Mujin, a robotics startup focused on AI-driven factory automation, says it plans to go public by 2030. The company is positioning the IPO to meet rising demand for artificial intelligence in manufacturing, according to a report from Crypto Briefing. The announcement comes amid a broader uptick in investor confidence in AI-powered industrial automation.
The 2030 timeline
Mujin hasn't set a specific date or exchange yet. The target is a long-range goal — nearly four years out — which gives the company room to scale before tapping public markets. It's a deliberate pace: build the technology, prove the model, then list.
The firm didn't disclose projected valuation or fundraising amounts. That's typical for such an early-stage target. What's clear is that Mujin sees the next few years as a runway to capture market share in a sector that's still early in its automation shift.
What Mujin builds
Mujin develops robotics and software that aim to make factory floors more flexible. Its systems use AI to guide robots in tasks like picking, packing, and assembly — jobs that have traditionally required human dexterity or rigid, expensive machinery. The company's pitch is that its technology can reduce setup time and handle product variations without reprogramming.
That focus on adaptive automation puts it in direct competition with companies like Plus One Robotics and Veo Robotics, though Mujin has kept a relatively low profile outside of industry conferences.
Why go public now — or at least plan for it
The 2030 IPO plan is less about immediate capital and more about signaling. Mujin wants customers and investors to know it's playing for the long haul. With AI hype still running hot in 2026 — especially around generative models and real-world deployment — a public offering later this decade could lock in a premium valuation if the company hits its milestones.
There's also the matter of timing in factory automation. Warehouses and manufacturing plants are only now starting to adopt AI at scale. Mujin is betting that by 2030, the market will be much larger, and an established player with a public listing will have an edge in winning contracts.
What’s next
Mujin hasn't filed any regulatory paperwork yet. The company's next steps are likely to include additional funding rounds — possibly Series C or D — before it's ready to file an S-1. There's no underwriter named, and no exchange chosen. For now, it's a roadmap with a date on the horizon.




