Robotics Hiring Report: January 2026

Executive Summary

Market Snapshot: January 2026 | 2,724 active positions analyzed

Key Findings:

Report Scope: This analysis examines 2,724 active job postings as of January 2026 to establish a baseline understanding of robotics hiring patterns. Unlike our Robotics Salary Guide, which focuses on compensation, this report answers: Where are the jobs? Who’s hiring? What skills do they need?


Table of Contents


1. Hiring Volume Overview

The robotics job market shows robust activity with 2,724 active positions spanning 30+ countries. This represents current opportunities candidates can pursue today, establishing the first comprehensive baseline for tracking industry hiring trends.

Market Distribution:

RegionActive Jobs% of Total
United States1,64060.2%
Canada1355.0%
India1324.8%
United Kingdom1314.8%
Germany903.3%
Other International63623.3%

The US accounts for 60% of identified positions, but international markets contribute substantial volume. Major hubs include Canada (135 jobs), India (132), and the UK (131), reflecting the global nature of robotics development from autonomous vehicle testing in Singapore to industrial automation across Germany to research positions throughout Asia.

US Geographic Concentration:

Within the American market, California’s dominance is absolute. The state accounts for 544 jobs—33% of all US robotics positions and 20% of the global total we tracked. Texas ranks second with 153 jobs (9% of US market), followed by Massachusetts at 137 (8%). This concentration reflects California’s dual advantages: Silicon Valley’s autonomous vehicle ecosystem and the broader tech industry’s robotics investments.

StateJobs% of US Market
California54433.2%
Texas1539.3%
Massachusetts1378.4%
Michigan986.0%
Washington684.1%
Ohio493.0%
Pennsylvania493.0%
Illinois412.5%

Work Arrangement Reality:

View Detailed Data
Category Value Percentage
Remote 85 3.1%
Hybrid 311 11.4%
Onsite 2,328 85.5%

Robotics remains an overwhelmingly onsite discipline with 85.5% of positions requiring physical presence at facilities. Only 11.4% offer hybrid arrangements, and just 3.1% (85 jobs) are remote. This reflects the hardware-centric nature of the field—debugging robot arms, tuning perception systems, and commissioning industrial equipment require physical access to hardware. Even hybrid and remote positions often involve significant travel to customer sites, manufacturing facilities, or testing grounds rather than pure work-from-home arrangements.

Employment Types:

Permanent positions dominate at 86.4% of the market (2,354 jobs). Internships account for 9.4% (256 positions), indicating healthy investment in early-career talent development. Contract, temporary, and other flexible arrangements comprise under 4% combined—companies are building long-term teams rather than engaging temporary expertise.


2. Who’s Hiring: Top Companies

NVIDIA and Amazon lead with 81 and 79 positions respectively, but their hiring strategies reveal dramatically different priorities. Company hiring patterns show clear specialization: some target AI researchers, others scale operations teams, and traditional manufacturers focus on field service and support.

Top 15 Companies by Volume:

CompanyActive Jobs% of MarketHiring Focus
NVIDIA813.0%AI & Software Engineering
Amazon792.9%Research & Operations Mix
ABB552.0%Field Service & Integration
Anduril Industries491.8%Product & Defense Systems
General Motors250.9%Autonomous Vehicle Software
Rivian230.8%EV Robotics & Automation
GE Vernova220.8%Energy Systems & Controls
Applied Intuition210.8%Simulation & Testing Tools
Toyota Research Institute200.7%Autonomous Mobility Research
Qualcomm190.7%Hardware & Embedded Systems
Analog Devices190.7%Sensor & Component Design
KION Group190.7%Warehouse Automation
Waymo190.7%Self-Driving Technology
Shield AI180.7%Defense AI & Autonomy
Hitachi180.7%Industrial Automation

Company Strategy Patterns:

NVIDIA (81 positions) targets AI infrastructure—nearly 70% of openings focus on ML Engineers (22%), Robotics Software Engineers (26%), and Research Scientists (21%). Their platform strategy means algorithmic improvements compound across all customers.

Amazon (79 positions) takes a full-stack approach: 20% Research Scientists, 17% Mechanical Engineers, and 17% Automation Technicians. This balances advancing warehouse robotics research with deploying systems across hundreds of fulfillment centers.

ABB (55 positions) reflects industrial maturity—31% Field Service Engineers and 20% Product Management. They’re maintaining and expanding an installed robot base worldwide rather than pursuing breakthrough research.

Anduril Industries (49 jobs) prioritizes product delivery: 35% Product & Project Management, followed by Robotics Engineers (25%) and ML Engineers (20%). Defense customers need complete autonomous systems, not just algorithms.

The top 15 companies account for only 18% of total market volume. This indicates a healthy, competitive landscape—hundreds of employers hire 1-10 positions each. Opportunities span traditional manufacturers, defense contractors, startups, and established technology companies.


3. What They’re Hiring For: Role Demand

The relationship between hiring volume and compensation reveals a critical market dynamic: high-volume roles don’t necessarily pay well. Automation Technicians represent 16.5% of all openings but earn $70K median salary. Meanwhile, Motion Planning Engineers account for only 3.4% of positions yet command $209K — 3x the compensation despite being 4.8x less common.

Role Distribution with Compensation Context:

RoleJobs% of MarketMedian SalarySalary Coverage
Automation & Robotics Technician44916.5%$69,92333.4%
Robotics Engineer31711.6%$170,05043.5%
Controls Engineer30011.0%$113,23124.0%
Machine Learning Engineer28110.3%$197,50043.4%
Robotics Product & Project Management27310.0%$182,25039.2%
Field Service Engineer2689.8%$86,09030.6%
Research Scientist2308.4%$171,50045.2%
Systems & Integration Engineer2288.4%$150,00038.6%
Robotics Leadership & Management2137.8%$205,00042.7%
Robotics Software Engineer2117.7%$189,50049.3%
Embedded Systems Engineer1766.5%$171,10032.4%
Electrical Engineer1355.0%$167,13225.2%
Motion Planning Engineer933.4%$208,75043.0%
Other Robotics Roles29010.6%Varies

Salary coverage indicates percentage of jobs in each role that disclosed compensation data

The Volume-Value Mismatch:

Three distinct hiring patterns emerge:

High-volume, operations-focused roles (Technicians, Field Service, Controls Engineers) account for 37.3% of all openings but pay $70K-$113K. These positions scale linearly with physical deployments—each warehouse, factory, or service territory requires dedicated staff. Companies like ABB (31% Field Service) and Amazon (17% Technicians) drive volume in these categories.

Moderate-volume, specialist roles (ML Engineers, Software Engineers,Research Scientists) represent 26.4% of openings and pay $171K-$197K. These positions scale digitally—one ML engineer’s perception model can serve thousands of robots. Companies like NVIDIA (69% in these roles) and GM (60% software-focused) concentrate hiring here.

Low-volume, premium roles (Motion Planning Engineers, Leadership) make up 11.2% of openings but command $205K-$209K. These represent either cutting-edge specializations (motion planning) or career apex positions (leadership) where supply constraints drive premiums.

The pattern reveals career track implications: entering through high-volume roles is easier (449 technician openings vs 93 motion planning openings), but the 3x compensation differential compounds significantly over a 30-year career. For detailed salary analysis by role, see our Robotics Salary Guide.


4. Industry Hiring Patterns

Industrial Manufacturing and Robotics Software & AI each account for 18% of hiring volume, yet pay dramatically differently—a 2.3x gap between their median salaries. Industry choice determines not just the type of work but the compensation floor—a pattern that holds even within identical job titles.

Industry Volume and Compensation:

IndustryJobs% of MarketMedian SalarySalary Coverage
Robotics Software & AI49218.1%$195,00042.9%
Industrial Manufacturing49218.1%$83,73729.5%
Transportation & Autonomous Vehicles39014.3%$199,30049.5%
Aerospace & Defense34112.5%$167,72548.7%
System Integration2569.4%$107,50024.6%
Logistics & Warehousing2398.8%$131,00043.1%
Energy & Mining2208.1%$112,80026.8%
Research & Academia1766.5%$103,08542.0%
Automotive Manufacturing1445.3%$127,75015.3%
Healthcare & Life Sciences1385.1%$111,68539.1%
Other Industries2368.7%Varies

Other Industries includes Robotics Hardware, Food & Beverage, Construction & Agriculture, Consumer Robotics, and sectors with <100 jobs

Industry Strategic Profiles:

Premium-tier industries (Transportation/AV, Robotics Software/AI, Aerospace) account for 44.9% of jobs and pay $167K-$199K median. These sectors pursue innovation and technological advancement, competing for talent through aggressive compensation. Industrial-tier industries (Manufacturing, System Integration, Energy) represent 35.6% of jobs and pay $84K-$113K, focusing on proven technology deployment at scale. Specialized-tier industries (Healthcare, Academia, Logistics) comprise 19.5% of jobs with $103K-$131K compensation.

The 2.3x pay differential between Industrial Manufacturing ($84K) and Robotics Software/AI ($195K) persists even for identical job titles. Our Salary Guide analysis showed “Robotics Engineer” pays $185K in Software/AI versus $113K in Manufacturing—same title, 64% pay difference based solely on industry context.

Get hiring alerts for high-demand roles

We track 2,700+ active robotics positions and notify you when companies hire for your target role and skills. Be first to know about opportunities in Transportation/AV, Robotics Software & AI, and other high-volume industries.

Please enter a valid email address

Unsubscribe anytime. We respect your privacy.


5. Skills in Demand

Python appears in 33% of job postings, making it the most frequently mentioned skill. However, skills rarely appear in isolation—Python and C++ co-occur in 68% of jobs requiring either language. The market isn’t hiring individual skills; it’s hiring complete skill clusters that define career specializations.

Top Skills by Frequency:

SkillMentions% of JobsPrimary Career Track
Python90733.3%Software/AI
C++75627.8%Software/AI
PLC Programming66324.3%Controls/Industrial
Sensors & Instrumentation55320.3%Hardware/Embedded
Electrical Design54620.0%Controls/Industrial
Machine Learning54119.9%Software/AI
Software Engineering53219.5%Software/AI
HMI / SCADA51218.8%Controls/Industrial
Mentorship50518.5%Leadership
Simulation & Digital Twins49018.0%Software/Systems
Maintenance & Reliability47117.3%Operations
Commissioning46717.1%Integration
Technical Leadership46317.0%Leadership/Senior
Project Management45716.8%Management
Computer Vision43015.8%Software/AI
Embedded Systems42015.4%Hardware/Embedded
Industrial Robotics41215.1%Manufacturing
Autonomous Systems35913.2%Software/AV
Field Service33912.4%Operations
Regulatory Compliance31411.5%Systems/Safety

Note: Skills represent mentions in job postings. Jobs often list multiple acceptable skill paths (e.g., “Python OR C++” or “Allen-Bradley OR Siemens”), so co-occurrence doesn’t always mean simultaneous requirement.

Skill Clustering Patterns:

Two dominant career tracks emerge from skill co-occurrence analysis:

Software/AI Track: Jobs mentioning Python also frequently mention C++ (68%), Machine Learning (42%), and Computer Vision (29%). This cluster defines the software-heavy robotics career path—perception, planning, learning systems—that pays $189K-$210K median salaries. The tight clustering (68% Python-C++ co-occurrence) indicates employers expect the full stack, not individual skills.

Controls/Industrial Track: Jobs mentioning PLC Programming also frequently mention HMI/SCADA (58%), Electrical Design (48%), and Commissioning (38%). This cluster defines the industrial automation and controls career path that pays $109K-$113K median salaries.

The market isn’t hiring Python developers or PLC programmers—it’s hiring robotics software engineers (who need Python + C++ + ML + domain expertise) or controls engineers (who need PLC + HMI + Electrical + commissioning experience). Individual skill development without track context rarely opens career doors.


6. Experience Requirements

The robotics job market heavily targets mid-career and senior professionals. Among jobs with clear experience indicators, senior-level positions (30%) outnumber entry-level roles (11%) by nearly 3:1, while nearly two-thirds of positions (63%) require 3+ years of experience. This distribution reflects industry maturation—companies need experienced engineers to deliver production systems, not just researchers to explore possibilities.

Experience Level Distribution:

Seniority LevelJobs% of Jobs with Seniority Data% of Total JobsTypical Experience Range
Entry21510.7%7.9%0-1 years
Junior52025.9%19.1%1-3 years
Mid39919.9%14.6%3-5 years
Senior59729.7%21.9%5-8 years
Lead+27913.9%10.2%8-12+ years

Analysis based on 2,010 jobs with clear seniority indicators (73.8% of total). Seniority determined from combination of explicit job level, years of experience requirements, and role complexity.

Entry-Level Reality:

Among jobs with clear seniority data, entry-level positions (0-1 years) represent 10.7%, while junior roles (1-3 years) account for 25.9%. Combined, positions accessible to early-career engineers represent 36.6% of classified jobs. This creates a challenging environment for entry-level candidates, who compete for fewer openings relative to experienced engineers.

Entry-level roles (215 total) concentrate in Automation & Robotics Technicians (68 jobs, 31.6%), Robotics Engineers (31 jobs, 14.4%), and Machine Learning Engineers (21 jobs, 9.8%). Entry-level salaries range from $65,842 (Technician) to $138,000 (ML Engineer), reflecting the software-hardware compensation divide even at career entry.

Mid-Career Sweet Spot:

Among jobs with seniority data, the combined mid-level and senior bands (3-8 years experience) account for 49.6% of classified positions. This represents the market sweet spot where engineers have sufficient expertise to contribute independently but haven’t yet priced themselves into lead/principal compensation brackets. Companies hiring at this level seek proven execution ability without requiring the deep specialization or leadership responsibilities of senior roles.

Senior Engineer Leverage:

Senior positions requiring 5-8 years account for 29.7% of classified jobs—the single largest seniority category. This strong demand for experienced engineers creates negotiating leverage for candidates with the right expertise. Combined with lead+ positions (13.9%), nearly 44% of jobs with seniority data target engineers with 5+ years of experience. Our Salary Guide showed senior roles command $193K median, with lead+ positions reaching $213K—premiums that reflect this tight supply-demand dynamic.


7. Market Outlook: 2026 Predictions

Based on current hiring patterns, several trends will likely shape the robotics job market through 2026:

Software specialization competition intensifies. ML Engineers and Motion Planning Engineers already represent only 10-13% of market volume while commanding $197K-$209K salaries. As more engineers recognize this premium, competition for these positions will increase, though the specialized nature of robotics applications maintains barriers to entry.

Geographic concentration persists. California’s 33% share of US positions reflects fundamental advantages: autonomous vehicle testing infrastructure, venture capital concentration, and established robotics talent networks. The 3.5x job density advantage over the next-largest state isn’t easily replicated.

Hardware skill gaps widen. Controls Engineers, Electrical Engineers, and Field Service Engineers face less competition (represent 25-30% of market) while universities produce fewer graduates in these specialties. Manufacturing expansion creates persistent demand, yet fewer students pursue these career tracks compared to software-focused programs.

Defense and industrial sectors diverge. Defense robotics (Anduril, Shield AI, Aerospace companies) increasingly competitive for talent due to higher compensation and cutting-edge technology focus. Traditional industrial manufacturing faces talent acquisition challenges—competing against higher-paying sectors while offering work some perceive as less exciting than autonomous vehicles or humanoid robots.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is the job outlook for robotics engineers?
Strong. We tracked 2,724 active positions globally as of January 2026, with 1,640 in the United States alone. Senior roles outnumber entry-level positions 3:1, indicating sustained demand for experienced talent. California accounts for 33% of US opportunities, with Texas and Massachusetts as secondary hubs.
Are there remote robotics jobs?
Very few. Only 3.1% of robotics positions (85 jobs) offer fully remote work. Another 11.4% are hybrid, though many involve travel to customer sites or testing facilities. The field's hardware focus—physical robots, sensors, manufacturing equipment—fundamentally limits remote options compared to pure software roles.
What companies hire the most robotics engineers?
NVIDIA leads with 81 active positions, followed by Amazon (79), ABB (55), and Anduril Industries (49). But the top 15 companies account for only 18% of total jobs—hundreds of smaller employers each hire 1-10 positions, so opportunities exist well beyond the big names.
How hard is it to get an entry-level robotics job?
Competitive. Entry-level roles represent only 11% of positions with clear seniority data, while senior roles account for 30%. Your best entry points are Automation Technician (449 openings, 16.5% of market) and Field Service Engineer (268 openings)—roles where companies like Amazon and ABB hire at volume. Software-focused entry positions are scarcer.
Where are the most robotics jobs?
California dominates with 544 US positions (33% of the American market, 20% of global). Texas ranks second at 153 jobs, followed by Massachusetts (137) and Michigan (98). Internationally, Canada, India, and the UK each have 130+ positions. The concentration reflects autonomous vehicle infrastructure and tech industry presence.

Methodology

Click to expand methodology

Data Source:

This report analyzes 2,724 active robotics job postings as of January 2026, sourced from company career pages and applicant tracking systems. We track positions directly from employer websites rather than aggregating from third-party job boards, ensuring accuracy and eliminating duplicate listings.

Geographic Coverage:

Global analysis with detailed breakdowns for United States (1,640 jobs) and state-level data for locations with 20+ positions. International markets include Canada, India, United Kingdom, Germany, Singapore, and 25+ additional countries.

Data Collection Period:

Positions analyzed represent active job openings as of January 5-8, 2026. “Active” status indicates positions currently accepting applications, excluding filled roles, expired postings, or listings marked as “on hold” by employers.

Role and Industry Classification:

Jobs classified across 18 role categories (Robotics Engineer, ML Engineer, Controls Engineer, etc.) and 14 industry sectors (Transportation/AV, Industrial Manufacturing, Aerospace, etc.) based on job descriptions, required skills, and employer business focus. Some positions appear in multiple categories when roles span specializations.

Skill Extraction:

Skills identified through natural language processing of job descriptions, requirements sections, and technical specifications. Skills mentioned in “required” and “preferred” sections both counted, as job postings often list alternative acceptable skill paths (e.g., “Python OR C++” or “Allen-Bradley OR Siemens”). Co-occurrence percentages indicate how frequently two skills appear in the same job posting, not whether both are simultaneously required.

Experience Level Determination:

Seniority levels (Entry, Junior, Mid, Senior, Lead+) determined from combination of: (1) explicit job level in title, (2) years of experience requirements, (3) role complexity and scope. Where experience ranges span multiple levels, positions classified by minimum requirement. Analysis covers 2,010 jobs (73.8% of total) with sufficient data for confident classification.

Salary Data:

Salary information included where available from job postings. Of 2,724 total positions, 1,008 (37.0%) disclosed compensation ranges. Median salaries calculated for roles and industries with minimum 20 jobs containing salary data. For comprehensive salary analysis, see our Robotics Salary Guide which examines compensation patterns in detail.

Sample Size Thresholds:

To ensure statistical reliability, we applied minimum sample requirements:

  • Companies: Minimum 15 jobs for inclusion in detailed analysis
  • Roles: Minimum 30 jobs for standalone reporting
  • Industries: Minimum 100 jobs for detailed breakdown
  • Skills: Minimum 200 mentions (7%+ of jobs) for primary analysis
  • Geographic regions: Minimum 20 jobs per location

Categories below these thresholds grouped into “Other” categories or excluded from specific analyses while still counted in overall totals.

Important Limitations:

This analysis represents a point-in-time snapshot of advertised positions, not filled roles or actual workforce composition. Job posting volume doesn’t necessarily correlate with hiring success—some positions remain open longer due to specialty requirements or location constraints. Salary data covers only 37% of positions; companies in certain industries or regions less likely to disclose compensation publicly.

International coverage skews toward English-language job postings and companies with accessible career pages. Some regions, particularly in Asia and Eastern Europe, may have lower representation than actual market activity.

Remote work classifications based on stated policy in job postings. Some “hybrid” positions involve substantial travel requirements to customer sites or field locations rather than pure office/home splits.

Data Freshness:

Position listings verified as active during January 1-6, 2026 data collection window. Job markets change rapidly—some positions may fill or expire shortly after analysis. We provide regular updates to track hiring trends over time.


Compare with compensation data: See our Robotics Salary Guide for detailed analysis of pay by role, industry, location, and skill set. While this Hiring Report shows where the jobs are, the Salary Guide reveals what they pay.

Explore current opportunities: Browse 2,700+ active robotics positions across all roles, industries, and locations. Filter by your target role, required skills, and location preferences.


Report compiled by James Dam, Founder of CareersInRobotics.com

Last updated: January 2026

Hiring robotics & automation talent?

Post your job to reach qualified professionals in the robotics and automation industry.
Featured jobs get promoted on LinkedIn and shared with our growing talent network.

Post a Job - Free

First 3 jobs free per company • Then $49/post • 60-day listings

Get the week's best robotics jobs

We review hundreds of postings weekly and hand-pick the top roles for you. High-salary positions, top companies, remote opportunities.

Please enter a valid email address

Unsubscribe anytime. We respect your privacy.