Dexory is turning warehouse robots into an inventory intelligence layer
Dexory's $165 million funding round shows a warehouse robotics business built around live inventory data, customer deployments, and AI-powered warehouse intelligence.

Dexory announced $165 million in funding on October 14, 2025, including a $100 million Series C led by Eurazeo. The round followed an $80 million Series B in October 2024 and put the company around a larger thesis: warehouse robots as live inventory infrastructure, rather than aisle-scanning hardware alone.
Dexory began as BotsAndUs and was founded by Andrei Danescu, Adrian Negoita, and Oana Jinga. The company moved from front-of-house service robots into logistics after warehouse operators asked for the same physical-world visibility inside storage environments. Danescu is CEO, Negoita is CTO, and Jinga is chief commercial and product officer.
The product stack combines tall autonomous scanning robots with DexoryView, a digital-twin and warehouse intelligence platform. Dexory says its robots scan racks up to 14 meters high, collect top-to-bottom inventory data, and can scan up to 10,000 locations per hour. DexoryView turns that capture layer into live reporting, inventory insights, SKU management, cubic utilization, location tracking, and discrepancy detection.
The operating problem is inventory truth. Warehouse management systems can show what should be in a building, but they often lag what is physically present, misplaced, blocked, short, overstocked, or inaccessible. Manual cycle counts are slow and episodic. Fixed infrastructure can be expensive to install across every aisle. Dexory is selling a mobile data layer that updates the warehouse record by moving through the site.
The customer record gives the funding more weight. Dexory has named customers including GXO, Maersk, DB Schenker, and other logistics operators, and the company says its technology is used across sites in the United States, Europe, and the Middle East. The 2024 Series B release said Dexory was live with customers in seven U.S. states and had launched its autonomous warehouse robots and software platform commercially 18 months earlier.
The competitive field includes warehouse drone inventory systems, fixed camera and barcode infrastructure, manual cycle-counting services, AMR-based scanning, and warehouse software vendors trying to add more physical visibility. Dexory's distinction is the combination of a purpose-built scanning robot and software that treats inventory data as a live operational model rather than a periodic report.
The proof boundary is still customer-by-customer economics. Public material discloses funding rounds, named customers, scan-height claims, scan-rate claims, and deployment geography, but it does not publish retention, fleet size per customer, measured accuracy lift by site, or payback validation outside company and commissioned material.
Dexory's strategic bet is that warehouses will buy physical data capture as an operating layer. If the company can keep turning robot scans into trusted inventory decisions across more sites, it moves from selling warehouse robots into owning part of the data foundation for logistics execution.
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