Boston Dynamics’ Atlas robot lifts and carries full fridge autonomously

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Boston Dynamics just released a video that makes every other robotics demo look like a science fair project. Its Atlas humanoid robot autonomously lifted a fully-loaded mini-fridge and carried it across the lab, no human intervention required.

The kicker: Atlas was primarily trained on objects weighing 50 to 70 pounds. The fridge exceeded 100 pounds. The robot figured it out anyway.

How Atlas learned to carry things it was never taught to carry

Boston Dynamics trained Atlas using millions of hours of parallel GPU simulations paired with reinforcement learning. The technique that made the fridge lift possible is called zero-shot transfer: the robot applied lessons from lighter objects to a heavier one it had never encountered during training.

What Boston Dynamics is demonstrating here is AI-driven whole-body control. Atlas isn’t just using its arms to lift the fridge. It’s coordinating its entire body, adjusting its center of gravity, balancing on its symmetrical feet, and routing force through its joints in real time.

The current Atlas model uses only two actuator types, built with identical subassemblies. It also features infinite joint rotation and field-replaceable modules, meaning a busted component can be swapped out on-site without shipping the whole robot back to Boston.

From CES showpiece to factory floor

This latest Atlas iteration first debuted at CES 2026 in January, where Boston Dynamics showcased its new AI behaviors for heavy-object manipulation. The fridge demo, released around May 15, 2026, is the most dramatic proof point yet that those CES promises weren’t just stage magic.

Initial Atlas shipments are planned for later in 2026, targeting industrial applications at Hyundai’s facilities and select partner sites. Hyundai, which acquired Boston Dynamics back in 2021, has been the obvious first customer from the start.

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