FANUC Corporation Announces $90 Million Michigan Expansion to Scale U.S. Automation Footprint.

On Friday, April 3, 2026, Japan-based robotics leader FANUC Corp announced a $90 million investment to significantly scale its North American operations through its subsidiary, FANUC America.

The centerpiece of this expansion is a new 840,000-square-foot facility in Michigan, designed to serve as a high-capacity hub for “Physical AI” and automated manufacturing. This project brings FANUC’s total U.S. investment to nearly $300 million since 2019.


The Michigan Expansion: Scale & Timeline

The new facility will be a major addition to FANUC’s existing 3-million-square-foot U.S. footprint, focusing on high-demand automation sectors.

  • Location: Rochester Hills / Auburn Hills area, Michigan.
  • Total Investment: $90 Million.
  • Completion Date: Targeted for late 2027.
  • Job Creation: Expected to add 225 high-skill roles in engineering and advanced manufacturing.
  • Strategic Focus: The site is specifically designed for “production-ready” flexibility, allowing FANUC to rapidly scale the assembly of industrial robots and CNC systems as domestic demand fluctuates.

Driving the “Physical AI” Revolution

FANUC’s investment is a direct response to the “reindustrialization” of North America, where manufacturers are increasingly leaning on three key technologies:

  1. Physical AI: Integrating Large Language Models (LLMs) and computer vision into robotic arms to allow them to “perceive” and adapt to unstructured environments (like sorting disorganized bins).
  2. Digital Twin & Virtual Commissioning: Using high-fidelity digital replicas to test and debug entire factory lines in a virtual environment before a single bolt is turned on the physical floor.
  3. CNC Integration: Strengthening the link between FANUC’s world-leading CNC (Computer Numerical Control) systems and its robotics for seamless “machine tending” in automotive and aerospace plants.

Closing the Talent Gap: The FANUC Academy

Recognizing that hardware is only as good as the people operating it, FANUC is opening the expanded FANUC Academy in Auburn Hills later in 2026.

  • Scale: Set to become the largest robotics and automation training center in the United States.
  • Curriculum: Focused on upskilling the American workforce in AI-enabled robotics, high-speed machining, and automated system maintenance.
  • Goal: To address the “manufacturing skills gap” that remains the #1 bottleneck for U.S. industrial growth.

Strategic Context: Strengthening the Domestic Supply Chain

As global supply chains remain volatile, FANUC America is moving toward a more “local-for-local” manufacturing model.

  • Responsiveness: By manufacturing and configuring robots closer to U.S. customers (GM, Ford, Tesla, etc.), FANUC reduces shipping times and improves custom engineering support.
  • Competitive Edge: This expansion allows FANUC to compete more aggressively with European rivals like ABB and Kuka by offering a faster, Michigan-based support ecosystem.

“By expanding its U.S. presence, FANUC America will strengthen domestic manufacturing, improve responsiveness to customer needs, and support industries that rely on automation to stay competitive.” — Mike Cicco, President and CEO of FANUC America.