
Strong cumulative revenue traction and a path to profitability position Niqo among a new generation of globally competitive Indian deep-tech companies.
Bengaluru based Niqo Robotics, a Physical AI company building intelligent agricultural robots for global farms, today announced that its core AI enabled weeding business is on track to achieve profitability in its first full year of commercial operations. The company has also built strong cumulative revenue traction, positioning it among the few Indian agricultural robotics companies to demonstrate meaningful commercial scale in this sector. At a time when many global agri-robotics players continue to prioritise scale over sustainable economics, Niqo is charting a different path, one built on capital efficiency, farmer ROI, and commercially viable deployment from the outset.
A rare profitability milestone in agri-robotics/deeptech
As agricultural robotics companies worldwide work to translate innovation into commercially viable businesses, Niqo Robotics’ core AI enabled weeding business is now approaching self-sustainability. The company attributes this to growing commercial traction, repeat demand, and a model built around disciplined economics rather than scale at any cost.
Niqo’s farmer-first model is built around a one-time purchase, with no recurring subscription fees, backed by 24/7 service support and locally stocked spare parts. This allows growers to adopt advanced automation without the burden of hidden costs or ongoing platform charges.
“We built Niqo to prove that Physical AI can be a real business, not just impressive technology that burns cash indefinitely,” said Jaisimha Rao, Founder and CEO of Niqo Robotics. “Our path to profitability is not about cutting corners. It is the result of building a product that delivers real ROI to growers from day one. No subscriptions, no hidden costs, just a machine that pays for itself.”
Made in Bharat, Made for the World
Niqo’s growth story also reflects a larger shift in Indian deep-tech: from research-led prototypes to commercially viable products competing in global markets. While India has seen decades of experimentation in farm automation, Niqo is among the first companies to commercialise and scale AI-powered field robots that are both designed in India and deployed in demanding agricultural environments across international markets.
This strengthens the narrative of India building globally relevant deep-tech products in frontier sectors. Niqo’s systems are built in India and are now being deployed across farms in the United States and India, signalling that agricultural robotics developed in Bharat can solve for productivity, labour, and sustainability challenges well beyond the domestic market.
An intelligent farming platform, not just a single machine
At the core of Niqo’s next phase of growth is Niqo Sense, the company’s proprietary AI camera platform that can be integrated across multiple machine form factors and retrofitted onto existing farm equipment. This platform combines AI at the edge with a dual-tank, twin-nozzle architecture to perform weeding, thinning, and beneficial spraying in a single pass, reducing the need for multiple machines and repeated field operations.
The system processes thousands of plant-level decisions per second in real time, entirely on the edge and with zero cloud dependency. It delivers more than 99% accuracy even in dense and challenging field conditions. This Physical AI approach, where intelligent software is tightly integrated with purpose-built hardware for real-world use, positions it at the forefront of a category attracting increasing investor and customer attention globally.
A broader signal for Indian agri-innovation
Niqo’s progress marks more than a company milestone. It points to a structural shift in Indian agri-innovation, where the focus is moving from pilots and proof-of-concept demonstrations to scalable, revenue-generating climate-tech businesses.
By helping growers reduce input costs, improve precision, lower chemical usage, and maintain soil health without displacing farm labour, Niqo is positioning robotics not as a futuristic concept, but as a practical and profitable tool for agriculture. The company plans to build on this foundation by expanding into new crops and additional applications through its broader Physical AI platform.