Delivery Robots
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Delivery Robots Buying Guide
Autonomous delivery robots carry food, supplies and goods across restaurants, hotels, hospitals and warehouses without human couriers. This guide helps Middle East and global buyers compare specs and source from China via Robosino.
Autonomous delivery robots carry food, supplies and goods across restaurants, hotels, hospitals and warehouses without human couriers. This guide helps Middle East and global buyers compare specs and source from China via Robosino.
Overview
Delivery robots are autonomous mobile machines that transport trays, dishes, parcels and supplies from point to point indoors. Using laser and visual SLAM navigation, they build a map of a venue, plan routes, avoid people and obstacles, ride elevators where integrated, and return to dock and recharge. The category ranges from slim multi-tray service robots for restaurants and hotels to compound units with robotic arms for advanced handling. Robosino lists field-proven platforms including the OrionStar LuckiBot and LuckiBot Pro, PUDU's BellaBot, HolaBot, KettyBot and KettyBot Pro, the multi-tray PuduBot 2, and the PUDU A1 compound delivery robot with a mechanical arm. As staffing costs climb and service expectations rise, these robots have become a practical way to extend a team's reach.
Key Applications
- Restaurants, cafes and food courts: Multi-tray runners such as BellaBot (40 kg payload, 10 kg/tray) and PuduBot 2 (up to 7 trays) carry dishes from kitchen to table, freeing staff for guest service in busy GCC dining venues.
- Hotels and hospitality: The HolaBot (60 kg capacity, enclosed 120 L cabin) handles room delivery and dish return across resorts in the UAE, Saudi Arabia and Qatar.
- Reception and marketing: KettyBot and KettyBot Pro combine delivery with an 18.5-inch ad screen for greeting and guidance in malls, showrooms and smart-city venues.
- Hospitals and healthcare: Enclosed-cabin units quietly move medication, samples and supplies between wards, reducing staff foot traffic.
- Warehouses and logistics: Compound robots like the PUDU A1, with a mechanical arm and laser-plus-visual SLAM, support pick-and-place and goods movement.
- Harsh-climate considerations: For Gulf deployments, confirm runtime, charging behaviour and dust tolerance with the supplier; most service robots are designed for climate-controlled indoor use.
How to Choose
When comparing delivery robots for sale, focus on the specs that match your workflow:
- Payload and trays: Match total load and per-tray limits to your tasks — BellaBot and the LuckiBot carry 40 kg, the LuckiBot Pro and HolaBot reach 60 kg, with adjustable trays for tall items.
- Open vs. enclosed cabin: Open trays suit restaurants; enclosed cabins like the HolaBot's 120 L zone protect food, medication or valuables and aid hygiene.
- Runtime and charging: Longer operating time means fewer interruptions; PuduBot 2 cites up to 24 hours, and most units auto-dock to recharge.
- Navigation and safety: Laser SLAM plus visual SLAM with multi-sensor safety control delivers reliable, people-safe operation in crowded spaces; check stopping accuracy.
- Interaction and branding: Ad and touch displays (KettyBot's 18.5-inch screen, LuckiBot's panel) add reception, promotion and ordering value.
- Advanced handling: For pick-and-place, a compound robot with an arm such as the PUDU A1 goes beyond simple tray delivery.
Why Source from China via Robosino
China is the global hub for service and delivery robot manufacturing, and Robosino brings leading brands — PUDU, OrionStar and more — together in one B2B marketplace. Buyers get factory-direct pricing, a broad model range and verified specifications without managing multiple vendors. We support export to the Middle East, Europe and Southeast Asia with consolidated logistics, documentation and after-sales coordination, so distributors and operators secure competitive landed cost and a single contact for quotes, lead times, spare parts and multi-unit rollouts. Request a quote on any delivery robot for current price, availability and shipping to your market.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an autonomous delivery robot? It is a self-driving indoor robot that carries food, supplies or goods between locations using SLAM navigation to map a venue, avoid obstacles and recharge automatically — used in restaurants, hotels, hospitals and warehouses.
How much weight can a delivery robot carry? It varies by model. BellaBot and the OrionStar LuckiBot handle around 40 kg total, while the LuckiBot Pro and HolaBot reach about 60 kg, with per-tray limits typically 10-15 kg.
Which robot is best for restaurants versus hotels? Open multi-tray robots such as BellaBot and PuduBot 2 suit restaurant table running, while enclosed-cabin units like the HolaBot are better for hotels and hospitals where food, medication or valuables need protection.
Are delivery robots suitable for the Middle East market? Yes. They are widely deployed in GCC restaurants, hotels and malls. Most are designed for climate-controlled indoor use; confirm runtime, charging and dust tolerance with Robosino for your specific site.
Can a delivery robot also greet customers or show ads? Yes. Models like KettyBot and KettyBot Pro include an 18.5-inch display for reception, guidance and advertising alongside delivery, combining roles in one machine.
Do you ship internationally and handle bulk orders? Yes. Robosino exports to the Middle East, Europe and Southeast Asia and supports single units through full fleets. Request a quote for price, lead time and shipping to your country.