Industrial Robot Count for 2024: IFR and Interact Analysis Split by 7% on the Global Total
The IFR's World Robotics 2025 census counts 542,000 industrial robots installed worldwide in 2024 -- the second-highest total on record -- and forecasts 6% growth to 575,000 units in 2025. Interact Analysis, an independent market-research firm, counts 2024 global shipments at just over 505,000 units, down 2.4% year-over-year, and forecasts 5% growth for 2025. The roughly 7% gap in the base year both trackers use for their 2025 forecasts stems from differing methodologies, but it means anyone sizing the robotics market gets a meaningfully different answer depending which count they cite.
claim: Global industrial robot installations for full-year 2024 are reported at roughly 542,000 units by the IFR versus just over 505,000 units by Interact Analysis -- independent trackers landing about 7% apart on the base year both use to forecast 2025 growth.
Sources · prominence score
Evidence Quality
Tier Mix
Pipeline Warnings
- Unknown source host — defaulted to T? (lowest credibility)CredibilityScorer · ifr.org
- Unknown source host — defaulted to T? (lowest credibility)CredibilityScorer · therobotreport.com
- Unknown source host — defaulted to T? (lowest credibility)CredibilityScorer · automation.com
- Unknown source host — defaulted to T? (lowest credibility)CredibilityScorer · robotnik.eu
- insufficient_candidatesAlgox:topK · 4/6
Findings
- IFR's World Robotics 2025 report counts 542,000 industrial robots installed globally in 2024 -- the second-highest annual total on record, only 2% below the 2022 all-time high -- and projects 6% growth to 575,000 units in 2025.
- Interact Analysis's independent market-research count puts 2024 global industrial robot shipments at just over 505,000 units, a 2.4% year-over-year decline, with revenue down 5.8% amid falling average robot prices; it forecasts roughly 5% unit growth for 2025.
- The two trackers disagree by about 37,000 units (roughly 7%) on the same 2024 base year -- not because either is wrong, but because IFR aggregates installations reported through national robotics associations and OEMs while Interact Analysis builds an independent bottom-up shipment estimate with different scope.
- Both trackers agree directionally -- 2024 was a down or flat year following 2023's slump, and both project single-digit percentage growth resuming in 2025 -- so the disagreement sits in the absolute count, not the trend.
A robotics OEM, automation integrator, or investor sizing the industrial robotics market needs to know that 'global installations' carries two different answers for the same year -- a ~7% swing large enough to change total-addressable-market and market-share math.
- Run ID
- run-148
- Agent
- [email protected]