- 1. Executive Summary
- 2. Company Overview
- 3. Product Line Comparison
- 4. Head-to-Head Specifications
- 5. Programming & Ease of Use
- 6. Ecosystem & Accessories
- 7. Reliability & Support
- 8. Cobot Safety Features
- 9. Integration Capabilities
- 10. Pricing & Total Cost of Ownership
- 11. Application Fit Guide
- 12. APAC Support & Availability
1. Executive Summary
Universal Robots and FANUC represent two fundamentally different philosophies in the robotics industry that have converged on the same battleground: collaborative robots. Universal Robots, the Danish pioneer that single-handedly created the cobot category in 2008, built its reputation on accessibility, ease of programming, and rapid deployment. FANUC, the Japanese industrial automation titan with over half a century of manufacturing dominance, brings unmatched reliability, the broadest product portfolio in the industry, and the deepest installed base of any robot manufacturer on Earth.
This comparison is the most frequently requested analysis in robotics procurement today. The reason is straightforward: Universal Robots owns approximately 50% of the global cobot market, while FANUC is the world's largest industrial robot manufacturer with over 1,000,000 robots installed worldwide. When a manufacturing operation evaluates automation, these two names surface first and most often. The decision between them is rarely simple because it involves trade-offs between ease of use and raw capability, between open ecosystem flexibility and vertically integrated reliability, and between lower entry cost and lower long-term total cost of ownership.
Our analysis draws on over 60 deployments across Vietnam, Thailand, Singapore, and South Korea where we have integrated both Universal Robots and FANUC systems. The data in this guide reflects real-world performance metrics, not manufacturer spec sheets alone. We cover every dimension that matters for a procurement decision: product lines, specifications, programming, safety, ecosystem, reliability, integration, pricing, and application fit.
2. Company Overview
2.1 Universal Robots (Denmark / Teradyne)
Universal Robots was founded in 2005 in Odense, Denmark by Esben Ostergaard, Kasper Stoy, and Kristian Kassow, three researchers from the University of Southern Denmark who recognized that traditional industrial robots were too expensive, too complex, and too dangerous for small and medium enterprises. Their vision was a robot that any worker could program in an afternoon without specialized training, that could operate safely alongside humans without caging, and that could be deployed profitably even in low-volume, high-mix production environments.
The company shipped its first commercial product, the UR5, in 2008. The concept of a lightweight, force-limited robot arm that could be taught tasks through manual hand-guiding was revolutionary at the time. By 2012, Universal Robots had effectively defined the "collaborative robot" category, and the industry followed. In 2015, Teradyne, the American semiconductor test equipment giant, acquired Universal Robots for $285 million, a figure that proved to be a significant bargain as UR's revenue grew from $100 million in 2016 to over $380 million by 2023.
Universal Robots' philosophy centers on democratizing automation. The company's design decisions consistently prioritize accessibility: a single controller platform across all models, the intuitive Polyscope programming interface, the UR+ ecosystem that certifies third-party peripherals for plug-and-play integration, and the UR Academy that offers free online training. This approach has made UR the default choice for first-time robot adopters, particularly SMEs.
Under Teradyne's ownership, UR operates alongside Mobile Industrial Robots (MiR) for autonomous mobile robots and AutoGuide for autonomous vehicle technology, creating a complementary automation portfolio. The latest generation, the e-Series (UR3e through UR30e), introduced a built-in force/torque sensor at the tool flange, enhanced safety features with 17 configurable safety functions, and a more robust control architecture.
2.2 FANUC Corporation (Japan)
FANUC Corporation's origins trace to 1956 when Dr. Seiuemon Inaba, an engineer at Fujitsu, developed Japan's first numerically controlled (NC) servo mechanism. The division was spun off as FANUC Ltd. in 1972 and rapidly became the world's dominant supplier of CNC systems. FANUC entered the robotics market in 1974 and has since grown to become the largest robot manufacturer globally, with cumulative production exceeding 1,000,000 units as of 2024.
FANUC's corporate culture is legendary in manufacturing circles. Headquartered at the base of Mount Fuji in Oshino, Yamanashi Prefecture, the company is famously secretive, fiercely engineering-driven, and obsessively focused on reliability. Every FANUC building is painted yellow, the company's signature color. The manufacturing philosophy emphasizes vertical integration: FANUC builds its own servo motors, CNC controls, sensors, and robot controllers in its own factories, many of which are automated by FANUC robots manufacturing other FANUC robots.
This vertical integration yields FANUC's most celebrated metric: a mean time between failures (MTBF) exceeding 80,000 hours, or roughly 9 years of continuous 24/7 operation. For manufacturers running three-shift production where unplanned downtime costs tens of thousands of dollars per hour, this reliability is FANUC's most compelling value proposition.
FANUC's product portfolio is the broadest in the industry, spanning from the 0.5 kg payload CR-4iA collaborative robot to the M-2000iA/2300, the world's strongest robot arm with a 2,300 kg payload capacity. The company entered the collaborative robot market in 2015 with its green CR series (based on industrial robot platforms with added safety skins) and followed in 2019 with the purpose-built CRX series, which directly targets Universal Robots' market segment with a tablet-based programming interface and hand-guided teaching.
| Attribute | Universal Robots | FANUC |
|---|---|---|
| Founded | 2005 (Odense, Denmark) | 1956 / 1972 (Oshino, Japan) |
| Parent Company | Teradyne (USA) | Independent (public: TYO: 6954) |
| Annual Revenue | ~$380M (2023) | ~$5.5B (FY2023) |
| Employees | ~1,100 | ~8,600 |
| Installed Base | ~100,000+ cobots | 1,000,000+ robots |
| Manufacturing | Odense, Denmark | Oshino & Tsukuba, Japan |
| Core Philosophy | Democratize automation | Reliability above all |
| Product Focus | Cobots only (3-30 kg) | Full spectrum (0.5-2,300 kg) |
| Global Service | 30+ offices worldwide | 264 service locations globally |
3. Product Line Comparison
3.1 Universal Robots e-Series Lineup
Universal Robots offers a focused product line of six cobot models, all sharing the same controller (CB5), the same programming interface (Polyscope), and the same mechanical architecture. The only variables are payload capacity, reach, and footprint. This uniformity is a strategic advantage: a programmer trained on the UR3e can immediately operate the UR30e, and URCap software plugins work across all models.
| Model | Payload | Reach | Weight | Footprint | Primary Use Cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UR3e | 3 kg | 500 mm | 11.2 kg | 128 mm dia. | Tabletop assembly, dispensing, light inspection, lab automation |
| UR5e | 5 kg | 850 mm | 20.6 kg | 149 mm dia. | Machine tending, pick-and-place, light palletizing, quality testing |
| UR10e | 12.5 kg | 1,300 mm | 33.5 kg | 190 mm dia. | Packaging, palletizing, heavy assembly, material handling |
| UR16e | 16 kg | 900 mm | 33.1 kg | 190 mm dia. | Heavy machine tending, material removal, high-payload assembly |
| UR20 | 20 kg | 1,750 mm | 64 kg | 245 mm dia. | Palletizing, welding, high-reach applications, heavy material handling |
| UR30 | 30 kg | 1,300 mm | 63.5 kg | 245 mm dia. | Heavy palletizing, machine tending with heavy parts, multi-pick |
The UR20 and UR30, launched in 2023 and 2024 respectively, represent a significant architectural evolution. They use a new joint design with increased torque density, allowing the UR20 to achieve a 1,750 mm reach, the longest in the cobot industry, while maintaining cobot-class speed and safety. The UR20 in particular has become a dominant force in palletizing applications, where its reach can service an entire standard pallet without requiring a linear track.
3.2 FANUC Collaborative Robot Lineup
FANUC offers two distinct collaborative robot families: the CR series (based on industrial robot platforms with safety overlays) and the CRX series (purpose-built cobots designed to compete directly with Universal Robots).
3.2.1 FANUC CRX Series (Purpose-Built Cobots)
| Model | Payload | Reach | Weight | IP Rating | Primary Use Cases |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CRX-5iA | 5 kg | 994 mm | 40 kg | IP67 | Assembly, inspection, small-part handling, lab automation |
| CRX-10iA | 10 kg | 1,249 mm | 40 kg | IP67 | Machine tending, pick-and-place, packaging, quality inspection |
| CRX-10iA/L | 10 kg | 1,418 mm | 46 kg | IP67 | Extended-reach machine tending, welding, material handling |
| CRX-20iA/L | 20 kg | 1,418 mm | 55 kg | IP67 | Palletizing, heavy part handling, machine tending, packaging |
| CRX-25iA | 25 kg | 1,889 mm | 79 kg | IP67 | Full-pallet palletizing, long-reach material handling, welding |
3.2.2 FANUC CR Series (Safety-Rated Industrial)
| Model | Payload | Reach | Based On | Speed (Collab Mode) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CR-4iA | 4 kg | 550 mm | LR Mate 200iD/4S | 500 mm/s |
| CR-7iA | 7 kg | 717 mm | LR Mate 200iD/7L | 500 mm/s |
| CR-7iA/L | 7 kg | 911 mm | LR Mate 200iD/7L | 750 mm/s |
| CR-14iA/L | 14 kg | 820 mm | M-10iD/14L | 750 mm/s |
| CR-35iA | 35 kg | 1,813 mm | M-20iD/35 | 750 mm/s |
3.3 FANUC Industrial Robot Portfolio (Non-Collaborative)
Where FANUC truly separates from Universal Robots is in its industrial robot portfolio. If your application outgrows cobot capabilities, FANUC offers a migration path that no cobot-only vendor can match. Key industrial series include:
| Series | Payload Range | Applications | Notable Models |
|---|---|---|---|
| LR Mate | 4-14 kg | Small part handling, machine tending, assembly | LR Mate 200iD family (7 variants) |
| M-10/M-20 | 10-35 kg | Arc welding, material handling, machine tending | M-10iD/12, M-20iD/25, M-20iD/35 |
| M-710 | 50-70 kg | Material handling, dispensing, large part assembly | M-710iC/50, M-710iC/70 |
| R-1000/R-2000 | 100-270 kg | Spot welding, heavy handling, press tending | R-1000iA/100F, R-2000iC/270F |
| M-900/M-2000 | 350-2,300 kg | Heavy payload, foundry, automotive body | M-2000iA/2300 (world's strongest) |
| SCARA (SR) | 3-20 kg | High-speed assembly, pick-and-place, packaging | SR-3iA, SR-6iA, SR-12iA, SR-20iA |
| Delta (DR) | 1-8 kg | High-speed picking, food packaging, pharma | DR-3iB/8L (8 kg, 1,600 mm reach) |
Universal Robots is a pure-play cobot company. If your application needs more than 30 kg payload or speeds exceeding cobot safety limits, you must switch to a different vendor entirely. FANUC lets you start with a CRX cobot and scale up to a 2,300 kg industrial robot without changing programming language, controller architecture, or system integrator. For enterprises planning a multi-year automation roadmap, this continuity is a significant strategic advantage.
4. Head-to-Head Specifications
The following tables provide direct comparisons between the most commonly cross-shopped models from each manufacturer. These are the matchups that arise most frequently in procurement evaluations.
4.1 Lightweight Class (5 kg Payload)
| Specification | UR5e | CRX-5iA |
|---|---|---|
| Payload | 5 kg | 5 kg |
| Reach | 850 mm | 994 mm |
| Repeatability | +/- 0.03 mm | +/- 0.04 mm |
| Robot Weight | 20.6 kg | 40 kg |
| Degrees of Freedom | 6 | 6 |
| Max TCP Speed | 1,000 mm/s | 1,000 mm/s |
| IP Rating | IP54 | IP67 |
| Power Consumption | ~200W (typical) | ~350W (typical) |
| Safety Certification | ISO 13849-1 PLd / Cat 3 | ISO 13849-1 PLd / Cat 3 |
| Built-in F/T Sensor | Yes (6-axis at flange) | No (optional) |
| Controller | CB5 (external box) | R-30iB Mini Plus |
| Hand Guiding | Yes (freedrive button) | Yes (arm surface sensors) |
4.2 Mid-Range Class (10-12.5 kg Payload)
| Specification | UR10e | CRX-10iA | CRX-10iA/L |
|---|---|---|---|
| Payload | 12.5 kg | 10 kg | 10 kg |
| Reach | 1,300 mm | 1,249 mm | 1,418 mm |
| Repeatability | +/- 0.05 mm | +/- 0.04 mm | +/- 0.05 mm |
| Robot Weight | 33.5 kg | 40 kg | 46 kg |
| Max TCP Speed | 1,000 mm/s | 1,000 mm/s | 1,000 mm/s |
| IP Rating | IP54 | IP67 | IP67 |
| Power Consumption | ~350W (typical) | ~400W (typical) | ~430W (typical) |
| Safety Certification | PLd / Cat 3 | PLd / Cat 3 | PLd / Cat 3 |
| Built-in F/T Sensor | Yes | No | No |
4.3 Heavy-Duty Cobot Class (20-30 kg Payload)
| Specification | UR20 | UR30 | CRX-20iA/L | CRX-25iA |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Payload | 20 kg | 30 kg | 20 kg | 25 kg |
| Reach | 1,750 mm | 1,300 mm | 1,418 mm | 1,889 mm |
| Repeatability | +/- 0.05 mm | +/- 0.05 mm | +/- 0.05 mm | +/- 0.04 mm |
| Robot Weight | 64 kg | 63.5 kg | 55 kg | 79 kg |
| Max TCP Speed | 1,000 mm/s | 1,000 mm/s | 1,000 mm/s | 1,000 mm/s |
| IP Rating | IP54 | IP54 | IP67 | IP67 |
| Mounting Options | Floor, wall, ceiling | Floor, wall, ceiling | Floor, wall, ceiling | Floor, wall, ceiling, angled |
| Best For | Palletizing (long reach) | Heavy part handling | Machine tending, packaging | Full-pallet palletizing |
One consistent advantage across the entire FANUC CRX line is the IP67 rating (dust-tight and protected against temporary immersion in water). Universal Robots' standard IP54 rating (protected against dust ingress and water splashes) is adequate for clean manufacturing environments but may require additional protection in food processing, washdown, or dusty machining environments. UR offers an IP67 upgrade kit for select models, but it adds cost and complexity.
5. Programming & Ease of Use
5.1 Universal Robots Polyscope
Polyscope is Universal Robots' proprietary programming interface and is widely regarded as the gold standard for cobot programming simplicity. It runs on a 12-inch touchscreen teach pendant and presents a graphical program tree where operators build programs by selecting from a menu of command nodes: Move, Wait, Set, If/Else, Loop, and dozens of others. Each node expands into a configuration panel where waypoints, speeds, forces, and I/O states are defined.
The programming workflow for a typical pick-and-place task follows this pattern:
- Freedrive hand-guiding: The operator presses the freedrive button on the back of the teach pendant (or on the robot's flange), physically moves the robot to each desired position, and saves the waypoint with a single tap.
- Program tree construction: Waypoints are connected with Move nodes (MoveJ for joint-space motion, MoveL for linear Cartesian motion, MoveP for process/blended motion). I/O commands control grippers, conveyors, and external devices.
- Force-sensitive operations: The built-in 6-axis force/torque sensor enables force-controlled insertion, polishing, and surface-following without external sensors. The Force mode node lets users define compliant axes and target forces directly in the program tree.
- Testing: Programs run in reduced-speed mode for verification before switching to full production speed.
For advanced users, URScript provides full programmatic control with Python-like syntax. The UR controller also supports XML-RPC, RTDE (Real-Time Data Exchange at 500Hz), and socket communication for external program control via PC-based applications.
5.2 FANUC TEACH Pendant (Industrial Robots & CR Series)
FANUC's traditional programming environment is the iPendant, a ruggedized handheld device with physical buttons, a 10.4-inch touchscreen, and a three-position enabling switch. Programming uses FANUC's proprietary KAREL language (a Pascal-derivative) or the more commonly used TP (Teach Pendant) programming language. TP programs are structured as numbered lines with motion commands, I/O instructions, conditional logic, and register operations.
The iPendant programming workflow is powerful but has a steeper learning curve than Polyscope. Experienced FANUC programmers can write highly optimized programs with precise cycle-time control, but the initial training period is typically 40-80 hours compared to 4-8 hours for basic UR programming. FANUC's ROBOGUIDE offline programming software is essential for complex applications, allowing full simulation and cycle-time analysis before deployment.
5.3 FANUC CRX Tablet Interface
Recognizing the usability gap, FANUC developed a completely new programming interface for the CRX series. The CRX tablet interface runs on a standard iPad or Android tablet and uses a drag-and-drop icon-based programming paradigm. Users drag action blocks (Move, Pick, Place, Wait, Loop) into a program timeline, configure each block through simple menus, and teach positions through direct hand-guiding on the robot arm.
The CRX interface is a dramatic departure from FANUC's traditional programming approach and is explicitly designed to match Universal Robots' ease-of-use benchmark. In our testing, operators with no prior robotics experience achieved basic proficiency in 2-4 hours with the CRX tablet, compared to 2-6 hours with Polyscope. However, the CRX interface currently offers fewer advanced programming features than Polyscope, such as limited support for complex force control, variable waypoints, and advanced math operations.
| Programming Aspect | UR Polyscope | FANUC iPendant (TP/KAREL) | FANUC CRX Tablet |
|---|---|---|---|
| Learning Time (Basic) | 4-8 hours | 40-80 hours | 2-4 hours |
| Learning Time (Advanced) | 40-80 hours | 200+ hours | 20-40 hours |
| Programming Style | Graphical tree + script | Line-by-line code | Drag-and-drop icons |
| Hand Guiding | Freedrive button | Not standard (CR series with overlay) | Direct arm guiding |
| Offline Programming | URSim (free) | ROBOGUIDE (paid license) | CRX Simulator (free) |
| Script Language | URScript (Python-like) | KAREL (Pascal-like) + TP | Simplified TP |
| Force Control | Built-in (6-axis F/T) | FS-100iA option | Basic (via sensor option) |
| Multi-Robot Coordination | Limited (external sync) | Advanced (multi-group) | Basic (single robot) |
| Vision Integration | URCap plugins | iRVision (integrated) | iRVision (integrated) |
| PLC Communication | Modbus, EtherNet/IP, PROFINET | All major fieldbuses | EtherNet/IP, PROFINET |
6. Ecosystem & Accessories
6.1 UR+ Ecosystem
The UR+ platform is Universal Robots' open ecosystem of certified peripherals, software, and application kits. With over 300 certified products from 200+ partners as of 2026, UR+ is the largest third-party ecosystem in collaborative robotics. Every UR+ product includes a URCap software plugin that integrates directly into Polyscope, providing a unified programming experience regardless of the peripheral vendor.
| Category | UR+ Products (Selected) | Integration Level |
|---|---|---|
| Grippers | Robotiq 2F-85/140, OnRobot RG2/RG6, Schunk Co-act, SMC, Piab vacuum | Plug-and-play URCap, auto-configured in Polyscope |
| Vision | Cognex IS2000, Photoneo, Pickit 3D, Sick, Basler | URCap with calibration wizards, direct waypoint offsets |
| Force/Torque | OnRobot HEX, Robotiq FT-300, ATI | Built-in F/T at flange; external for higher precision |
| Tool Changers | Robotiq ATC, RSP, Schunk | Automatic tool recognition, parameter switching |
| Conveyor Tracking | UR Conveyor Tracking URCap, Ewellix | Encoder input, real-time tracking in Polyscope |
| Welding | Fronius, Lincoln Electric, Miller | Welding-specific URCap with seam parameters |
| Dispensing | Nordson, Techcon, Viscotec | Flow rate control synced with robot speed |
| Safety | SICK, Pilz, Keyence area scanners | Direct safety I/O integration, zone monitoring |
6.2 FANUC Ecosystem
FANUC's ecosystem follows a vertically integrated philosophy. Rather than relying on third-party certified products, FANUC develops and manufactures many key peripherals in-house, ensuring deep integration with the robot controller but offering fewer vendor choices.
| Category | FANUC Solutions | Integration Level |
|---|---|---|
| Vision | iRVision (2D/3D, built into controller) | Native: runs on robot controller, no external PC needed |
| Force Sensing | FS-100iA (6-axis, FANUC-made) | Native: integrated into TP programming with Force Control option |
| Line Tracking | FANUC Line Tracking (conveyor sync) | Native: real-time encoder sync on R-30iB controller |
| Grippers | Third-party (Schunk, SMC, Zimmer) | I/O or fieldbus integration; less plug-and-play than UR+ |
| Welding | ARC Mate series + FANUC arc welding packages | Native: full welding parameter control in robot program |
| Offline Programming | ROBOGUIDE (FANUC's simulation suite) | Full kinematic simulation, cycle time analysis, PLC co-simulation |
| Edge Computing | FANUC FIELD (IoT platform) | Connects to robot controller for analytics and predictive maintenance |
| Safety | DCS (Dual Check Safety), built-in | Native: configurable safety zones, speed limits per zone |
Universal Robots: Open platform. UR+ makes it easy to mix and match best-of-breed peripherals from dozens of vendors. Ideal for integrators who want flexibility and end-users who want choice. Risk: quality and support depend on the specific UR+ partner.
FANUC: Vertically integrated. iRVision, force sensors, and safety systems are all FANUC-made and deeply integrated into the controller. Fewer choices, but every component is guaranteed to work together seamlessly with factory-level support. Risk: vendor lock-in and typically higher per-component cost.
7. Reliability & Support
7.1 FANUC: The Reliability Benchmark
FANUC's reliability is not marketing hyperbole; it is the single most measurable competitive advantage the company possesses. The published MTBF of 80,000+ hours for FANUC robots has been validated by independent studies and by decades of field data from automotive OEMs who track downtime with extreme precision. This figure represents the average time a FANUC robot operates continuously before experiencing any failure that requires service intervention.
To put this in perspective: 80,000 hours of continuous operation equals approximately 9.1 years of 24/7 runtime. Many FANUC robots in automotive plants have been operating for 15-20 years with only routine maintenance (greasing, battery replacement, cable inspection). The Japanese automotive industry's famously demanding production requirements, where a single minute of unplanned downtime can cost $10,000 or more, have made FANUC the default robot vendor for Toyota, Honda, Nissan, and virtually every major Japanese manufacturer.
FANUC's reliability advantage stems from several design decisions: hardened servo motors with proprietary encoders, sealed joint assemblies, robust cable routing through the arm body, and comprehensive self-diagnostic systems. The R-30iB controller includes predictive maintenance features that monitor motor current, temperature, and vibration signatures to flag potential failures before they cause unplanned stops.
7.2 Universal Robots: Support & Community
Universal Robots does not publish official MTBF figures, which itself is telling. In our field experience across 60+ deployments, UR cobots demonstrate reliable operation in clean manufacturing environments but are more susceptible to issues in harsh conditions (dust, metal chips, coolant mist) due to the IP54 rating and lighter-duty mechanical construction. Common service items include wrist joint replacement (typically at 20,000-35,000 hours depending on load profile), cable harness replacement, and teach pendant connector issues.
Where Universal Robots excels in support is the breadth and accessibility of its resources. UR Academy offers free online training courses. The UR community forum has over 30,000 active members sharing solutions. The URScript documentation is comprehensive and publicly available. When hardware issues occur, UR's swap-and-replace service model (ship a replacement unit, return the failed unit) minimizes downtime for regions with local UR offices or certified distributors.
| Reliability & Support | Universal Robots | FANUC |
|---|---|---|
| Published MTBF | Not published | 80,000+ hours |
| Observed Field Life | 20,000-35,000 hrs typical before major service | 80,000+ hrs before major service |
| IP Rating (Standard) | IP54 | IP67 (CRX) / IP67 (industrial) |
| Warranty (Standard) | 12 months | 12-24 months (varies by region) |
| Extended Warranty | UR Care (up to 3 years) | FANUC Service agreements |
| Global Service Locations | 30+ offices | 264 locations |
| Remote Diagnostics | UR+ Log Viewer, remote access | ZDT (Zero Down Time) cloud diagnostics |
| Spare Parts Availability | Good (via distributors) | Excellent (massive parts inventory) |
| Community Resources | UR Academy (free), forums, GitHub | FANUC Academy (paid), limited public resources |
| Training Cost | Free (UR Academy online) | $2,000-5,000 per course (in-person) |
8. Cobot Safety Features
8.1 Universal Robots Safety System
Universal Robots' safety architecture is built around 17 configurable safety functions certified to ISO 13849-1 Performance Level d, Category 3 and ISO/TS 15066 compliance. These safety functions are configured through the Safety tab in Polyscope and monitored by redundant safety processors independent of the main control processor.
The configurable safety functions include:
- Joint position limits: Restrict each joint's rotational range to prevent reaching into hazardous zones
- Joint speed limits: Cap the angular velocity of each joint independently
- TCP position (safety plane): Define up to 8 virtual safety planes creating a restricted workspace envelope
- TCP speed limit: Cap the tool center point velocity (default 250 mm/s for collaborative mode per ISO/TS 15066)
- TCP force limit: Maximum allowable force at the tool (configurable from 100-250N)
- Elbow speed and force limits: Independent monitoring of elbow velocity and contact force
- Momentum limit: Caps the total system momentum to limit impact energy during collisions
- Power limit: Caps the total mechanical power output of the robot
- Safety I/O: Configurable safety-rated digital inputs/outputs for integration with external safety devices (light curtains, area scanners, e-stops)
The e-Series' built-in 6-axis force/torque sensor plays a dual role: it provides force feedback for process control (polishing, insertion, assembly) and serves as a collision detection mechanism. When unexpected external forces exceed the configured threshold, the robot executes a protective stop within milliseconds.
8.2 FANUC DCS (Dual Check Safety)
FANUC's Dual Check Safety is available on both CR series collaborative robots and all standard industrial robots. DCS is a safety-rated software function that runs on dedicated safety processors within the R-30iB controller. It provides position and speed monitoring with safety integrity up to SIL 2 / PLd, Cat 3.
DCS features include:
- Safe Position / Cartesian space limits: Define complex 3D zones (boxes, cylinders, planes) where the robot is restricted or prohibited. Up to 100 zones can be defined simultaneously.
- Safe Speed: Configure maximum joint speed and TCP speed per zone. The robot automatically reduces speed when entering restricted zones and returns to full speed when leaving.
- Safe Standstill Monitor: Confirms the robot is stationary before enabling human access to a zone (e.g., opening a cell door).
- Safe I/O: Safety-rated I/O integration with external devices, monitored by the DCS processor.
- DCS Zone visualization: ROBOGUIDE provides 3D visualization of all DCS zones overlaid on the robot's workspace for intuitive configuration.
8.3 FANUC CRX Contact Detection
The CRX series adds a contact-detection safety layer beyond DCS. The CRX robots have force sensors integrated into each joint, enabling the entire surface of the robot arm to detect contact with a person or obstacle. When contact is detected, the robot stops within milliseconds. This distributed sensing approach means the CRX detects contact anywhere on the arm, not just at the tool flange, providing comprehensive collision protection without requiring external safety skins or covers.
| Safety Feature | UR e-Series | FANUC CR Series | FANUC CRX Series |
|---|---|---|---|
| Safety Standard | ISO 13849-1 PLd Cat 3 | ISO 13849-1 PLd Cat 3 | ISO 13849-1 PLd Cat 3 |
| ISO/TS 15066 Compliance | Yes (all modes) | Yes (PFL mode) | Yes (all modes) |
| Configurable Safety Functions | 17 functions | DCS (position, speed, zone) | DCS + joint contact sensing |
| Contact Detection Method | Flange F/T sensor + current monitoring | Safety skin (soft foam cover) | Joint-integrated force sensors |
| Safety Planes / Zones | Up to 8 planes | Up to 100 3D zones | Up to 100 3D zones |
| Speed Monitoring | Joint + TCP speed limits | DCS Safe Speed per zone | DCS Safe Speed per zone |
| Safety I/O | Configurable (8 SI, 8 SO) | DCS Safe I/O | DCS Safe I/O |
| Risk Assessment Support | Safety configuration tools in Polyscope | DCS visualization in ROBOGUIDE | DCS visualization + tablet interface |
| Collaborative Modes Supported | SSM, HG, S&M, PFL | SSM, S&M, PFL | SSM, HG, S&M, PFL |
SSM = Safety-Rated Monitored Stop; HG = Hand Guiding; S&M = Speed & Separation Monitoring; PFL = Power & Force Limiting
9. Integration Capabilities
9.1 Communication Protocols
Both Universal Robots and FANUC support the major industrial communication protocols, but the depth and native support differ significantly. FANUC's decades of industrial integration experience give it an edge in protocol breadth and PLC integration sophistication.
| Protocol / Interface | UR e-Series | FANUC (R-30iB) |
|---|---|---|
| EtherNet/IP | Yes (built-in) | Yes (built-in) |
| PROFINET | Yes (built-in) | Yes (option card) |
| Modbus TCP/RTU | Yes (built-in client/server) | Yes (option) |
| EtherCAT | No (planned for future) | Yes (option card) |
| CC-Link / CC-Link IE | No | Yes (native, common in Japan/Asia) |
| DeviceNet | No | Yes (option card) |
| TCP/IP Socket | Yes (server + client) | Yes (via KAREL) |
| MQTT | Via URCap plugin | Via FANUC FIELD platform |
| OPC-UA | Via URCap plugin | Yes (R-30iB Plus option) |
| RTDE (500Hz data exchange) | Yes (proprietary, well-documented) | No equivalent (use SNPX or PCDK) |
| ROS / ROS2 | Official ROS2 driver (ur_robot_driver) | Community ROS driver (fanuc_driver) |
| Digital I/O | 16 DI + 16 DO (configurable) | Up to 40 DI + 40 DO (expandable) |
| Analog I/O | 2 AI + 2 AO (0-10V / 4-20mA) | 4 AI + 4 AO (expandable) |
9.2 PLC Integration
In traditional manufacturing environments, the PLC (Programmable Logic Controller) is the master orchestrator, and the robot is a subordinate device. Both UR and FANUC handle this paradigm, but FANUC's industrial heritage provides deeper integration:
- FANUC advantages: Native support for all major PLC fieldbus protocols, including CC-Link (dominant in Japanese and Korean factories), EtherCAT (common in high-speed assembly lines), and DeviceNet (legacy but still prevalent). FANUC's GP (General Purpose) I/O allocation allows mapping hundreds of signals directly between the robot and PLC without middleware.
- UR advantages: Modbus TCP is built-in and immediately accessible without option cards. RTDE provides 500Hz bidirectional data exchange, enabling PC-based supervisory control with lower latency than most fieldbus configurations. The open-source UR RTDE library for Python and C++ simplifies integration with MES, SCADA, and custom applications.
9.3 ROS2 and Research Applications
Universal Robots maintains an official, well-documented ROS2 driver (ur_robot_driver) that provides full control of the robot through the ROS2 ecosystem. This driver supports MoveIt2 for motion planning, real-time control via the RTDE interface, and standard ROS2 topics/services for position, velocity, and force control. The UR ROS2 package is one of the most widely used robot drivers in the ROS community, with active development and regular updates.
FANUC's ROS support is community-driven rather than officially maintained. The fanuc_driver_ros2 package provides basic functionality but lacks the depth and documentation of UR's official driver. For research labs, universities, and applications requiring ROS2 integration (such as autonomous manipulation or AI-driven pick-and-place), Universal Robots is the clearly preferred choice.
10. Pricing & Total Cost of Ownership
10.1 Robot Hardware Cost
Robot arm list prices represent only a fraction of total deployment cost, but they are the starting point for any budget discussion. The following figures represent approximate list prices in the APAC market as of Q1 2026. Actual prices vary by distributor, volume, and negotiation.
| Model Match-Up | UR Model | UR List Price (est.) | FANUC Model | FANUC List Price (est.) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5 kg class | UR5e | $35,000 - $38,000 | CRX-5iA | $38,000 - $42,000 |
| 10 kg class | UR10e | $43,000 - $48,000 | CRX-10iA | $42,000 - $48,000 |
| 10 kg extended reach | UR10e (+ 7th axis) | $55,000 - $65,000 | CRX-10iA/L | $45,000 - $52,000 |
| 20 kg class | UR20 | $55,000 - $60,000 | CRX-20iA/L | $55,000 - $62,000 |
| 25 kg+ class | UR30 | $58,000 - $65,000 | CRX-25iA | $62,000 - $70,000 |
10.2 Total Cost of Ownership (3-Year Analysis)
Hardware cost tells only part of the story. The total cost of ownership (TCO) includes integration, peripherals, programming, training, maintenance, and downtime. Here is a representative 3-year TCO breakdown for a typical machine-tending application using the 10 kg class robots.
| Cost Component | UR10e Deployment | CRX-10iA Deployment | FANUC Industrial (M-10iD) Cell |
|---|---|---|---|
| Robot Hardware | $45,000 | $45,000 | $40,000 |
| Controller | Included | Included (R-30iB Mini Plus) | $18,000 (R-30iB Plus) |
| Gripper / End Effector | $4,000 (Robotiq 2F-85) | $4,500 (Schunk EGP) | $4,500 (Schunk EGP) |
| Vision System | $6,000 (UR+ camera) | $8,000 (iRVision) | $8,000 (iRVision) |
| Safety Equipment | $2,000 (area scanner) | $2,000 (area scanner) | $8,000 (safety cell + curtain) |
| Integration Labor | $15,000 (80-120 hrs) | $20,000 (100-160 hrs) | $35,000 (200-300 hrs) |
| Programming | $5,000 (40-60 hrs) | $8,000 (60-100 hrs) | $15,000 (120-200 hrs) |
| Training | $0 (UR Academy free) | $4,000 (FANUC Academy) | $6,000 (FANUC Academy) |
| Annual Maintenance (x3) | $4,500 ($1,500/yr) | $3,600 ($1,200/yr) | $3,000 ($1,000/yr) |
| Est. Downtime Cost (3yr) | $6,000 | $3,000 | $2,000 |
| 3-Year TCO | $87,500 | $98,100 | $139,500 |
| Cost per Operating Hour | $3.50/hr | $3.93/hr | $5.58/hr |
UR wins on initial deployment cost due to faster integration, free training, and a broader ecosystem of plug-and-play peripherals that reduce integration labor. The lower entry cost makes UR particularly attractive for first-time robot adopters and pilot projects.
FANUC wins on long-term operational cost due to superior reliability (lower maintenance and downtime costs) and lower energy consumption for equivalent tasks. For high-volume, multi-shift operations where the robot will run for 5-10 years, FANUC's higher upfront cost is amortized over a longer useful life with fewer service interventions.
Industrial FANUC has the highest TCO for simple applications due to safety cell requirements, longer programming time, and specialized training. However, for high-speed applications where cobot speed limits are the bottleneck, industrial robots deliver significantly higher throughput, making the per-unit cost substantially lower.
11. Application Fit Guide
The "which robot should I choose" question ultimately comes down to application requirements. Here is our decision framework based on deploying both brands across dozens of APAC manufacturing sites.
11.1 Choose Universal Robots When:
- First-time automation: Your team has no prior robotics experience, and you need to be productive in days, not months. UR's learning curve is genuinely shorter, and the free UR Academy eliminates training budget barriers.
- High-mix, low-volume production: You change part types frequently and need to reprogram or adjust the robot quickly. Polyscope's graphical interface and freedrive hand-guiding make changeovers fast.
- Tight floor space, shared workspace: The robot must work directly alongside human operators without safety fencing. UR's compact controller and lightweight arm minimize footprint.
- Force-sensitive applications: Tasks requiring force control, such as polishing, deburring, insertion, or surface following, benefit from UR's built-in 6-axis F/T sensor, which is a standard feature requiring no additional hardware.
- R&D and prototyping: Research labs, university programs, and prototype development benefit from UR's open architecture, official ROS2 driver, and extensive developer documentation.
- Budget-constrained pilot projects: When the mandate is to prove cobot ROI with minimal initial investment, UR's lower integration cost and free training resources reduce project risk.
11.2 Choose FANUC CRX When:
- Harsh environments: Food processing, pharmaceutical, machining with coolant, or any environment requiring IP67 protection. The CRX's standard IP67 rating eliminates the need for protective covers or sealed enclosures.
- Existing FANUC infrastructure: Your facility already uses FANUC CNC machines, industrial robots, or controllers. CRX integrates natively with the R-30iB ecosystem, iRVision, and existing FANUC service contracts.
- Scalability to industrial: Your automation roadmap includes future applications that will exceed cobot payload or speed limits. Starting with CRX means your team learns the FANUC programming environment, and you can scale to industrial FANUC robots without retraining.
- Maximum uptime requirements: Production lines where unplanned downtime has severe financial consequences. FANUC's MTBF advantage and 264 global service locations provide the best safety net.
- Vision-heavy applications: Applications requiring advanced 2D/3D vision for part location, inspection, or bin picking benefit from FANUC's iRVision, which runs natively on the controller without an external PC.
11.3 Choose FANUC Industrial When:
- High-speed production: Cycle times below 6-8 seconds where cobot speed limits (typically 1,000 mm/s TCP) are the bottleneck. Industrial robots can operate at 2,000+ mm/s TCP.
- Heavy payloads: Any application requiring more than 30 kg payload (UR's max) or more than 25 kg (CRX max). FANUC covers up to 2,300 kg.
- Long reach requirements: Applications requiring reach beyond 1,889 mm (CRX-25iA max) or complex articulated motion in tight spaces (7-axis configurations).
- Automotive body shop: Spot welding, seam sealing, and heavy material handling in automotive BIW (body-in-white) applications. This is FANUC's core domain with specialized solutions.
- Multi-robot coordination: Applications requiring synchronized motion of multiple robots (e.g., dual-arm assembly, coordinated welding, transfer between robots). FANUC's multi-group control handles up to 4 coordinated robots on a single controller.
11.4 Application Decision Matrix
| Application | Best Choice | Runner-Up | Rationale |
|---|---|---|---|
| CNC Machine Tending | UR10e / UR16e | CRX-10iA | UR's F/T sensor helps with door handling and part seating; faster programming |
| Palletizing (light, <15 kg) | UR20 | CRX-20iA/L | UR20's 1,750 mm reach covers full pallet; strong UR+ palletizing kits |
| Palletizing (heavy, >15 kg) | CRX-25iA | UR30 | CRX-25iA's 1,889 mm reach + 25 kg payload is the best range/payload combo |
| Welding (light duty) | UR10e + Fronius | CRX-10iA/L | UR+ welding packages are mature; wide welder compatibility |
| Welding (production volume) | FANUC ARC Mate | - | Industrial speed, iRVision seam tracking, multi-robot coordination |
| Quality Inspection | UR5e + vision | CRX-5iA | UR's lighter weight and compact form; strong UR+ camera ecosystem |
| Food Packaging | CRX-10iA | UR10e (IP67 kit) | CRX's standard IP67 and stainless options; food-grade certification |
| Electronics Assembly | UR3e | CRX-5iA | UR3e's 11.2 kg weight and 500 mm reach ideal for tabletop; built-in F/T sensor |
| Lab Automation | UR3e / UR5e | CRX-5iA | UR dominates in biotech/pharma lab automation; strong UR+ lab peripherals |
| Automotive Spot Welding | FANUC R-2000 | - | No cobot alternative; requires industrial speed, payload, and reach |
| Heavy Material Handling (>50 kg) | FANUC M-710/R-1000 | - | Beyond cobot payload limits; safety fencing required |
12. APAC Support & Availability
12.1 Universal Robots in APAC
Universal Robots has built a strong APAC presence with regional headquarters in Singapore and offices/distributors across the region. UR's APAC strategy relies on a network of certified distributors and system integrators (URSIs) who handle sales, integration, and first-line support.
| Country | UR Presence | Key Distributors / Partners | Local Support Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vietnam | Distributor network | Universal Robots Vietnam (direct), local automation houses | Sales + integration; advanced support via Singapore |
| Singapore | Regional HQ | Direct sales + integrator network | Full support including training center |
| Thailand | Office + distributors | MCP Group, Automation Solutions | Sales, integration, and training |
| South Korea | Direct office (Seoul) | UR Korea + distributor network | Full support, training center, demo lab |
| Japan | Direct office (Tokyo) | UR Japan + 50+ distributors | Full support (competing on FANUC's home turf) |
| China | Direct office (Shanghai) | UR China + extensive distributor network | Full support, local manufacturing exploration |
| India | Direct office (Bangalore) | UR India + authorized distributors | Full support, training programs |
12.2 FANUC in APAC
FANUC's APAC presence is deeper and more established than any robot manufacturer, reflecting the company's 50+ year history and Japanese origin. FANUC operates fully owned subsidiaries (not distributors) in every major APAC market, providing direct factory support with Japanese-trained engineers.
| Country | FANUC Presence | Facilities | Local Support Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vietnam | FANUC Vietnam (subsidiary) | Ho Chi Minh City office, service center | Direct factory support, spare parts inventory, training |
| Singapore | FANUC Singapore (subsidiary) | Office, service center, training academy | Full factory support, CNC + robotics |
| Thailand | FANUC Thai (subsidiary) | Bangkok office, service center, demo room | Full factory support, automotive focus |
| South Korea | FANUC Korea (subsidiary) | Seoul + Changwon offices, large service center | Full factory support, major automotive presence |
| Japan | Headquarters + 6 factories | Oshino, Tsukuba, Mibu facilities | Factory headquarters, all resources available |
| China | FANUC China (subsidiary) | Shanghai HQ, 5+ regional offices, factory | Full factory support, local manufacturing |
| India | FANUC India (subsidiary) | Bangalore HQ, Mumbai, Pune, Chennai offices | Full factory support, growing rapidly |
For Vietnamese manufacturers choosing between UR and FANUC:
FANUC has a stronger on-the-ground presence in Vietnam through FANUC Vietnam Co., Ltd. (a fully owned subsidiary) with direct factory-trained engineers and a local spare parts inventory in Ho Chi Minh City. This matters for 24/7 manufacturing operations where a same-day service response can prevent costly production stops.
Universal Robots is available through authorized distributors and has been expanding its Vietnam-specific resources, including Vietnamese-language training materials and local integration partners. UR's lower entry cost and faster deployment make it popular among Vietnam's growing SME manufacturing sector, particularly in electronics assembly around Hanoi and Ho Chi Minh City.
Both brands are subject to Vietnam's import duty structure: robots (HS code 8479.50) typically attract 0% import duty under CPTPP and EVFTA free trade agreements when origin requirements are met (Denmark for UR, Japan for FANUC). 10% VAT applies to all imported equipment. FANUC's CNC controls (already ubiquitous in Vietnamese machine shops) create a familiarity advantage that CRX cobots can leverage.
12.3 Lead Times & Spare Parts
| Factor | Universal Robots | FANUC |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Lead Time (APAC) | 4-8 weeks | 6-12 weeks (cobot) / 8-16 weeks (industrial) |
| Spare Parts (common) | 1-3 days (from regional hub) | Same-day to 2 days (from local subsidiary) |
| Spare Parts (major) | 1-2 weeks (from Denmark) | 3-7 days (from Japan) |
| Emergency Service Response | 24-48 hours (distributor dependent) | 4-24 hours (direct subsidiary) |
| Service Contract Options | UR Care (3 tiers) | Custom SLAs (factory direct) |
| Local Training Availability | Online (free) + distributor sessions | FANUC Academy (in-person, paid) |
12.4 Final Verdict
There is no universally correct answer to the Universal Robots vs FANUC question. The right choice depends on your specific application requirements, organizational capabilities, existing infrastructure, and long-term automation strategy. Here is our summary recommendation framework:
| If Your Priority Is... | Choose | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Fastest time to production | Universal Robots | Shortest learning curve, fastest integration, broadest plug-and-play ecosystem |
| Maximum long-term reliability | FANUC | 80,000+ hour MTBF, factory-direct service, IP67 standard |
| Lowest initial investment | Universal Robots | Lower integration cost, free training, extensive community resources |
| Lowest 5-year TCO | FANUC | Lower maintenance, less downtime, longer operational life |
| Scalability beyond cobots | FANUC | Seamless path from CRX to industrial robots on same platform |
| ROS2 / research applications | Universal Robots | Official ROS2 driver, open architecture, developer community |
| Harsh environment operation | FANUC CRX | IP67 standard, proven in automotive and food manufacturing |
| Best APAC service network | FANUC | Fully owned subsidiaries in every major APAC market |
Seraphim Vietnam is vendor-agnostic. We integrate both Universal Robots and FANUC systems across our APAC deployments and can provide an unbiased assessment of which platform best fits your specific application, budget, and organizational constraints. Schedule a consultation with our robotics team to discuss your requirements.

