LG is preparing a high-profile premiere at CES 2026: in Las Vegas, the company will showcase the first humanoid home robot CLOiD, which can perform daily household tasks.
The CLOiD robot is equipped with two multi-stage manipulators with five independently controlled fingers each, while its computing and hardware platform is integrated into the main module, which also houses a visual display, an acoustic system, a camera, and a set of sensors designed to provide human-machine interaction. The device is based on LG’s proprietary Affectionate Intelligence technology, which provides for adaptive improvement of the robot’s reactions in the course of repeated interactions with the user; however, the company has not yet provided detailed information on the list of specific household or service tasks that CLOiD can perform.
LG sees the CLOiD humanoid robot as an element of its Zero Worries at Home, Quality Time concept, which declares a reduction in user workload by automating routine household processes. At the current stage, the manufacturer refrains from disclosing the full industrial and constructive implementation of the device before the official presentation, limiting itself to publishing some visual materials showing only the manipulator modules. At the same time, LG’s exposition at the Las Vegas exhibition will include a demonstration of CLOiD in a number of applied use cases, but the question of whether the presented prototype will be further transformed into a mass-produced commercial product or remain in the status of a conceptual demonstration remains open.
In this way, CLOiD serves as a demonstration of LG’s strategic direction in the field of consumer robotics and intelligent home systems, reflecting the potential for integrating humanoid robots into everyday environments, but the actual scale of its practical application and commercialization remains subject to further evaluation.

