NEURA Robotics raises $1.4 billion to build the world's leading Physical AI platform, backed by Amazon, NVIDIA, Qualcomm, and others. The German startup aims to transform industries with cognitive robots that learn and collaborate.
NEURA Robotics, a cognitive robotics startup from Metzingen, Germany, just announced a massive Series C funding round of up to $1.4 billion (โฌ1.2 billion). The company, which created the Neuraverse, plans to use this cash to build the world's leading Physical AI platform.
Think about it: robots that can actually see, hear, feel, and learn alongside us. That's the vision here. And some of the biggest names in tech are betting on it.
### Who's Backing This?
The financing comes from a heavy-hitting group of investors:
- Tether
- Qualcomm Technologies
- Amazon
- NVIDIA
- imec.xpand
- Bosch
- Schaeffler
- European Investment Bank
- Lingotto Horizon
- InterAlpen Partners
And that's not all. Just last January, the company closed a $130 million (โฌ120 million) Series B round, led by Lingotto Investment Management. So they've been building momentum for a while.
### What's Physical AI Anyway?
David Reger, founder and CEO of NEURA Robotics, puts it this way: "The future of AI will not only live on screens. It will move, interact, learn and work beside us in the real world." He believes Physical AI and cognitive robotics will be one of the biggest tech shifts in decades, transforming everything from manufacturing and logistics to healthcare and household robotics.
Founded in 2019, NEURA builds robots that aren't just programmed for one task. These machines can adapt, learn, and collaborate. They combine robotics, AI, sensors, edge computing, and large-scale learning into a single platform designed for global deployment.
### The Neuraverse: A Shared Brain for Robots
Here's where it gets interesting. NEURA is building an open ecosystem called the Neuraverse. It's basically a shared intelligence network where robots constantly share skills, capabilities, and real-world learning. So a robot in a factory in Germany can learn from a robot in a hospital in Japan.
To make this work, the company is expanding its network of NEURA Gyms. These are specialized training environments that combine real-world sensor interaction, simulation, and multimodal learning pipelines. The goal is to create one of the largest real-world robotics data infrastructures on the planet.
### Why This Matters for the US Market
Reger makes a bold point: "Many believed globally relevant AI infrastructure companies could only emerge from Silicon Valley. We believe the next generation of AI leaders can emerge anywhere." With this funding, NEURA positions itself alongside the best robotics companies in the US and China.
For US professionals, this signals that the Physical AI race is truly global. As AI moves from digital systems into physical environments, the next competitive advantage will come from combining intelligence with real-world interaction. As Reger says, "In the future, people will not only ask what AI can say. They will ask what AI can physically do."
### The Bigger Picture
NEURA is also shaping decentralized AI architectures and machine-native economic systems. The company believes that trusted, open, and interoperable robotics ecosystems will become essential as AI moves into factories, logistics centers, healthcare environments, and homes.
Nicola Beer, Vice President of the European Investment Bank, sums it up: "By backing NEURA Robotics, the European Investment Bank is putting serious European firepower behind the next wave of physical AI and cognitive robotics."
This isn't just about robots. It's about building infrastructure that the world will depend on. And with $1.4 billion in the bank, NEURA is ready to lead the charge.