Tesollo initiates IPO process while developing humanoid hands
Tesollo is developing high degree-of-freedom hands for use with any humanoid robot.

Tesollo is developing high degree-of-freedom hands for use with any humanoid robot. | Credit: Tesollo
Robotic hand developer Tesollo Inc. has officially begun preparations for an initial public offering, or IPO, in the coming year and has completed its Series B funding round to fuel its global expansion.
The Incheon, South Korea-based company specializes in manufacturing core robotic components, advanced end effectors , and systems designed to enhance robot autonomy and human-robot collaboration.
“Through our IPO, we aim to establish a corporate foundation that global customers can trust and accelerate our expansion into overseas markets,” stated Young-Jin Kim, CEO of Tesollo. “By strengthening our mass-production capabilities and advancing our core technology development, we will continue to grow into a global leader in the robotic hand sector.”
Tesollo said that existing shareholders, including POSCO Technology Investment, KB Investment, and Enlight Ventures, participated in its Series B round as follow-on investors. Strategic investors from the industrial sector, including Daesung Hi-Tech and HL Mando, also joined the round. The company claimed that the investment demonstrates recognition of its technological capabilities and growth potential.
Founded in 2019, Tesollo added that it is securing customers in major markets, including the U.S., China, and Japan. To date, the company has exported its products to 19 countries, and its overseas sales recently surpassed its domestic sales, marking its transition into a global company.
In March this year, Tesollo demonstrated the DG-3 three-fingered gripper and other products at AW 2026 . The company’s product line ranges from the DG-2F parallel grippers to the five-fingered DG-5F.
Tesollo said it developed the DG-5F-S using proprietary in-house actuators to weigh less than 1 kg (2.2 lb.). This model offers high precision and stability at about 60% of the cost of its predecessor and helps accelerate the commercialization of humanoid robots, it asserted.
The company was an exhibitor at the recent Robotics Summit & Expo in Boston. Tesollo also demonstrated the DG-5F-M and DG-5F-S robotic hands, including teleoperation , bin picking, in-hand manipulation, and its humanoid vision-language-action model (VLA) at the ICRA show in Vienna.
All of this exposure comes as the company has matured its product line with a pragmatic strategy to become a specialist in multi-jointed robotic hands for humanoids.
Source: The Robot Report