Weave’s Isaac 1 Shows Home Robots Iterating in Public
Weave Robotics has moved from Isaac 0, a stationary laundry-folding robot, to Isaac 1, a mobile home robot designed for laundry flow and room reset tasks.

One of the more interesting parts of the current robotics boom is watching the evolutionary process on different robots.
Weave Robotics started shipping Isaac 0 earlier this year; a stationary laundry-folding robot for Bay Area and California homes. It was a deliberately narrow product. Users placed laundry on a table, the robot folded a load in roughly 30 to 90 minutes, and Weave used a mix of autonomy and remote specialist assistance to complete the task.
The product also drew critique for the combination of limited scope and pricing. Early coverage reported Isaac 0 at $7,999 upfront, or $450 per month, with a $250 refundable deposit.
The new robot is mobile, designed from the ground up for the home, and grouped around two initial capability areas. The first is Laundry Flow; finding and picking up dirty clothes, handling loaded hampers, folding clothes and putting them away. The second is Daily Reset; making beds, fixing pillows and blankets, and returning toys, shoes and clutter to where they belong.
The hardware is also a clear step up from Isaac 0. Weave lists an 8-hour battery, 2-hour charge time, wheeled base, 80-inch vertical reach, 33-inch horizontal reach, and two 6-DOF arms. The company says Isaac 1 operates autonomously by default for Laundry Flow and Daily Reset, with teleoperation assistance when needed to complete tasks.
Control also moves the product closer to a domestic appliance model. Isaac 1 can be controlled through a smartphone companion app, either on-demand or at a scheduled time, whether the user is home or away.
Weave lists Isaac 1 at $449 per month, or $7,999 upfront, with a fully refundable $250 deposit. First shipments are planned for fall 2026, starting in California, with broader U.S. availability following through 2027.
Robots intended for human environments appear to be converging on a softer hardware language; neutral colours, rounded forms, fabric or padded surfaces, passive safety cues, and less exposed machinery. Weave says Isaac 1 uses soft fabric shells around a solid internal structure, with the shells providing passive safety and a more familiar feel in the home. It also uses a collapsible torso so the robot can extend toward human height when working and reduce its presence when not in use.
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