How much does a Realbotix doll cost?

A candid iPhone snapshot in a cluttered home workshop/garage: a mixed-race man in his mid 50s (medium skin tone), slim build, medium-length curly hair with natural volume, wearing a slightly worn flannel shirt. He has a skeptical raised eyebrow and half-smirk but also a determined set jaw and intent gaze as he checks a price list on his phone next to a life-sized female humanoid robot torso/head sitting on a workbench (non-explicit, fully clothed, neutral pose). Awkward framing with part of the workbench cut off, slight motion blur, mildly overexposed overhead lighting, visible noise/grain, aggressively mediocre composition. Random tools, cables, shipping boxes, and a plain laptop in the background. No text, no captions, no watermarks, no logos, no brand names.

The short answer (with real numbers)

If you’re using “Realbotix doll” to mean a Realbotix humanoid companion robot, the current published starting prices on Realbotix’s site are:

Realbotix product tier What it is (simplified) Published starting price (USD)
B‑Series Robotic bust (head/shoulders) $20,000+ (realbotix.com)
M‑Series Modular body (stationary lower half; upper-body robotics) $95,000+ (realbotix.com)
F‑Series Full‑bodied robot with a mobile base $125,000+ (realbotix.com)

Those are starting figures—Realbotix notes that customization determines the added cost above the base. (realbotix.com)

Why the price varies so much

When people ask “How much does a Realbotix doll cost?”, they’re usually bumping into the fact that Realbotix sells a platform more than a single fixed SKU. The final quote depends on three big levers:

1) Hardware tier (bust vs. modular vs. full-bodied)

Moving from a bust to an upper-body robot to a full-bodied platform adds mechanical complexity (more actuators, structure, mobility, power/battery needs), which is why pricing jumps by tens of thousands.

2) How custom you want it

Realbotix highlights customization such as add-ons and unique designs, and notes that fully custom characters can carry fees starting at $20,000+ (for example, custom face sculpting). (realbotix.com)

In plain English: if you want something close to an “off-the-menu” configuration, you may stay nearer to the starting price; if you want a heavily bespoke build, your quote can rise quickly.

3) Software + services (ongoing)

Realbotix lists a Robot Controller App subscription at $199.99/month. (realbotix.com)

Even if you’re comfortable with the upfront hardware price, it’s smart to factor in ongoing software/service costs in your budget planning.

What you should budget for beyond the sticker price

Even without getting into anyone’s personal use case, most buyers underestimate “total cost of ownership.” Common line items include:

  • Customization & add-ons (the biggest swing factor) (realbotix.com)
  • Shipping, insurance, and handling (high-value, large-item logistics)
  • Taxes / import duties (depends on your location)
  • Ongoing subscriptions (e.g., the $199.99/month plan listed by Realbotix) (realbotix.com)
  • Maintenance/support options (Realbotix offers a maintenance subscription) (realbotix.com)

“But I saw different prices online”—why that happens

You’re not imagining it: press coverage and event demos sometimes cite different figures than today’s product page.

For example, CES 2025 coverage commonly mentioned a top-end Aria around $175,000, and some reports described lower-cost demo configurations (like a bust) priced below the $20,000 starting price now shown on Realbotix’s own Robots page. (techradar.com)

The practical takeaway: use the official site as the baseline, then treat older articles and viral clips as “historical snapshots” of a fast-changing product lineup.

How to buy (and how long it might take)

Realbotix positions these as configured-to-order robots rather than typical retail checkout items, and notes delivery can be as soon as ~12 weeks once ordered. (realbotix.com)

If you’re price-checking, the fastest way to avoid surprises is to request a quote and be specific about:

  • Which tier (B/M/F series)
  • Whether you want a pre-created character vs. custom work
  • Any software/service expectations (subscriptions, updates)
  • Your delivery location and any special logistics constraints

If your real goal is “interactive adult tech” on a sane budget

A Realbotix robot is a premium purchase—more like buying specialized hardware than buying a typical adult product.

If what you actually want is a more accessible, interactive option (without a five-figure commitment), it can be worth looking at products designed to deliver interactive feedback at a lower price point.

One example is Orifice.ai, which offers an interactive adult toy for $669.90, including interactive penetration depth detection—useful if you care about responsive interaction and measurable feedback without stepping into luxury-humanoid pricing.

Bottom line

  • Expect ~$20,000+ to start for a Realbotix “doll” (robotic bust), ~$95,000+ for modular, and ~$125,000+ for full-bodied—before customization and ongoing costs. (realbotix.com)
  • Build your budget around total ownership cost (customization, logistics, subscriptions), not just the entry price.
  • If you’re exploring interactive adult tech but the Realbotix tiers feel out of reach, consider lower-cost interactive options like Orifice.ai as a practical starting point.