It has arms, hands, eyes — of a sort — and can stand for hours doing the same task, over and over, without uttering a word of complaint.
But Toyota Canada’s latest employee is unlike any other ever to grace the floor of the company’s Woodstock, Ont., assembly plant. You see, Digit is a humanoid robot.
Following a successful pilot, the company has signed a commercial Robots-as-a-Service agreement with Oregon-based Agility Robotics to deploy its general-purpose robot at the facility. The robots will support manufacturing, supply chain and logistics operations.
Digit, a humanoid robot developed by Agility Robotics, performs material-handling tasks inside a manufacturing facility.
Agility Robotics
While seven robots are allocated under the agreement, deployment will begin with three units.
Story continues below advertisement
“After evaluating a number of robots, we are excited to deploy Digit to improve the team member experience and further increase operational efficiency in our manufacturing facilities,” Tim Hollander, president of Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada, said in a release.
Get daily National news
Get the day’s top news, political, economic, and current affairs headlines, delivered to your inbox once a day.
Digit is designed to take on repetitive and physically demanding tasks commonly found on automotive production lines.
In the release, the companies said that automating “extremely repetitive and physically taxing tasks” could reduce strain and increase safety for employees, freeing them to focus on more value-added work.
Digit, a humanoid robot developed by Agility Robotics, performs material-handling tasks inside a manufacturing facility.
Agility Robotics
Trending Now
Agility Robotics CEO Peggy Johnson said partnering with Toyota, one of the world’s largest automakers, marks a significant step for humanoid robots in industrial settings.
“Toyota is one of the premier companies in the world; one with a long history of innovation and success, so it’s a privilege to join forces to integrate humanoid robotic solutions like Digit into automotive production,” Johnson said.
Story continues below advertisement
The companies say they will continue exploring additional use cases where robots and artificial intelligence could further augment automotive production.
Digit, a humanoid robot developed by Agility Robotics, moves containers along a conveyor inside an Amazon facility.
Agility Robotics
Toyota joins a growing number of Fortune 500 companies deploying Agility’s humanoid robots globally, including GXO, Schaeffler and Amazon.
Toyota Motor Manufacturing Canada operates vehicle assembly plants in Cambridge and Woodstock and is Toyota’s largest manufacturing operation outside Japan.
© 2026 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.



