gen3, Link 6, JACO assistive arm lines. Link 6 (2022) is the first Canadian-manufactured industrial cobot. Deployed in 30+ countries. ~5,000 units/year production.
Sanctuary AI
Vancouver, BC
Phoenix general-purpose humanoid — Canada's flagship bipedal platform. Carbon AI control system for human-like intelligence. Canadian Tire retail pilot. Targeted at retail, logistics, security.
OTTO Motors (Rockwell)
Kitchener, ON
Formerly Clearpath Robotics; acquired by Rockwell Automation 2023. OTTO autonomous mobile robots for warehouse material handling. ~15% Canadian robotics market share before acquisition.
Robotiq
Lévis, QC
Cobot grippers, force sensors, vision systems. End-effector ecosystem partner for Universal Robots, FANUC, KUKA. Highly profitable niche leader.
Avidbots
Kitchener, ON
Neo autonomous floor-cleaning robot deployed in 15+ countries — airports, malls, warehouses. AI-driven navigation and obstacle handling.
MDA Space
Brampton, ON
Canadarm heritage. Building Canadarm3 for Lunar Gateway. Emerging defense and orbital robotics programs. Public company (TSX: MDA).
A&K Robotics
Vancouver, BC
Autonomous floor cleaning for public transit, airports. Direct competitor/alternative to Avidbots.
Chapter 03

Deployment by Vertical

Where robots are actually working in Canada today — and where growth is accelerating fastest. SVRC's estimates reflect operational stock, not cumulative installations.

VerticalDeployed Units (2025E)YoY GrowthLeading Form Factor
Automotive (GM/Ford/Magna)3,200+9%Imported industrial arm
Warehousing / Logistics2,100+21%AMR (OTTO, Attabotics legacy)
Mining / Resource Extraction840+28%Autonomous haul / inspection
Healthcare / Assistive580+41%Kinova arms, medical cobots
Commercial Cleaning390+32%Avidbots Neo, A&K
Space / Defense110n.a.MDA Canadarm3, Canadensys
Exhibit 3.1 — Deployed Units by Vertical, 2025 Estimate
Units deployed in commercial / production environments · highlighted bars exceed 35% YoY growth
Automotive (GM/Ford/Magna)3,200 +9%Warehousing / Logistics2,100 +21%Mining / Resource Extrac…840 +28%Healthcare / Assistive580 +41%Commercial Cleaning390 +32%Space / Defense110 n.a.
Source: SVRC Research, IFR, industry associations
Chapter 04

Strengths & Challenges

A candid assessment of what Canada does best in global robotics — and where structural vulnerabilities require attention.

Strengths

  • AI research base — Vector (Toronto), Mila (Montreal), Amii (Edmonton) produce outsized share of foundational ML research. Hinton, Bengio, Sutton — three Turing Award laureates in robotics-adjacent AI.
  • Category specialists — Kinova in assistive/lightweight arms, Robotiq in cobot tooling, Avidbots in cleaning, MDA in space — Canadian firms lead specific niches rather than compete for platform dominance.
  • US market access — USMCA, language, regulatory alignment, and proximity make US enterprise sales a natural extension. Canadian companies routinely generate >50% of revenue from US customers.
  • Government programs — Strategic Innovation Fund, Scientific Research and Experimental Development (SR&ED) tax credit, and Pan-Canadian AI Strategy combine to subsidize R&D at effective rates few peer countries match.

Challenges

  • Capital scale — Canadian VC robotics deployment is ~$180M vs $4.9B in the US. Scale-ups routinely raise US rounds and relocate HQs (or economic substance) southward.
  • Talent retention — Canadian-trained PhDs flow to US labs. Vector, Mila, and Amii have partially reversed this, but commercial robotics companies compete against OpenAI, Anthropic, Google for the same engineers.
  • Domestic demand depth — Canada's manufacturing base is 1/10th the scale of US and 1/30th of China. Insufficient domestic demand for an industrial robotics champion to scale entirely on home-market revenue.
  • No humanoid Tier-1 — Sanctuary AI is Canada's humanoid entry; respected technically but well behind Figure, Unitree, AgiBot on unit shipments and production capacity.
Chapter 05

Capital & Investment

The flow of venture capital, strategic corporate investment, and public funding that shapes robotics competitiveness in Canada.

Canadian robotics raised ~$180M across 24 disclosed rounds in 2025. Largest rounds: Sanctuary AI ($75M Series B), Avidbots ($38M growth round). Rockwell's 2023 acquisition of Clearpath Robotics (~$600M) remains the largest Canadian robotics exit. Strategic capital increasingly comes from Rockwell, Mitsubishi Electric, and Canadian Tire Corp; Canadian Pension Plan and CDPQ have ramped robotics allocations via fund-of-fund positions.

The Data Moat Thesis in Canada Context

Globally, investors increasingly cite proprietary data collection infrastructure as the primary defensibility argument in robotics. The question for Canada specifically: do its robotics companies generate deployment-specific data at a rate that compounds faster than foundation model improvements erode it? This is the question that 2026–2027 will answer.

Chapter 06

What to Watch in 2027

Four themes SVRC's research team believes will define Canada's robotics trajectory over the next 18 months.

01 · Sanctuary AI Series C

Expected 2026. Will test whether Canadian humanoids can sustain competitive capitalization against Figure, Apptronik, 1X. Benchmark: if raised at <$1B valuation, gap with US widens structurally.

02 · Kinova humanoid entry

Kinova's lightweight arm expertise positions it as a potential humanoid upper-body supplier. Expect partnerships or own platform announcement in 2026–2027.

03 · Space robotics boost

Canadarm3 for Lunar Gateway, Canadensys defense programs, and commercial LEO services create a robotics niche where Canadian heritage is durable. MDA Space IPO performance sets the tone.

04 · Research-to-market conversion

Key question for 2026: can Vector, Mila, and Amii produce commercial robotics spin-offs at a rate commensurate with their research output? Success would re-rate the entire Canadian ecosystem.

SVRC Perspective on Canada

Canada's robotics trajectory in 2026–2027 will be defined less by hardware breakthroughs than by whether the country can convert its distinctive advantages into repeatable deployment outcomes — at the speed that Chinese and US competitors are setting. The window for structural positioning is narrowing.

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Partner with SVRC on Canada opportunities.

Whether you're an enterprise evaluating deployment, a manufacturer considering market entry, or an investor sizing the opportunity — SVRC partners on hardware sourcing, data collection programs, policy navigation, and on-the-ground deployment coordination.

For enterprises in Canada — hardware evaluation, data collection programs, deployment services, and integration with domestic and imported platforms.
For investors — deep due-diligence on Canada robotics startups, technical validation, and co-investment relationships with domestic funds.
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Cite this reportSVRC. (2026). State of Robotics 2026: Canada Edition. SVRC Research.