Bonsai Robotics Debuts New Lineup

Its new Amiga lineup features integration with Bonsai Intelligence, low-clearance vehicles and off-road capabilities.

Bonsai-Robotics-New-Amiga.png
Bonsai Robotics’ new Amiga Max is designed for tough terrain and heavy loads in bedded fields and orchards.
(Photo courtesy of Bonsai Robotics)

Bonsai Robotics debuted its new Amiga lineup at FIRA USA 2025. The company says this is a major milestone following its July acquisition of farm-ng. The company debuted the Amiga Flex, the first vehicle to be fully integrated with Bonsai Intelligence, alongside the Amiga Trax and Amiga Max.

Tyler Niday, CEO of Bonsai Robotics, told The Packer this new iteration of the v6 Amiga features is a machine that can outperform tractors in many use cases.

“With this release, it’s a really exciting time, because we’re coming out with the new version of the v6 which has more robust feature sets, more hardware,” he says. “It’s called the Flex. In addition, we’re coming out with the Trax, which is, I would say, a higher horsepower, low cost machine for, you know, medium-sized crops.”

The Amiga Flex is roughly the size of a small ATV with an 800-pound payload, a 700-pound lift and a 1,600-pound towing capacity. Bonsai says it can tow, carry or operate implements used in research, agriculture and light-soil work. This includes weeding, hauling materials, towing sprayers or mowers and scouting crops. It also has capabilities to enable sensors and autonomy research tools.

Amiga Flex comes with Bonsai Intelligence, which powers its vision-based autonomy for intelligent navigation, perception and task execution and a swapable battery system with more than 8 hours of run time per pack.

The company also debuted the Amiga Trax, a low-clearance vehicle for rugged outdoor environments and the Amiga Max, with heavy-duty capabilities. The Trax is ideal for vineyards, perennial crops, off-road work and more and offers towing, hauling and automation capabilities. The Amiga Max offers spraying, towing, hauling and lifting in bedded crops, orchards and more and is designed for tough terrain and heavy loads.

“This is the productized version in a strawberry form factor, and it is hybrid electric, not just electric,” Niday says of the Amiga Maxx.

Niday says the entire new line features updated batteries for longer run times.

What Niday says sets the new iterations of the Amiga line apart is the integration with Bonsai Pilot, a cloud-based application for growers to plan, monitor and manage autonomous operations, across the entire offerings. For growers, this means the entire product line runs off of Bonsai Pilot and generates data in one place.

“We’re now able to run all these machines off the Bonsai Pilot, which is our Bonsai autonomy app stack,” Niday says. “Previously, farm-ng didn’t have an app, and we fundamentally believe you need A-to-B navigation and being able to run plans. I think it’s a huge feature set unlocked, not only from the hardware perspective, but also to be able to run these machines fully autonomously.”

Scoop-logo (1346x354)
Read Next
ASA says it fully supports year-round E15 ethanol but says social media backlash stems from confusion over SREs in House bill language as the measure heads to a tougher Senate fight.
Follow the Scoop
Get Daily News
Get Markets Alerts
Get News & Markets App