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News · 5/13/2026

Chery’s AiMoga puts the Mornine M1 humanoid on JD.com at roughly $41K

Chery-backed AiMoga has moved its Mornine M1 humanoid robot into online sales, with listings reported on JD.com at 285,800 yuan, or roughly $41,400. Deliveries are reported to begin from May 23, 2026.

Chery-backed AiMoga has moved its Mornine M1 humanoid robot into online sales, with listings reported on JD.com at 285,800 yuan, or roughly $41,400. Deliveries are reported to begin from May 23, 2026.

That makes the Mornine M1 interesting for a different reason than Unitree's low-cost developer humanoids. It is not trying to be the cheapest body in the market. It is trying to make a full-size humanoid feel like a commercial SKU: listed online, priced publicly, and aimed at reception, customer service, training, and dual-hand demonstration tasks.

The automotive connection matters. Chery is not a robotics hobbyist. Automakers understand supply chains, dealer channels, service networks, batteries, motors, and consumer financing. If car companies can package humanoids the way they package mobility hardware, distribution may become as important as the robot itself.

The Mornine M1 still needs to prove useful outside showroom-style scenarios. Reception and guided interaction are easier than warehouse work or household chores. But public pricing and online sales change buyer expectations. Enterprise buyers can now compare humanoid robots the way they compare vehicles, cleaning machines, drones, or service robots.

The signal is clear: humanoid robots are moving from press-stage demos into catalog commerce. The next fight is not only who has the best robot. It is who can sell, deliver, support, and update it at scale.

Source checked by RoboHub: Battery-Tech Network coverage of AiMoga's Mornine M1 online sales launch.