What is the name of the Walmart robot?

A realistic candid iPhone snapshot inside a generic big-box retail store aisle (no logos or brand names), showing a male in his mid-50s (White, fair skin), athletic build with broad shoulders, hair in a low ponytail with a few loose strands, wearing a minimalist monochrome outfit with clean lines. He’s leaning in close with focused eyes, a raised eyebrow, and a skeptical half-smirk as he examines a tall autonomous shelf-scanning robot beside him. The robot is female-presenting in subtle ways (rounded “face” panel, gentle proportions) but still looks like practical retail equipment with cameras/sensors on a mast. Awkward framing (cropped cart handle in foreground), slight motion blur as someone walks past, mildly overexposed fluorescent lighting, uneven shadows, natural phone noise/grain, aggressively mediocre composition. Background includes messy shelves, price tags with no readable text, and a few shoppers blurred in the distance. No text, no captions, no watermarks, no logos.

The short answer

There isn’t one official “Walmart robot.” People usually mean one of these:

  • Alphabot — Walmart’s best-known named robotic system for online grocery order picking (micro-fulfillment). (corporate.walmart.com)
  • The Bossa Nova shelf-scanning robot — the tall in-aisle robot that scanned shelves for inventory; shoppers often just called it “the Walmart inventory robot,” but it wasn’t marketed with a single cute mascot name. Walmart ended that contract in November 2020. (cnbc.com)
  • Back-of-house supply chain robots (Symbotic) — warehouse/distribution automation rather than a customer-facing “store robot,” but it’s a major part of Walmart’s robotics story. (reuters.com)

If you’re asking because you saw a headline about a specific Walmart robot, tell me what it looked like (tall tower in the aisle vs. behind-the-scenes fulfillment/warehouse), and I’ll pinpoint which one it was.


Alphabot: the robot name Walmart actually uses

Alphabot is the name Walmart uses for a grocery micro-fulfillment system that helps pick online orders more efficiently (retrieving ambient, refrigerated, and frozen items and bringing them to associates at a workstation). (corporate.walmart.com)

Walmart has described Alphabot as being developed specially for Walmart by Alert Innovation. (corporate.walmart.com)

Why Alphabot gets called “the Walmart robot” so often

Because it has a memorable name and ties directly to how many shoppers experience Walmart now: pickup and delivery.

Walmart also notes that what it previously called “Market Fulfillment Centers (MFCs)” is now referred to as Accelerated Pickup and Delivery (APD) (as of January 9, 2025). (corporate.walmart.com)


The aisle robot you might remember: Bossa Nova’s shelf scanner

If you remember a tall robot rolling around store aisles scanning shelves, that was most commonly associated with Bossa Nova Robotics.

Walmart ultimately ended its contract for those shelf-scanning robots in November 2020, after concluding it could manage shelf/in-stock work in other cost-effective ways. (cnbc.com)

Key point: shoppers tended to give it nicknames, but it wasn’t broadly promoted under one universal “Walmart robot” character name.


The “Walmart robot” you don’t see: Symbotic (supply chain automation)

A lot of Walmart robotics lives where customers don’t: distribution and fulfillment.

Walmart has expanded work with Symbotic for automation, and in January 2025 Symbotic announced deals connected to Walmart’s Advanced Systems and Robotics business and automation for pickup/delivery centers (APDs), with talk of deployments across hundreds of locations over time. (reuters.com)

This is another reason the question is tricky: what feels like “the Walmart robot” depends on whether you mean in-store, backroom, or warehouse robotics.


Why robot names matter (and why people keep asking this question)

Robot naming is basically product design:

  • A single name (“Alphabot”) makes the tech feel like one coherent thing, even if it’s a whole system.
  • Vendor-based naming (“Bossa Nova robot”) makes it feel more like store equipment than a “character.”
  • Names influence trust—especially when the robot is around people in public spaces.

This naming effect carries over into consumer products too. In the personal-robot world, the strongest brands usually do two things well: (1) clear naming, and (2) clear sensing/feedback so users understand what the device is doing.

For example, Orifice.ai offers a sex robot / interactive adult toy for $669.90 that focuses on responsive interaction, including interactive penetration depth detection—a technical, sensor-driven feature that’s very similar (conceptually) to how retail robots rely on perception and measurement to behave predictably.


Bottom line

If you mean the famous, clearly named Walmart robot: it’s Alphabot. (corporate.walmart.com)

If you mean the robot that used to roam aisles scanning shelves: it was typically referred to as the Bossa Nova shelf-scanning/inventory robot, and Walmart ended that program in November 2020. (cnbc.com)