Industrial robotics

What is Gecko Robotics?

Robots and AI software for inspecting critical infrastructure.

Category
Industrial robotics
Headquarters
Pittsburgh, PA
Founded
2013
Employees
300-600
Total funding
~$220M+
Valuation
$1.25B (2025)

What is Gecko Robotics?

Gecko Robotics uses wall-climbing robots, sensors, and AI software to inspect critical infrastructure for energy, manufacturing, and defense customers.

Gecko Robotics uses wall-climbing robots, sensors, and AI software to inspect critical infrastructure for energy, manufacturing, and defense customers. As of June 2026, it sits in Industrial robotics with headquarters in Pittsburgh, PA.

Public reporting says Gecko reached a $1.25B valuation in 2025 and that its robots inspect power plants, refineries, Navy ships, submarines, and Air Force missile silos. Its public traction is strongest where customers need high-reliability systems, safety, and mission or operational outcomes rather than experiments.

For sellers, Gecko Robotics should be treated as a technical account with multiple buying centers. Product, engineering, security, operations, finance, and customer-program teams can all matter depending on the workflow.

What does Gecko Robotics offer?

Gecko Robotics offers products and services across Industrial robotics.

  • Climbing inspection robots· Hardware
  • Cantilever· Software
  • Digital twins· Data
  • Ultrasonic inspection· Sensors
  • Defense asset readiness· Use case
  • XR/maintenance workflows· Software

How does Gecko Robotics make money?

Gecko makes money through inspection programs, robotics-enabled services, and software around asset data. Pricing is enterprise or government-contract based by asset scope, data capture, Cantilever software, and recurring monitoring.

Gecko makes money through inspection programs, robotics-enabled services, and software around asset data. Pricing is enterprise or government-contract based by asset scope, data capture, Cantilever software, and recurring monitoring.

Growth comes from turning dangerous manual inspection into reusable asset data, with defense and industrial customers using the record for maintenance, readiness, and downtime reduction.

The practical revenue drivers are deployment scale, customer proof, reliability, and attach of software, support, integration, or sustainment. Public pricing is limited or quote-based, so deal sizing should be anchored in programs, fleet size, usage, or enterprise scope rather than a published tier page.

Who leads Gecko Robotics?

Gecko Robotics's public leadership includes Jake Loosararian, Troy Demmer, Paul Vinciguerra, Trae Stephens.

  • Jake LoosararianCo-founder and CEOFounder since 2013Started Gecko while studying electrical engineering near Pittsburgh.
  • Troy DemmerProduct/technology leaderSenior leaderProduct and technology leader associated with Gecko platform.
  • Paul VinciguerraOperations leaderSenior leaderSupports field operations and scaling.
  • Trae StephensBoard member/investorBoard signalFounders Fund partner involved after later rounds.

How do you contact Gecko Robotics's leadership?

Gecko Robotics publishes corporate or team contact routes, but individual executive inboxes are generally not published. The personal emails below are format-following addresses based on public email-pattern signals; treat them as routing hypotheses, not verified personal inboxes.

Email formatfirst.last@geckorobotics.com

How much funding has Gecko Robotics raised?

Gecko Robotics has raised ~$220M+; latest public valuation/status is $1.25B (2025).

Gecko Robotics's disclosed financing history is: 2016: Seed/early capital (Early capital to commercialize climbing inspection robots.) 2021: Series B/C period (Growth funding as industrial inspections scaled.) 2024: Pre-unicorn valuation mark (Axios later described the 2025 valuation as roughly double 2024.) 2025: Series D - $1.25B valuation (Gecko becomes Pittsburgh newest unicorn.) 2026: Defense-industrial visibility (Washington Post highlights Navy, submarine, missile-silo, and industrial infrastructure work.)

The latest round/status is Series D (2025). Notable backers include Founders Fund, and the valuation/status to use as of June 2026 is $1.25B (2025).

Funding should be read together with customer traction. For hardware, robotics, autonomy, or defense companies, contract conversion, production scale, safety validation, and deployment economics matter as much as nominal capital raised.

How did Gecko Robotics get here?

Gecko Robotics's timeline runs from founding in 2013 to its latest financing and deployment milestones.

  1. 2013Founded in PittsburghJake Loosararian starts the company after seeing power-plant maintenance problems.
  2. 2017-2020Industrial inspections scaleRobots inspect boilers, pipes, tanks, and refineries.
  3. 2021Founders Fund-backed growthDefense-tech investor interest increases.
  4. 2025$1.25B valuationSeries D makes Gecko a Pittsburgh unicorn.
  5. 2025L3Harris XR partnershipCantilever supports aircraft maintenance digital twins.
  6. 2026Defense modernization profileGecko highlighted for Navy, submarine, and missile-silo inspections.

Who are Gecko Robotics's competitors?

Gecko Robotics competes with companies that solve adjacent customer problems in Industrial robotics.

  • ANYboticsQuadruped inspection robots for industrial sites.
  • Boston DynamicsMobile robotics used in industrial inspection and automation.
  • Energy RoboticsInspection software and robot fleet management.
  • PalantirDefense and industrial data platforms, not inspection robots.
  • CogniteIndustrial data operations and asset digitalization.

Gecko Robotics — frequently asked questions

Agent CTA Background

Revenue work. On autopilot.

Start Free TrialBuilt for revenue teams who care about quality.