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On May 14, 2026, a local robotics startup, Gatsby, made history by dispatching an autonomous humanoid robot to complete the first-ever residential cleaning for an end consumer in the United States. The homeowner was chosen entirely at random from a rapidly growing waitlist. They booked the service through the Gatsby iOS app.
It marks a massive milestone for consumer robotics. For the first time, a humanoid machine walked straight into a messy American living room to do the dirty work.
“Housework is the largest unpaid job in human history, and it falls hardest on the people with the least time to give,” said Aron Frishberg, Founder and CEO of Gatsby.
“Right now, somewhere, there’s a parent scrubbing floors who would rather be with their kid. A worker mopping after a sixteen-hour shift. We’ve mapped every neuron and synapse in a fruit fly’s brain, yet we still clean our homes the same way our ancestors did hundreds of years ago,” Frishberg added.
Several major tech heavyweights and heavily backed startups are racing to put humanoid robots directly into consumer homes. Most of these companies (like Tesla and 1X) want to sell you a $20,000+ robot to keep in your closet.
Gatsby’s idea is that they are building an Uber-like service layer. It lets you rent the exact humanoid robot for $150 a pop, without needing to buy the hardware.
For Frishberg, a University of Chicago dropout who launched the venture under parent company West Egg Labs, the ultimate goal goes far beyond sparkling countertops.
He stated that the technology wasn’t created solely to clean apartments, but rather to give humanity valuable time back.
Gatsby is currently live in San Francisco, offering its service at a flat rate of $150 per cleaning, regardless of the apartment’s size. This pricing strategy undercuts local human operations, where a professional cleaning service typically charges between $150 and $300 per apartment, depending on size.
Gatsby chose cleaning as its initial market because it is universally hated and already commands a massive consumer budget. Compared with moving or airport rides, home cleaning has not seen much innovation since the invention of the broom, making it ripe for disruption.
The robotics industry is currently locked in a multi-billion-dollar hardware arms race. Heavy hitters are spending immense capital to build the perfect mechanical body.
Gatsby is taking a different path. Started in January 2026, the company is built to work with any kind of robot.
Rather than building proprietary hardware, it is constructing the consumer distribution layer, which includes software, navigation, and a user interface required to make any robot useful in a home setting.
If one hardware brand is the best this week, but a cheaper, better robot comes out next month, Gatsby can just switch the underlying hardware instantly without rewriting their business model.
The startup is backed by NVIDIA Inception and Entrepreneurs First.
Demand for the service is already surging. Gatsby has secured a massive waitlist within the San Francisco Bay Area, alongside a rapidly expanding list of eager customers across the rest of the country.
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Mrigakshi is a science journalist who enjoys writing about space exploration, biology, and technological innovations. Her work has been featured in well-known publications including Nature India, Supercluster, The Weather Channel and Astronomy magazine. If you have pitches in mind, please do not hesitate to email her.
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