REAL · AUTÓNOMO REAL / AUTONOMOUS
Built by Geek+

Geek+ P-Series

It doesn’t bring the person to the shelf: it brings the shelf to the person.

Price
AutonomyAutonomous navigation (laser SLAM)
CategoryGoods-to-person robot
AvailableIn production

Why this verdict · Updated July 2026

We rate it REAL. These robots navigate autonomously with laser SLAM and codes, lift shelving units weighing hundreds of kilos and bring them to a fixed station with no human intervention along the way. The proof is scale: Geek+ has more than 20,000 robots across 950 warehouses in 40 countries and listed in Hong Kong in 2025. It’s not a future promise; it’s working infrastructure.

What it does well

  • The worker never walks: productivity rises up to 300%
  • Very high payload (up to 1,200 kg) and 99.99% picking accuracy
  • Massive, proven scale across 40 countries
  • Modular system that grows with the warehouse

What it doesn’t

  • Requires redesigning the picking area around fixed stations
  • Best for very high volume; overkill for small warehouses
  • Higher upfront infrastructure investment than a collaborative AMR

Specifications

TypeGoods-to-person
Payload (P-Series)Up to 1,200 kg
SpeedUp to 4.5 m/s
NavigationLaser SLAM + QR codes
Picking accuracyUp to 99.99%
Proven scale20,000+ robots · 950 warehouses

How 'goods-to-person' works

In a classic warehouse, the worker walks the aisles hunting for products. The Geek+ model flips it: the P-Series robots slide under movable shelving units, lift them and carry them to a station where the person waits, still. The software decides which shelf to bring and in what order, so the worker gets a continuous stream of items.

The result, documented in cases like CEVA’s, is a jump from around 120 picks per hour manually to over 400 with the Geek+ system. By fully removing the walking and searching time, productivity multiplies and accuracy rises to 99.99%.

When to choose Geek+ over a collaborative AMR

The rule of thumb: if your volume is very high and stable and you can dedicate floor space to fixed stations, Geek+’s goods-to-person squeezes out maximum productivity. If your volume is more variable or your space irregular, a collaborative AMR like the Locus Origin adapts better and starts faster.

They don’t compete for the same picture: one reorganizes the warehouse around the robot; the other slips into the warehouse you already have. Our warehouse-AMR comparison puts them side by side with Amazon Proteus, the third approach: full autonomy for transport.

The IPO that validated the model

In July 2025, Geek+ became the first major AMR company to list on the Hong Kong stock exchange, and the market answered with an oversubscription of more than 130 times on the retail tranche. Beyond the financial anecdote, for a buyer that datum answers the question no brochure addresses: will this maker be alive in ten years to service my robots? A listed company with public accounts and 950 warehouses in its portfolio is a very different vendor risk from a startup with two pilots.

Scale also has a direct technical effect: every new warehouse trains the orchestration software with more order patterns, more peaks and more incidents. In goods-to-person, where the system decides which shelf to move and when, that accumulated experience is the product as much as the robot is.

Industries

Frequently asked

What is a goods-to-person robot?

It’s a robot that brings the shelf to a fixed picking station, instead of the worker walking to the shelf. This removes travel time and productivity soars.

How much can the Geek+ P-Series move?

The P-Series range reaches up to 1,200 kg of payload, with speeds up to 4.5 m/s and laser-SLAM navigation.

Is Geek+ a reliable company?

It’s one of the world’s sector leaders: more than 20,000 robots across 950 warehouses in 40 countries and a Hong Kong stock listing since 2025.

Does Geek+ only make shelf robots?

No. The P family (up to 1,200 kg) is its flagship goods-to-person product, but the catalog includes sortation robots, autonomous forklifts and the F series for heavy loads up to 2,000 kg.

Sources

  1. Geek+ P Series, goods-to-person robots Geek+ · 2025
  2. China’s Geek+ unveils warehouse robots and lists in Hong Kong Interesting Engineering · 2025